Mainstream and special schools’ use of well-being programmes : a regional survey

Abstract

The incorporation of mental well-being provision into school curricula is increasingly the focus of government policy in the UK and internationally. However, it is not clear what well- being programmes schools provide to pupils, and how these programmes are delivered. The current study was an online survey to assess the use of whole-school well-being programmes in primary schools in North Wales. Normalisation Process Theory (NPT) was utilised as a framework to assess normalisation of the well-being programmes. One-hundred and fifty-one schools in North Wales responded to the survey. The mean number of whole-school well- being programmes utilised by schools was 4.59, and nine of the ten most frequently used programmes had little or no associated evidence base. The well-being programmes were generally perceived as normalised (i.e., everyday practice) by respondents. Implications for future practice are discussed, including the need to support schools to identify and implement evidence-based mental well-being provision

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This paper was published in Warwick Research Archives Portal Repository.

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