Life Skills and Adolescent Mental Health
Can Kids Be Taught to Master Life?
Abstract
Can school teach us to master life? This book confronts what the author sees as an ongoing trend in many Western democracies where citizens are increasingly being held accountable for their health and happiness.
The author believes that the introduction of life skills in school shows a tendency to place more responsibility on the individual rather than address fundamental societal flaws that really should be solved politically. It examines how such responsibility to psychologically deal with these problems affects our mental health and quality of life. This book questions the fundamentals of the life mastery curriculum where we might be risking the creation of just another arena where children have to perform, challenging readers to evaluate more closely the premises, consequences and limitations of life mastery.
The book, one of the first to question ‘life mastery’ as an achievable goal with critical reviews of the 21st century skills movement, will be of interest to psychologists, school counsellors, teachers, students, politicians, and any reader evaluating school curriculums in relation to the decline in youth and adolescent mental health.
Keywords
Adolescent;Child and Young People Mental Health;coping;Life Skills;Norway;Norwegian;Psychological Tools;Psychology;policy;Quality of life;School Counsellors;School CurriculumDOI
10.4324/9781003372547ISBN
9781003372547, 9781032445120, 9781032445144, 9781000926576Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
2023Imprint
RoutledgeSeries
Routledge Focus on Mental Health,Classification
Social, group or collective psychology
Counselling and care of students