Well-Being: Bridging the Gap between the Language of Policy and the Culture of Schools

Authors

  • Margaret Nohilly Mary Immaculate College, Ireland
  • Fionnuala Tynan Mary Immaculate College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2019v15n12a886

Keywords:

Well-Being, Policy, Schools, Culture

Abstract

While there is an increasing interest in the notion of well-being—politically, societally and educationally—it remains an enigmatic, multifaceted concept that sometimes eludes definition in academic articles. This article takes account of policy developments in the area of well-being over the last decade in Ireland, particularly educational policy developments. It presents research findings from a study conducted with primary school teachers on the west coast of Ireland about what well-being means to them as teachers and their challenges in promoting it. The findings highlight that well-being is open to many interpretations, and there is a clear gap between the language of well-being policy documents and the practices taking place in schools.

Author Biography

Fionnuala Tynan, Mary Immaculate College

B.Ed. (St. Patrick’s College), M.Ed. (NUIG), Grad. Dip. (School Planning) (NUIG), Grad. Dip. (SEN) (St. Angela’s College), M.A. (SEN) (St. Angela’s College), Ed.D. (University of Lincoln)

Fionnuala worked as a primary teacher, a facilitator for the School Development Planning Service (Primary) and as an inspector with the Department of Education and Skills prior to joining Mary Immaculate College in September 2015. She currently lectures in Educational Methodology. She holds a Doctorate in Education from the University of Lincoln, a Master’s Degree in Education from NUI (Galway), a Master’s Degree in Special Education from St. Angela’s College, Sligo, a Graduate Diploma in Special Education from St. Angela’s College, Sligo and a Graduate Diploma in School Planning from NUI (Galway).

Her research interests include Inclusive and Special Educational Methodologies, Williams Syndrome, Anxiety, Individual Education Planning, Learner Voice and Self-Perception of Learners with SEN. Her other areas of interests include General Learning Difficulties, Complex Learning Profiles, and Social, Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties.

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Published

2019-11-29

How to Cite

Nohilly, M., & Tynan, F. (2019). Well-Being: Bridging the Gap between the Language of Policy and the Culture of Schools. International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership, 15(12). https://doi.org/10.22230/ijepl.2019v15n12a886

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