Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage survey
The purpose of the study was to reveal participants' health concepts via a cross- sectional survey examining students at different educational stages. Four dimensions of health are integrated within an overall health concept, as drawn from relevant literature: the physical, mental, social, and...
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2020-11-01
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doaj-9add76bc6a24459fab4a116f896951992020-12-09T06:24:52ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402020-11-01611e05383Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage surveyMing-Chin Hsin0Chen-Yung Lin1Hsing-Yin Li2Show-Yu Lin3Office of Institutional Research, National Taipei University of Business, Taipei City, TaiwanGraduate Institute of Science Education, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, TaiwanGraduate Institute of Science Education, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, TaiwanCentre for General Education, Aletheia University, Taipei, Taiwan; Corresponding author.The purpose of the study was to reveal participants' health concepts via a cross- sectional survey examining students at different educational stages. Four dimensions of health are integrated within an overall health concept, as drawn from relevant literature: the physical, mental, social, and cultural dimensions. An open questionnaire was administered to 551 students in three educational stages in Taiwan: junior high (13 ± 0.6yrs), senior high (16 ± 0.6yrs), and college (19 ± 0.6yrs). The results indicated that the total participants' major health concerns were situated within the physical dimension, followed by the social and mental dimensions. No participants mentioned a cultural dimension of health. Senior high school students were relatively more concerned with the mental rather than the physical dimension when compared to responses from the other two stages. Moreover, a gender difference was found in that female participants were more concerned with physical aspects while male participants focused more on the social dimension. Different concerns were obvious across the three educational stages; accordingly, an educational approach was suggested to address these findings.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240584402032226XSocial scienceConceptions of healthEducational stagesGender |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ming-Chin Hsin Chen-Yung Lin Hsing-Yin Li Show-Yu Lin |
spellingShingle |
Ming-Chin Hsin Chen-Yung Lin Hsing-Yin Li Show-Yu Lin Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage survey Heliyon Social science Conceptions of health Educational stages Gender |
author_facet |
Ming-Chin Hsin Chen-Yung Lin Hsing-Yin Li Show-Yu Lin |
author_sort |
Ming-Chin Hsin |
title |
Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage survey |
title_short |
Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage survey |
title_full |
Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage survey |
title_fullStr |
Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage survey |
title_full_unstemmed |
Students' conceptions of health: A cross educational stage survey |
title_sort |
students' conceptions of health: a cross educational stage survey |
publisher |
Elsevier |
series |
Heliyon |
issn |
2405-8440 |
publishDate |
2020-11-01 |
description |
The purpose of the study was to reveal participants' health concepts via a cross- sectional survey examining students at different educational stages. Four dimensions of health are integrated within an overall health concept, as drawn from relevant literature: the physical, mental, social, and cultural dimensions. An open questionnaire was administered to 551 students in three educational stages in Taiwan: junior high (13 ± 0.6yrs), senior high (16 ± 0.6yrs), and college (19 ± 0.6yrs). The results indicated that the total participants' major health concerns were situated within the physical dimension, followed by the social and mental dimensions. No participants mentioned a cultural dimension of health. Senior high school students were relatively more concerned with the mental rather than the physical dimension when compared to responses from the other two stages. Moreover, a gender difference was found in that female participants were more concerned with physical aspects while male participants focused more on the social dimension. Different concerns were obvious across the three educational stages; accordingly, an educational approach was suggested to address these findings. |
topic |
Social science Conceptions of health Educational stages Gender |
url |
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240584402032226X |
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