Children's wellbeing in schools

Research report


Cary, E. and Webb, L. 2025. Children's wellbeing in schools. London UK Parliament.
AuthorsCary, E. and Webb, L.
TypeResearch report
ContributorsHowells, K.
Abstract

• Research data for England suggests that positive wellbeing helps children to engage in learning.
• Research shows that aspects of school culture, including relationships and sense of belonging, are important for wellbeing.
• Short-term outcomes of low wellbeing can include effects on relationships and behaviour, absence from school, and lower academic achievement.
Long-term outcomes can include effects on mental health and adult employment.
• More evidence is needed around approaches to improving wellbeing of children in schools, the factors underpinning the most effective approaches, and how best to measure their impact.
• Practices that may improve wellbeing include psychological, social, culture and environment-based practices, and physical health promotion. However, evidence around these practices is mixed and it is challenging for practitioners to determine which practices to implement, and how.
• In December 2024 the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill was laid before Parliament, which contained several proposals related to wellbeing in schools including on provision of breakfast clubs.

KeywordsChildren's wellbeing; Physical activity; Mental health
Year2025
PublisherUK Parliament
Place of publicationLondon
Page range1-34
Official URLhttps://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/POST-PN-0739/POST-PN-0739.pdf
Output statusPublished
File
File Access Level
Open
Publication dates
Print06 Feb 2025
Publication process dates
Deposited10 Feb 2025
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https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/9q447/children-s-wellbeing-in-schools

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