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Wellness as higher education curriculum: a comprehensive framework for health education and promotion

Authors :
Brymer, E
Cuddihy, T
Goss, Halima
Cuddihy, Tom
Brymer, E
Cuddihy, T
Goss, Halima
Cuddihy, Tom
Source :
Creating Active Futures: Edited Proceedings of the 26th ACHPER International Conference
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

A number of studies in relation to the place, impact and purpose of Wellness curricula provide insight into the perceived benefits of Wellness education in university environments. Of particular note is the recommendation by many authors that curriculum design fosters personal experiences, reflective practice and active self-managed learning approaches in order to legitimise (give permission for) the adoption of wellness as a personal lifestyle approach in the frenetic pace of student life. From a broader educational perspective, Wellness education provides opportunities for students to engage in learning self regulation skills both within and beyond the context of the Wellness construct.To realise the suggested potential of Wellness education in higher learning, it is necessary that curricula overlay the principles from the domains of both self-regulation and Wellness, to highlight authentic learning as a means to lifelong approaches. Currently, however, systematic development and empirical examination of the Wellness construct have received limited academic investigation. Despite having a multitude of intended purposes from the educative to the therapy oriented goals of the original authors, most wellness models appear to be limited to the “what” of Wellness. Investigations of the “how” and “why” aspects of Wellness may serve to enhance currently existing models by incorporating behaviour modification and learning approaches in order to create more comprehensive frameworks for health education and promotion.It is also important to note that none of the current Wellness models actually address the educative framework necessary for an individual to learn and thus become aware or understand and make choices about their own Wellness.The literature reviewed within this paper would suggest that learner success is optimised by giving learners authentic opportunities to develop and practice self regulation strategies. Such opportunities include learning experiences that

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Creating Active Futures: Edited Proceedings of the 26th ACHPER International Conference
Notes :
application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1146601072
Document Type :
Electronic Resource