To read this content please select one of the options below:

Health knowledge and health education in the democratic health‐promoting school

Bjarne Bruun Jensen (Bjarne Bruun Jensen is Associate Professor at the Research Centre for Environmental and Health Education, The Royal Danish School of Educational Studies, Copenhagen NV, Denmark.)

Health Education

ISSN: 0965-4283

Article publication date: 1 August 2000

4407

Abstract

This paper suggests that there are two different paradigms within health education and the health‐promoting school, the traditional/moralistic paradigm and the democratic paradigm. The Danish network of Health Promoting Schools favours the democratic paradigm, within which the overall aim is to develop students’ abilities to influence their own life and the society – their so‐called “action competence”. The nature of an “action” is defined here as being “purposefully directed at solving a problem or facilitating change and consciously decided upon by those carrying out the action”. The key factors which influence action are discussed: they are insight and knowledge; vision; commitment; experience; and social skills. The paper then looks more deeply at insight and knowledge, suggesting that it has four different dimensions: knowledge of effects; causes; the processes of change; and vision of future possibilities. It suggests that teachers themselves need both the educational competence to facilitate the education of others, and high levels of action‐oriented knowledge and insight.

Keywords

Citation

Bruun Jensen, B. (2000), "Health knowledge and health education in the democratic health‐promoting school", Health Education, Vol. 100 No. 4, pp. 146-154. https://doi.org/10.1108/09654280010330900

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2000, MCB UP Limited

Related articles