Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Details

Wright, J. E. & Burrows, L. (2004). "Being Healthy": The discursive construction of health in New Zealand children's responses to the National Education Monitoring Project. Discourse, 25 (2), 211-230.

Abstract

In this paper we examine the discursive resources that year 4 and year 8 students draw on to construct meanings for health. Drawing on students' responses to tasks in the New Zealand National Monitoring Project (Crooks & Flockton, Health & Physical Education, University of Otago Educational Assessment Research Unit, 1999) we examine what students have to say about health, and speculate on where these responses have come from and on the implications of these for health education pedagogy. The students' responses indicate that they are well versed in "healthism" discourses that link practices like eating, exercise, smoking, drinking and taking drugs with "health". The students' responses also point to the construction of health knowledge as certain and static. Relatively little attention is paid to the social, cultural, economic or political contexts of people's lives. Indeed, the "typical" responses clearly point to the dominance of white; middle class values about health and fitness promoted in New Zealand society. We conclude by posing several questions generated for educators.

ANZSRC / FoR Code

2002 CULTURAL STUDIES

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