Publication:
Finding purpose: What Singaporean adolescents are telling us

cris.virtual.author-orcid0000-0003-0890-2159
cris.virtual.departmentPolicy, Curriculum and Leadership (PCL)
cris.virtualsource.author-orcid3e065f84-b9aa-4a2f-a7e3-25c75fc72631
cris.virtualsource.department3e065f84-b9aa-4a2f-a7e3-25c75fc72631
dc.contributor.authorHeng, Mary Anneen
dc.date.accessioned2021-02-13T07:20:49Z
dc.date.available2021-02-13T07:20:49Z
dc.date.issued2024
dc.descriptionNote: Restricted to NIE Staff.
dc.description.abstractWhile Singapore has been recognised as a high-performing education system in international education benchmarking indicators, scholars argue we should ask more fundamental questions regarding what students make of school (Deng & Gopinathan, 2016). Moving beyond the means-end model of education in which the present criteria for success may not be valid for the future, education should guide adolescents to make important decisions in the future about what they consider useful, successful, and ethical (Willbergh, 2015). Asking more fundamentally what students make of school, this study investigates the relationship between youth purpose, meaning in life, social support, and life satisfaction among adolescents in Singapore. This study seeks to shed light on the tensions of preparing students for success in the globalised economy as well as educating for an uncertain future that requires reconnecting with purpose in education.<br> Purpose is a long-term, stable and high-level intention to influence the world in ways both meaningful to oneself and others (Damon, 2008). Adolescents with self-reported life purpose show higher levels of life satisfaction and school achievement (Bronk, Hill, Lapsley, Talib, & Finch, 2009). The other-oriented component in the purpose construct is what distinguishes it from the meaning in life construct (Damon), which is the significance one makes of one’s life (Steger, Frazier, Oishi & Kaler, 2006). Social support relates positively to wellbeing (Ben-Zur, 2009). While educational achievement is the more common metric in education research in Singapore, self-reported life satisfaction helps educators and policymakers understand how well the school curricula are achieving policy aims as perceived and experienced by adolescents.en
dc.description.projectOER 10/13 MAH
dc.grant.fundingagencyMinistry of Education, Singaporeen
dc.grant.idEducation Research Funding Programme (ERFP)en
dc.identifier.citationHeng, M. A. (2024). Finding purpose: What Singaporean adolescents are telling us (Report No. OER 10/13 MAH). National Institute of Education (Singapore), Office of Education Research. https://hdl.handle.net/10497/22660
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10497/22660
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherOffice of Education Research, National Institute of Education, Singaporeen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesOER Final Report
dc.rights.licenseCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
dc.subjectYouth purposeen
dc.subjectMeaning in lifeen
dc.subjectLife satisfactionen
dc.subjectSocial supporten
dc.titleFinding purpose: What Singaporean adolescents are telling usen
dc.typeTechnical Reporten
dspace.entity.typePublication
local.message.claim2021-12-22T12:13:11.197+0800|||rp00059|||submit_approve|||dc_contributor_author|||None*
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