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    Home » How learning about wellbeing can benefit university students’ own wellbeing
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    How learning about wellbeing can benefit university students’ own wellbeing

    Rhys GregoryBy Rhys GregoryAugust 5, 2022No Comments
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    Studying wellbeing science as part of their courses could be a key way of improving how today’s students cope with the barrage of stressors they face, according to research.

    Students are a high-risk population for mental ill-health and face increasing academic demands, high levels of loneliness and sustained financial pressures, which can adversely impact on mental health.

    Now a Swansea University team have taken a closer look at just what impact an optional wellbeing science module offered to undergraduates would have on students’ wellbeing.

    The research, by Professor Andrew Kemp and his co-authors consultant clinical psychologist Dr Zoe Fisher, of the University’s Health and Wellbeing Academy and PhD student Jessica Mead, has just been published in the journal Teaching of Psychology .

    Professor Kemp, who is research lead at the School of Psychology, said: “The wellbeing of university students is deteriorating, highlighting a critical role for institutions to better support student wellbeing.”

    Previous studies have explored the impact of positive psychology on student wellbeing, but this module created by the team moved beyond positive psychology, focusing on promoting a sense of connection to self, others, and nature.

    He said: “Research tells us that wellbeing can be influenced by issues such as inequality and anthropogenic climate change. Our module encourages reflection on these issues and what students might do to within their capacity to address major societal issues of importance.

    “While the capacity of individuals to promote their own wellbeing is greater than their capacity to promote collective and planetary wellbeing, there remains tremendous scope for individuals themselves to promote collective and planetary wellbeing alongside larger collaborative efforts through for example, volunteering and effective activism.”

    The team used questionnaires to assess students’ feelings of wellbeing before and after completing the module, alongside the results from a control group which did not complete the module. Comparisons with published norms, further highlighted the beneficial impact of the module.

    The team say its research is significant for several key reasons:

    • students are at high risk of developing mental health difficulties;
    • improvements in wellbeing have been shown to reduce future healthcare costs; and
    • the findings demonstrate that wellbeing can be improved despite great hardship and suffering.

    Professor Kemp explained the timing of the study was particularly relevant: “Our study was conducted during the Covid pandemic and demonstrates capacity of strategically designed modules to improve student wellbeing during challenging times.

    “These findings have important implications for thinking about how the education sector might support wellbeing alongside other major societal stressors such as the climate catastrophe.”

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    Rhys Gregory
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