Moulding student mental health in Singapore’s Character and Citizenship Education: projected pedagogic identities

IF 1.9 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Nah Dominic, Li Yin Lim, Nur Diyanah Anwar, Jasmine B.-Y. Sim
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACTThis paper examines the official pedagogic discourse communicating the explicit inclusion of Mental Health (MH) education in Singapore’s revised 2021 Character and Citizenship (CCE2021) curriculum within Singapore’s state-driven educational context of decentralised centralism. By adapting Basil Bernstein’s theoretical work on pedagogic discourse – using William Tyler’s typology of Bernstein’s ‘Pedagogic Codes’ and ‘Official Pedagogic Identities’ – our findings reveal how MH in CCE2021 projects different, simultaneous student identities. These include retrospective identities of students as resilient, community-minded citizens; prospective identities of students as vulnerable cyber users requiring explicit guidance for their future-readiness; de-centred therapeutic identities of students as reflective, self-actualising students requiring psychological safety; and de-centred market identities of students as trained advocates and community first responders. Together, they generate a tension where therapeutic identities are positioned as prerequisite to the other identities, subsuming individual well-being within community well-being, and conflating the intrinsic good of personal resilience with instrumental notions of future-readiness. This expresses a paradox where state-student social relations are both transformed and continued, as concerns of student confidentiality and efficacy of help-seeking efforts persist. Overall, we contend the educational reform of MH in CCE2021 accommodates rather than reconciles progressive concerns of youth mental health with neoliberal state imperatives.KEYWORDS: Mental health educationcharacter educationcitizenship educationBasil Bernsteinofficial pedagogic identitiesSingapore AcknowledgementsOur first and third author (Nah Dominic and Nur Diyanah Anwar) were both supported by the Nanyang Technological University Research Scholarship during the co-authorship of this manuscript. The authors would like to thank Emeritus Professor Dr. Ron Toomey (Victoria University) and Associate Professor Dr. Lim Tze-Wei Leonel (National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University) for useful comments on earlier drafts of this manuscript. We would also like to thank the two anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments and suggestions.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by the Nanyang Technological University [Nanyang Technological University Research Scholarship].
在新加坡的性格和公民教育中塑造学生的心理健康:投射的教师身份
摘要本文考察了在新加坡国家驱动的分散集中制教育背景下,新加坡修订的2021年品格与公民(CCE2021)课程中明确包含心理健康(MH)教育的官方教学话语。通过改编巴兹尔·伯恩斯坦关于教学话语的理论工作-使用威廉·泰勒对伯恩斯坦的“教学代码”和“官方教学身份”的类型-我们的研究结果揭示了CCE2021中的MH如何投射不同的,同时的学生身份。这些措施包括回顾学生作为适应力强、有社区意识的公民的身份;学生作为易受伤害的网络用户的未来身份需要明确的指导,以便他们为未来做好准备;学生作为需要心理安全的反思、自我实现的学生的去中心治疗认同;学生作为训练有素的倡导者和社区第一响应者的市场身份去中心化。总之,它们产生了一种张力,治疗身份被定位为其他身份的先决条件,将个人福祉纳入社区福祉,并将个人弹性的内在善与未来准备的工具概念混为一谈。这表达了一个悖论,即国家与学生的社会关系既发生了变化,又继续存在,因为对学生保密和寻求帮助努力的有效性的担忧仍然存在。总体而言,我们认为CCE2021中的MH教育改革适应而不是调和青年心理健康的进步问题与新自由主义国家的要求。关键词:心理健康教育性格教育公民教育巴兹尔·伯恩斯坦官方教师身份新加坡致谢我们的第一作者和第三作者(Nah Dominic和Nur Diyanah Anwar)在本文的共同作者期间都获得了南洋理工大学研究奖学金的支持。作者要感谢荣休教授Ron Toomey博士(维多利亚大学)和副教授Lim ze- wei Leonel博士(南洋理工大学国家教育研究所)对本文早期草稿的有用意见。我们还要感谢两位匿名审稿人提出的有见地的评论和建议。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。本研究得到了南洋理工大学[南洋理工大学研究奖学金]的支持。
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来源期刊
Pedagogy Culture and Society
Pedagogy Culture and Society EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
10.00%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: Pedagogy, Culture & Society is a fully-refereed international journal that seeks to provide an international forum for pedagogy discussion and debate. The identity of the journal is built on the belief that pedagogy debate has the following features: •Pedagogy debate is not restricted by geographical boundaries: its participants are the international educational community and its proceedings appeal to a worldwide audience. •Pedagogy debate is open and democratic: it is not the preserve of teachers, politicians, academics or administrators but requires open discussion.
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