Showing posts with label Marina Schwimmer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marina Schwimmer. Show all posts

2025/02/13

Postcritical discourse analysis: examining the case of the student well-being discourse |Marina Schwimmer 2024

Postcritical discourse analysis: examining the case of the student well-being discourse | Journal of Philosophy of Education | Oxford Academic
Postcritical discourse analysis: examining the case of the student well-being discourse 
Marina Schwimmer
Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 58, Issue 6, December 2024, Pages 1015–1028, https://doi.org/10.1093/jopedu/qhae077
Published: 13 November 2024 Article history
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Abstract
This article examines how the critical tradition initiated by Nietzsche and pursued through poststructuralism might be compatible with what is currently being described as postcritique. It does so by looking at the example of critical discourse analysis (CDA). The first section gives some indications about the state of the methodology currently known as critical discourse analysis and introduces what a ‘postcritical’ reaction could look like. The second section focuses on a concrete example and presents the main critical literature about the student well-being discourse, showing that it generally limits itself to a debunking attitude. The third section explores how the affirmative and creative dimension of critique, its ‘postcritical’ dimension, has been and could be put forward to contribute to what could be called a postcritical discourse analysis methodology

Issue Section: Original Article

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Introduction

In response to what is often described as a fatigue of critique, postcritical approaches have emerged in several fields of the social sciences and humanities in recent years.1 For example, against a tendency to read texts with critical distance, detachment, through a hermeneutic of suspicion, Rita Felski (2015) argues for the rehabilitation of a more immanent form of reading that allows for aesthetic pleasure, enchantment, and reinvigoration. Laurent de Sutter (2019), in trying to identify cross-disciplinary aspects of postcriticality, has edited a book that brings together researchers from the fields of philosophy, law, literature, and anthropology. According to him, our current forms of critique (as lucidity) make us stupid, and we need to define other critical possibilities. For example, Armen Avenassian claims that postcritique is concerned with a speculative and poetic othering, involving abductive and recursive processes that testify to a new behaviour: the practice of thinking through doing2 (2019: 27).

In a similar way, the project of postcritical pedagogy initiated by Naomi Hodgson, Joris Vlieghe, and Piotr Zamojski rejects the tendency in critical pedagogy towards suspicion and advocates a different, affirmative, approach. Contrary to critical pedagogy which is centred around the unveiling and denunciation of unjust power relations to enlighten and bring about the conditions deemed necessary for social change (and may lead to cynicism or disenchantment), postcritical pedagogy considers that if there are indeed things in the world that we should hate, there is also a lot to be cherished and the role of a pedagogue is not one of rejection and refusal but one of care and initiation (Hodgson, Vlieghe and Zamojski 2018; Vlieghe and Zamojski 2019). Perhaps the main preoccupations of postcritical pedagogy can be put in three main categories: 1) postcritique is an ethos (vs a reflexive process). It recognizes that critique concerns living things and is a lived experience; 2) postcritique is about affirmation (vs denunciation). It is about love, care, preservation of the world in the Arendtian sense; 3) postcritique is about interruption and hope in the present through the initiation of something new. Perhaps this is a way of insisting on the matter that emancipation is not as a trajectory towards enlightenment that can be attained through the devising of plans but should be conceived as a capacity, again, to live in affirmation, here and now.

What the authors of the manifesto for a postcritical pedagogy are advocating is an understanding of education as initiation, initiation to the world through the study of that world, and for its own sake. Hence, it is itself a critique of critical pedagogy, which too often sums up, they claim, to a questioning and denouncing of the power structures that underlie education, its practices, as well as the knowledge it claims to transmit. Schooling, for example, is viewed as a possible time and space of interruption of the social and the political, a privileged time and space of study, a hopeful one, where students are not only introduced to the world by adults (pedagogues) who care for the world, but where they can learn to rely on themselves and initiate something new themselves. Hence, here again, we find a plea for a critique that is immanent, that does not come after the fact, a critique that, through affirmation, might open the possibility of producing, of building as Zamojski (2024) puts it in his article published in this same issue, something in the present.

With these postcritical claims, Stefano Oliverio and Bianca Thoilliez3 suggest that we might be witnessing the birth of a paradigmatic shift in our relationship to knowledge and critique. It is impossible to verify this claim in the present, but it seems important to point out that the call for what is called postcriticality here is not new. One can find similar calls all the way back in the texts of the Cynics in Antiquity (Sloterdijk 1988) and most significantly in Nietzsche’s call for learning to live affirmatively, ‘a disposition for trying to say yes to see what it does’4 (Astor 2019: 78), Indeed, Dorian Astor (2019) insists on the idea that researchers who undertake a pure hermeneutic of suspicion, using a methodology of uncertainty or a constructivist guidebook under the name of Nietzsche have misread (or never read) him. The same could be said of the poststructuralist tradition that postcritique defendants often attack as being too suspicious and leading to relativism, fatigue, and cynicism. Archaeology or deconstruction, as Michel Foucault (1969, 2001a), Jacques Derrida (1967; 1972), and others have practised, should in no way be reduced to a critical perspective understood as suspicion and liquidation of meaning constructions. The task of unveiling, debunking, or unmasking perspectivism was never the actual goal of most poststructuralist thinkers but only a means for something else. The whole point of destabilizing meanings through deconstruction or genealogy is thus not to undermine the possibility of meaning but to open new possibilities, to affirm and allow for something new to take shape. As Astor puts it, it is not about exclusion but about preference and love, about ‘the determination of what matters’5 (2019: 87). In other words, postcriticality, from this point of view, was always already a constitutive part of critique.

In what follows, the tradition of critical discourse analysis (CDA) will be examined to show how the critical tradition initiated by Nietzsche and pursued through poststructuralism, has been taken up and might have been lost on the way. The goal is to somehow contribute to the rehabilitation of the initial impetus (or conatus) of this critical tradition in current methodologies that are born from it and that might have crystallized in methodological orthodoxies. The first section will give some indications about the state of the methodology currently known as CDA and introduce what a ‘postcritical’ reaction could look like. The second section focuses on the concrete example of the critical discourse about student well-being, showing that it generally limits itself to a debunking attitude. The third section explores how the affirmative and creative dimension of critique, its ‘postcritical’ dimension, has been and could be put forward to contribute to what could be called a postcritical discourse analysis methodology.

Discourse analysis: the deciphering of meaning
Discourse analysis generally refers to the analysis of the meaning of discourses, understood as any contextualized expression of language, whether they are linguistic or not, including social practices (e.g. clothing, gestures, intonation) (Schiffrin et al. 2008). It is generally divided into descriptive and critical approaches.

The descriptive approach
The descriptive approach to discourse analysis is primarily linguistic and looks at the functioning of language, the grammar, the way sentences relate to one another, stylistic or rhetorical procedures, and may take at least two different forms: 1) Formal linguistic discourse analysis (such as sociolinguistics) looks at samples of written or oral texts to analyse the meaning and uses of language. This type of work would mainly be carried out by linguists (Hodges et al. 2008: 571). 2) Empirical discourse analysis (such as conversation analysis or genre analysis) looks at language not as a purely linguistic structure but as a practice in use. For example, it could look at the ways in which language is used in concrete social or cultural practices, such as communication between doctors and nurses (Hodges et al. 2008) or between teachers and students.

The critical approach
From a critical perspective, language is never neutral and always inevitably carries and installs power relations. Hence, discourse should never be analysed without considering the influence of the social and political contextual factors embedded in the discourse being analysed. This understanding of discourse analysis has been largely influenced by Foucault’s work according to whom discourse should be understood as a system of thought, an episteme, that makes certain things thinkable and sayable in a particular historical period, thus being the reflection of the social, cultural, and political norms of the period in question. Very often, when the social sciences undertake discourse analysis, they tend to adopt such a critical perspective to denounce and resist various forms of oppression. As such, according to Norman Fairclough, the main agenda of CDA is:

to systematically explore often opaque relationships of causality and determination between (a) discursive practices, events and texts, and (b) wider social and cultural structures, relations and processes; to investigate how such practices, events and texts arise out of and are ideologically shaped by relations of power and struggles over power. (Fairclough 1995: 132)

Because of this preoccupation, critical discourse analysts tend to analyse discourses that exercise dominant or hegemonic power on people, cultures, societies, for example, phallocentric discourses, ethnocentric or racist discourses, certain types of mediatic discourses, political discourses, dominant institutional and professional discourses (van Dijk, 2008). According to Teun van Dijk, the issue of discursive power can be split up into two basic questions addressed to the text: ‘1. How do (more) powerful groups control public discourse? 2. How does such discourse control the mind and action of less powerful groups, and what are the social consequences of such control, such as social inequality?’ (van Dijk, 2008: 355). In doing so, CDA is very effective in denaturalizing discourses, which although they are the product of ideological mechanisms appear as if they were natural (Fairclough 1995).

Understood as such, the critical methodology, although useful to uncover the ideological nature of our discourses and thoughts, has its limits. Firstly, it may prove constraining for the analyst because they pretty much know in advance what they will find. There is no doubt that if you look for male, white, or English domination, you will find it. This is not to say that such analysis is unimportant, on the contrary, it is crucial to uncover new and more refined forms of domination. Secondly, since it can be argued that all discourses are social and historical formations, then they all become suspicious and must be put into question. This suspicion is important to some extent, but it can also lead to excesses and relativism. As such, analysing all discourses through this form of critical lens only may lead to the rejection of practices and traditions that looked at from a different perspective may well prove to be worth preserving.

Towards a postcritical approach?
A postcritical approach to discourse analysis could consider that examining the historical nature of our discourses itself deconstructs and attention to this could help to justify the importance of what we contribute to construct and preserve. Indeed, although it is often thought that poststructuralism is predominantly a critical tool used to demystify, I would argue that it is postcritical as well. Demystification, for the poststructuralist, is only a first step in the understanding of a discourse. When the analyst uncovers the multiple layers embedded in a discourse, they do not only show its constructed nature, they also make visible its accumulated possibilities of meaning, many often forgotten. This allows us to rework that discourse, to see how it might be transgressed and perhaps become more fruitful. Inspirations for this type of methodology might be found in the work of Homi Bhabha (1994) who has reworked the discourse about nationalism or the work of Aimé Césaire (1971) with the political and literary trend of ‘négritude’, a term coined to reclaim the otherwise often pejorative meaning of blackness and assert the beauty of the cultural values of Africa.

What the two examples have in common is a particular understanding of language as open to the reassignation of meaning. Critical approaches tend to focus on the normalized meaning of signs. Certain signs are deemed offensive and as perpetuating forms of violence and domination and should be denounced and avoided at all costs. However, this dimension of language, which may be described as ‘communicative’, or as simply transmitting predefined meaning is not the only one. Language is also in large part a creative enterprise and meaning is always evolving. Jacques Derrida (1972), Roland Barthes (1986), and others have shown this fundamental ambiguity at the heart of the functioning of signs, ambiguity that allows them to indeed acquire a specific meaning in a specific context to be communicable, but also allows them to be reworked and produce new meanings. Hence a discourse analysis can look at social, political, and historical contexts and the power relations that are productive at a certain period in time and that influence the production of a text, but it can also try to be sensitive to the veiled possibilities of meaning a text encloses and may be able to transgress previous and accepted ones.

To develop this further, and away from classical cases related to cultural, gender, or racial identities, I now want to turn to another type of discourse that is gaining more and more traction nowadays, the well-being discourse. Here, CDA takes a particular form: what is analysed and criticized is the hegemony of a certain scientific and professional discourse based on positive psychology and neurosciences. It is relevant to note that CDA here also draws to some extent on critical policy analysis since governmental policies and programmes are central to the analysis of this discourse. Contrary to policy analysis, which focuses mostly on the analysis of policies to enhance them and make them more efficient, critical policy analysis is concerned with: ‘a) the educational, moral and social concerns underlying the policy studies, b) the broad conception of policy, including politics, the mechanisms of power and the relation with the wider social context, and c) the diverse forms of critical advocacy’ (Simons et al. 2009: 17). Critical policy analysis and CDA intersect in this regard.

Enough of the discourse of student well-being!
Since it was popularized in the 1960s and ’70s, most notably through the thriving field of humanist psychology and the human potential movement and was reframed around the 1990s through the developments of positive psychology and neuroscience, the well-being discourse has spread widely (Wright 2014). This is highlighted by the proliferation of self-help books, workshops and therapies, scientific research, policy documents, TV shows, centred around the pursuit of happiness, that are promoted by psychologists, economists, policymakers, educators, and society.

Although there is not one clear conception of well-being guiding this important trend, it remains possible to identify a general ‘discourse’ about well-being in the sense suggested by Foucault of an epistemological construction that allows certain statements and thoughts and excludes others. Nicolas Marquis (2014) who analysed a wide range of self-help books has shown that although they are diverse (some focus on health while others on self-confidence or on communication), they still share the same goal: helping individuals find their inner strengths to transcend themselves and change their lives proactively. Certain ideas of autonomy, authenticity, responsibility, self-reliance, self-regulation, resilience, or optimism that have been neutralized in some way and have come to represent a particular, idealized way of life, run through all of them. It seems important to point out that the way in which these ideas have come to be understood through the well-being discourse are rather nihilistic because they discourage richer and stronger accounts of what it could mean to live authentically or with self-reliance, that is to say probably more defiantly. And there is no doubt that this well-being vocabulary translates quite intactly in the field of education through notions of building resilience, cultivating social and emotional skills, and helping every student fulfil their full potential.

Indeed, this discourse is not only promoted by major international organizations such as UNESCO (2016) and the OECD (2018) but is also clearly discernible in most Western societies more broadly. In Quebec, for example, the well-being discourse emerged in the 1970s and has gained much prevalence in past decades. Discourse analysis of documents such as educational curricula, research reports for governmental use, official teachers’ association communications, professional journals, teacher interviews, and the like can illustrate the evolution of this discourse (Schwimmer 2018; 2021). As such, in the ’70s an important report published by the Conseil supérieur de l’Éducation (CSE 1971), following a similar one in the curricular reform of the 1960s (Québec, 1966), asked educators to be more concerned with ‘students’ inner life’ and their ‘whole development’ as a person, including their ‘emotional and affective needs’. In the following decades, this progressive discourse became prevalent. The official school programme produced in 2006 affirmed the centrality of ‘students’ needs’ and of helping them fulfil their ‘full potential’ (Québec, 2006). Although it was never made explicit in the discourse, anyone familiar with the dominant language of humanist psychology (with proponents such as Abraham Maslow or Carl Rogers, for example) will recognize its underlying presence, what Annemarie Mol calls its ‘resonance’ (Mol 2020). Then in the past two decades, the well-being discourse has evolved in line with a more medical, and later neuroscientific stance. In 2005, a report on well-being insisted on the importance of promoting good health habits and preventing bullying (Québec, 2005). In 2019, much in line with the OECD report (2018), the CSE published a new report promoting the ‘cultivation of social and emotional skills’, which mostly relied on arguments borrowed from positive psychology and neurosciences (CSE 2020).

This discourse has given rise to critical work, including CDA, denouncing its socio-cultural pervasiveness. Critics have argued that it reflects a general tendency towards psychologization (overanalysing through the lens of psychology), depersonalization (fragmentation of the self in the context of cultural relativism), and neoliberal normalization (inculcating of neoliberal values) (Furedi 2004; Illouz 2008; Ahmed 2010). In the field of education, similar criticisms take place. For example, Steadman Rice deplores that young people in the USA are educated ‘in the vocabulary of emotion and the practice of self-absorption’ and that education is less and less about instruction (2002). Although they recognize that education and therapy are inevitably connected, Paul Smeyers, Richard Smith, and Paul Standish (2010) argue that the rhetoric of therapeutic education, with its emphasis on self-esteem, confidence, or stress management, ‘conceals the complexity of human existence’ (p. 24). Problems encountered by students are understood as coming from the self and having to be solved in the self, through the mastery of certain skills, instead of being explored as matters of the world that come to matter to students, in terms of their identity and what motivates them. At the heart of this, and following the line of thought developed by Nicolas Rose (1998), lies the idea that the professional power exerted by the field of psychology has grown to such an extent that it has imposed a view of how subjects understand their lives and should govern themselves (see e.g. Gagen 2015; Brunila and Siivonen 2016).

Many contemporary critics denounce that this psychologized educational experience also reflects a will to optimize students’ psychological development. This line of thought insists not only on the pervasiveness of the psychological discourse, but on its complicity with the neoliberal one as well. As Catherine Kingfisher (2013) argues, it is not a coincidence that positive thinking, self-regulation, self-examination, and entrepreneurialism are also the qualities required for the neoliberal economy. Hence, the well-being discourse is shown to contribute to the fabrication of entrepreneurial subjects who are flexible, responsible, and proactive (Bradbury 2019; Schwimmer 2021). Young people thus become the target of a managerial power that gains from ensuring that citizens are formed to govern themselves to be productive and competitive.

Moreover, some critics have shown how this discourse may be even more detrimental to underprivileged groups. Referring to the work of Sara Ahmed (2010), Liz Jackson and Charles Bingham (2018) note that the expectation that every student develops the skills to be happy fails to acknowledge how unjust pre-existing social and political relations might understandably prevent flourishing to a certain degree. Ahmed has shown convincingly how happiness has served historically as a justification for colonialism. On the pretext that native people were not ‘happy’ according to established expectations, it seemed justified to civilize them. Even if the wish for them to find happiness might have been sincere, what was wished for is that they find happiness without compromising the established equilibrium, thus imposing a moral order and maintaining the status quo.

These lines of criticism are important in showing how dominant discourses such as psychology and management, come to influence the way we conceive well-being and thus how we understand ourselves, work on ourselves, and expect others to do so. However, by insisting primarily on issues of power imbalance they produce, they fail to recognize the other possibilities they may contain. From a postcritical perspective, discourse analysis should not only describe and reveal the (hidden) meaning of discourses. Other ways to relate to it may be more productive, for example, looking at the different layers or possibilities of meanings that can historically be found in a discourse, as Derrida’s or Foucault’s approaches have shown, or how they resonate, as Mol points out (2020), when analysing how the word schoon, (which means clean) loses its Dutch resonances when translated in English. As she puts it: ‘Such resonances are not simply characteristics of ‘a language’—an allegedly well-rounded system of signs that may be caught within the confines of a dictionary. Instead, they have to do with all kinds of particularities of the practices in which words participate’ (p.386). She then goes on to develop how they may refer to cultural, material, semantic, or multilingual resonances.

Indeed, it might be fruitful to ask the question: what remains educational in the well-being discourse? Is the well-being discourse entirely wrong and miseducative in essence or is there still something to be rescued? Certainly, there is much to want to preserve. Indeed, technologies of well-being can also be conceived as pedagogical exercises that can help students explore and define who they are or might become through expression, attention, and conversation. Hence, I will argue that it might be helpful to rework the analysis of the well-being discourses and reconsider the technologies they promote through frameworks that put their possibilities to the front. Hence, the next section aims at understanding how from a methodological point of view we can go beyond CDA and articulate a postcritical discourse analysis (PCDA) framework.

PCDA: reclaiming the affirmative aspect of criticism
Much in line with the poststructuralist tradition, two aspects are explored in this section. First, it describes the poststructuralist gesture as a way of paying attention to the layers of meaning of a discourse. Then, it looks at what happens when this first gesture has been performed, how new meanings and experiences come to be possible. In line with postcritical methodologies, it is suggested that discourses contain more than first appear, not in terms of hidden power struggles, but in terms of possibilities of meaning (which are never fixed once and for all). The idea is to look at texts and traditions and to engage with them diffractively in a free and unprogrammed way. As Geerts and Van der Tuin put it, following Karen Barad:

diffractively engaging with texts and intellectual traditions means that they are dialogically read ‘through one another’ to engender creative, and unexpected outcomes (…) Rather than flat-out rejecting what has been theorised before, the foundations of the old, so to say, are being re-used to think anew. (2021: 30)

For the critic, adhering to well-being discourse uncritically is naïve and ill-informed. In a way, the critic believes they know better because they can see what is hidden, the underlying structure of power relations underneath the well-being discourse. But surely, critique is more than trying to uncover the meaning hidden between the lines. A richer account of critique, one we could call criticism to mark the difference towards an account that integrates fully the postcritical dimension, might look at what is there, what is also manifest, enabled, made possible, through the discourse.

Katie Wright (2014) analysed the well-being discourse in the Australian context going back to its origins in the 1960s and ’70s to show how the well-being discourse was not primarily of an unacknowledged ‘therapeutic turn’, as many put it, but also, and very explicitly, of a growing democratic concern for justice in Western societies. A major part of her paper is devoted to acknowledging the important critical work that has been done about the well-being discourse. Hence, she cannot be said to adopt a naïve view of the phenomenon. However, against the sociological and philosophical critique of the pervasiveness of a culture that psychologizes social life, that promotes narcissism, self-absorption, and victimhood, and that has shifted away from the traditional goals of schooling, she shows how the concern for students’ social and emotional well-being is actually historically tied up to new priorities in the 1960s and ’70s to conceive forms of schooling that were less traditional and more equitable, less authoritarian and more sensitive to children’s needs and differences, and hence where every child could truly participate in the educational project. It seems important to note that the fact that the democratic discourse of well-being evolved and stabilized to become a discourse about equality of opportunities and individualized needs was never a necessity. One could try to imagine other ways of defining what is a democratic education, not one that seeks to equalize every child’s opportunities, but perhaps one that seeks to acknowledge every child’s dignity and foster capabilities (Sen 1995), or perhaps one that seeks to initiate each one to the world through its collective study (Vlieghe and Zamojski 2019). Indeed, the meaning of a democratic education could be different as long as the concern (the matter of concern) for an education that is available to all remains. Hence, at the heart of the therapeutic turn in education, there would be, according to Wright, a democratic aspect worth preserving from a critical perspective.

Child-centred pedagogies are generally described as opposed to ‘postcritical pedagogy’ (PCP) (Vlieghe and Zamojski 2019). Indeed, PCP values education for education’s sake, the love of a subject matter, and tries to turn away from pedagogies that are seen as instrumental and overly concerned with learning processes. Education should not, in this view, be a learning device, but a milieu of study of the world we share. However, the gesture of identifying the progressive layer of meaning embedded in the well-being discourse should by no means be read as a will to vindicate or legitimize a certain type of discourse over other ones. The point here is to destabilize the notion that the well-being discourse should necessarily be reduced to the idea of a hegemony of the therapeutic culture by showing that there are other less discussed aspects in this discourse that a different form of critique, let’s say criticism, might help to identify and work through: in this instance a democratic aspect identified by Wright (2014).

One may claim that the progressive aspect of well-being discourses is far from being silenced nowadays since positive psychologists and educational managers do claim that learning some emotional skills or attending to students’ individual affective needs is an important factor for developing autonomy and for achievement, especially for young people from underprivileged backgrounds. This is precisely the explicit and dominant discourse critical discourse analysts denounce in the first place. So what does Wright’s analysis add to the story? Perhaps, it is a recontextualization of where and how this discourse emerged in the first place, not as an instrumental tool to increase individualized achievement, but as a counter-discourse to programmes that have a strong traditionalist orientation. In a way, Wright’s work provides an example of Latour’s postcritical call to treat things not as matters of facts (as CDA often does) and more as matters of concern, as living and socially relevant things that concern us here and now, a call to reconnect those things to the network of productive associations and interactions that gave them life in the first place and not as determined and fixed categories of thought (Latour 2004). Her work seeks to understand the movement or vitality underlying the ramifications of the discourse. Hence, she insists on the importance of taking a historical stance and being open to the web of traditions of thought and disciplinary perspectives that informs the discourse and that might help to see other possibilities of meaning that are linked to democratic values. This differs from classic CDA by drawing attention to the somehow silenced or unacknowledged aspects of the discourse (vs only uncovering the hidden power relations).

Furthermore, the meaning of the well-being discourse could be understood in many other ways as one could look all the way back to ancient notions of care for the self in different philosophical schools, to Buddhist or other traditions of thought such as psychoanalysis. One could look at what I would call, following Gilles Deleuze (1975), ‘minor discourses’. A concrete example could be found in the work of the late Foucault, who explored at length the various practices founded on the precept of care for the self (epimeleia heautou) that was initiated in antiquity and became the matrix of Christian ascetism and later of modern thought (2001a: 6–16). Foucault was concerned with the necessity to reverse the ‘Cartesian moment’ and to redefine this tradition of care for the self, and of moral philosophy in general, as a way of living (spirituality) rather than as theoretical discourse (philosophy), retrieving the Greek wisdom in a sense (p. 16). To live well, in this tradition, is to ask the question of how one ought to live, and thus how to live deliberately, not following imposed rules and conventions, but affirming the self through transformation, through certain technologies of the self that ‘allow individuals to act on their body and soul, their thoughts, their conducts, and ways of being … to reach a certain state of happiness, purity, wisdom, perfection or immortality’6 (2001b: 1,604). This language resonates in a particular way when considered in the backdrop of the contemporary discourses in education that claims that education should help students understand who they are, construct their identities, and plan their life projects. Contrary to this view, where identity construction is seen as a rational and autonomous endeavour, Foucault shows that ‘self-construction’ can also be about refusing the self as it is, as it has already been constructed, and experimenting with it. Transformation, in this view, can occur in two ways: through love (erôs) and through ascetism (askêsis). Erôs comes from the outside, from an illumination that can induce a form of ascension, whereas askêsis is a work on the self for which the self is responsible (2001a: 17). As such, at the heart of this notion of care for the self, there are notions of attitude, of conversion, of love, and of self-transformation (p. 12) that echo the postcritical notions of ethos and affirmation mentioned earlier. Critique, again, does not only take the form of a refusal of principles, but is seen as having to be incarnated, practised, in daily life, if one is to live well and deliberately so as to be able to attain some form of bliss or tranquillity, which are different ways of approaching the question of well-being.

What generally leads critical theorists to criticize and denounce a discourse is generally its hegemonic function. Hence, CDA often concentrates on dominant discourses (political, institutional, mainstream media, or major research traditions). However, at the periphery, there are dissident voices, different intakes and sensitivities that testify to discursive irregularities (2001a). These discourses are crucial because they provide examples of ways in which the discourse of well-being may be translated or reappropriated differently. This phase of translation, is a time and space where interruption can occur, a time for what matters and should concern us, where one can affirm aspects of well-being over others, with the understanding of the political and historical aspects that influence it, and a preoccupation for what is, or is not, educational in them.

A postcritical analysis of the student well-being discourse is attentive to what happens in the breach when dominant meanings have been destabilized, and something needs to be enacted, when teachers or other educationists are concerned with students’ well-being, here and now. By indefinitely taking us back to the problem of fixing or determining meaning, this places the very possibility of meaning into tension, and consequently submits us to the experience of the impossibility of meaning, or as Derrida (1996) calls it, ‘the experience of aporia’. Therefore, it is not ultimately an act of understanding (of the meaning) but more importantly an act of opening new possibilities that we cannot fully predict or control. This is an ethical moment requiring to decide what matters and what to do next and to be responsible for what is to come. It is not a situation of planning for an anticipated future to realize according to a plan. It is about enabling, enacting, affirming an experience of well-being here and now, ways of living deliberately, of living in common also, that might not have yet been imagined, acting as if it were a genuine possibility, with no telos in view, and see what happens. Put differently, the postcritical moment is one of exploring and being able to perceive what is made possible, what may emerge from the destabilization of meaning in terms of experiences.

The examples examined here seem fruitful not only because they offer ways of enabling richer and more complex ways of thinking, of discussing and practising well-being but also because they are compatible with the very project of postcritical pedagogy. They exemplify a way of caring for the world through the initiation of something that matters to us as human beings, as cultural beings, as teachers of a subject matter. Such a methodology allows a ‘diffractive reading’ of well-being discourses, putting different ways to think about what it means to live well together and seeing what it does. In turn, this makes for a relevant subject of study, it also allows experimentation and could hopefully engender creative and unexpected well-being discourses and practices. This could be truly educational in that it could constitute an initiation to a dimension of the world that can be seen as worth caring for and preserving. Well-being is not currently constituted as a subject matter in schools; however, it could be argued that it would offer a richness of language for thinking, discussing about well-being, or about what it means to live well, to care for the self or the world, to live in common, to risk ourselves, etc., and perhaps even for experimenting with them. These are undoubtedly important issues for any human being.

Conclusion
A general result of the contemporary spread of well-being discourses around the world has been the development of a technological language and apparatus to address well-being issues such as self-regulation (mindfulness, conflict resolution, cardiac coherency, cognitive behaviour therapy) or self-expression (identification of emotions, expression of feelings, reflective journaling). As CDA has extensively shown, this language is to be questioned because it often privileges adaptation to an unjust world, blindly reaffirming capitalist values and contributing to forms of normalization that may prove alienating, especially for underprivileged groups. A postcritical response would put forward a different way to live in language, a different attitude towards meaning, recognizing the way it works, in an open way, open to new uses and in constant translation. It would try to resist forms of crystallization into discourses that would again induce instrumental and constraining ways of understanding well-being. It is impossible to predict or programme what a postcritical language of well-being would look like exactly, for this would go against the very spirit of postcriticality. However, it can be said that it would not emerge from a particular theory of well-being, it would rather be experimental and try to affirm something worth caring for in the present.

Perhaps some will wonder if what has just been described can really be construed as postcritical discourse analysis? Some could argue that PCDA should abandon a hermeneutical stance, that it should be postdiscursive because postcriticality is fundamentally anti-linguistic and materialistic, it seeks to establish ‘an affective bond … an embodied relation … to understand how it exerts its conatus’ (Croce in Oliverio and Thoilliez, in this issue). Perhaps, what could be answered is that discourse and language do have materiality as well, they not only produce discursive meaning, but concrete effects in terms of affects, resonances, and relations. To conclude, the work of imagination that is required if we are truly concerned about allowing the next generation to explore other potentialities of existence might involve initiating them to the study of well-being (or other related concepts), to what it means as well as to what it produces on the self.

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Footnotes
See e.g. Bruno Latour (2004), Rita Felski (2015), or Hodgson, Vlieghe and Zamojski (2018).
In italics and in English in the original.
In the conclusion of this issue of Journal of Philosophy of Education, Stefano Oliverio and Bianca Thoilliez reflect on this question of the paradigmatic shift.
My translation of: ‘Une disposition qui a toujours essayé de dire d’abord oui, pour voir ce que ça fait’ (italics are in the original).
My translation of: ‘la détermination de ce qui importe’ (italics are in the original).
My translation.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Philosophy of Education Society of Great Britain.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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Dear Marina,
Your article on postcritical discourse analysis resonates with Okkyung's life story.  The concepts of reclaiming meaning, moving beyond critique to affirmation, and "care of the self" mirror her journey of healing and self-discovery.  Like the multiple layers of meaning in discourse, Okkyung navigated complex contexts and personal struggles alongside a commitment to social justice.  Her reconnection with heritage, spiritual exploration, and message of forgiveness exemplified these principles.  Reconciling opposites and finding meaning in the margins also struck me.  Okkyung's life, like your analyzed discourses, integrated seemingly contradictory elements. Her engagement with North Korea reflected the importance of exploring alternative perspectives.  Thank you for your insightful work. It provides a valuable framework and a beautiful lens through which to appreciate the richness of Okkyung's life.

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2025/02/04

Should Wellbeing Be a Goal of Schooling? – Marina Schwimmer 2023

Should Wellbeing Be a Goal of Schooling? – Philosophical Inquiry in Education – Érudit

Should Wellbeing Be a Goal of Schooling?
Marina Schwimmer
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Un article de la revue Philosophical Inquiry in Education 

Volume 30, numéro 3, 2023, p. 179–192

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Revisiting “Pedagogy of Discomfort” Through the Combined Lenses of “Inconvenience” and “Affective Infrastructure”: Pedagogical and Political Insights
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Résumé
Introduction
Wellbeing as an Overarching Aim of Schooling
Normalizing Effects of Student Wellbeing as an Aim: Some Criticisms
On Self-Government
Ordinary Techniques of Care for the Self: Adaptation Versus Adjustment
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Abstract
Several philosophers and psychologists of education have taken the position that wellbeing should be at the heart of our educational system, if not its primary goal. The aim of this paper is to outline, question, and challenge this position. It starts by discussing the main approaches that consider student wellbeing as the primary goal of the educational system – the propositions of positive psychology and those of certain educational philosophers and psychologists. It follows with an examination of some major social critiques of the idea of wellbeing as a goal of schooling. Drawing mainly on Foucault, the paper questions the extent to which the aim of wellbeing contributes to normalization and hinders the possibility of self-government. The paper concludes that wellbeing should not be conceived as a goal, but rather as an ongoing preoccupation of care for the self.

Corps de l’article
Introduction
The wellbeing of students in school is a worldwide social concern today. It constitutes one of the fundamental aims of contemporary educational systems. Students’ experience of stress, anxiety, and depression is a major source of worry for the actors of educational systems, so much so that it warrants government intervention. The OECD has even begun measuring student wellbeing: in 2015, it commissioned a Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study to be carried out in 72 countries (OECD, 2017). The study concluded that, depending on the country, 12 to 20% of 15-year-old students reported a high level of dissatisfaction with their lives and a considerable degree of uneasiness in school.

National policies reflect in quite different ways the concern for student wellbeing in school. In 2014, the French Ministry of Education published Une école bienveillante, which provides guidelines for spontaneous interventions when students are in particular need. In 2005, the UK Department for Education issued a publication that listed the social emotional skills that students should learn in school to ensure their healthy development, and which would help lead to their success later in life. Even the countries that foster competitiveness and are particularly focused on academic performance have begun to institute policies mindful of student wellbeing. For example, certain schools in South Korea have introduced school terms without academic assessment (OECD, 2017). Although the policies implemented for the wellbeing of students may vary from country to country, they bear witness to a common concern: the responsibility of the school in the face of student stress, anxiety, and depression.

Two major discourses account for this new concern. The first, held primarily by the OECD, regards student wellbeing as a necessary condition for learning, for performing, and for contributing to the economic development of a country. The second, resulting from the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1989, regards wellbeing more and more as an inalienable right (Bradshaw, 2019, p. 97).

Dating back to progressive theorists of the early 20th century, through the radical deschooling and libertarian education movement of the 1960s and 1970s, when many theorists were influenced by psychoanalysis and trends in humanistic psychology, and until recent advances in psychology and the neurosciences, educational theorists and psychologists have taken the position that wellbeing should be at the heart of our educational system, if not its primary goal. Others, on the contrary, have denounced this project as ill-informed or even dangerous. The aim of this paper is twofold. First, it provides an overview of key positions in this ongoing debate over wellbeing as an aim of schooling and argues that what mainly separates the defenders and their opponents is the idea that an education aiming at wellbeing contributes to students’ autonomy, or their capacity to “self-govern.” Following this overview, the paper then discusses Michel Foucault’s work on self-government to problematize the very notion of autonomy and to develop a middle-ground framework in which wellbeing is conceived as an ongoing concern for the care of the self rather than as an ideal or non-ideal model to be attained. The main claim is that the pedagogical approaches developed and implemented as part of a focus on students’ wellbeing can end up inhibiting their possibilities for developing autonomy through a form of normalization and through enacting forms of subjectification, but can also prevent this and even be liberatory if treated with caution. To put it differently, what is argued for is a form of via negativa in which teachers and other educationists should refrain from defining wellbeing, happiness, or flourishing in advance and consider the question as one that should remain open for the students to explore themselves.

Wellbeing as an Overarching Aim of Schooling
An aim or a goal is a statement of principles or ideals that stem from values, from philosophical ideas, and from the aspirations of a social group or a society. In education, goals are set in terms of exit profiles: at the end of their educational journey, students will ideally have such and such qualities and such and such skills, and they will conduct themselves in such and such manner. The notion of a goal, therefore, cannot be dissociated from the acts undertaken to reach it (Gross & Prandi, 2004). Indeed, if student wellbeing must be a goal, we must have “a clear picture of what wellbeing is,” as John White puts it (2011, p. 2).

The ample literature we have on the subject shows that there are various conceptions of wellbeing and more specifically student wellbeing. Some are more individualistic while others are more collective; some are subjective (determined on the basis of how people feel, or report to be feeling) while others are objective (determined on the basis of an objective, universal set of goods or conditions), or a mixture of the two (Bradshaw, 2019; Kristjánsson, 2017). Amongst these conceptions, there is the hedonistic view (wellbeing as the experience of positive or negative states, and in particular states of satisfaction) and the eudaimonic view (which defines wellbeing as independence, acceptance of oneself, and having a meaningful life). The present format does not allow me to elaborate on these distinctions. What is important to keep in mind, however, is that despite concerns about not imposing a singular norm and defining for others what makes for a happy life, it seems, nevertheless, impossible to discuss wellbeing as a final goal of schooling without establishing some set of normative features. In support of this argument, let us briefly examine some contemporary conceptions theorized in the literature today according to which wellbeing should be a main goal of schooling.

Positive psychology is certainly the most influential approach today in defining wellbeing as a goal of schooling in educational and political discourses. Developed in the work of Martin Seligman in the 1980s and 1990s, it is generally adopted by international institutions such as the OECD, and it is at the heart of a rising number of pedagogical initiatives across the world under the banner of “positive education.” According to this line of thinking, emotional wellbeing is made up of a set of social emotional features that should be cultivated in individuals (Seligman, 2002). These psychologists, contrary to classical psychologists, who study the mentally ill and the deviant, began to study people who consider themselves happy, optimistic, and accomplished, to identify the correlative traits of character (e.g., compassion, pro-social tendencies, altruism) and thus provide the means to develop these traits and enable people to lead happier lives. The PERMA model is the result of these studies. It synthesizes the five major components of happiness: positive emotions, positive engagement, positive relationship, positive meaning, and positive accomplishment (Seligman and al., 2009). More recently positive health was added to the list (ibid.). To help students acquire these traits, different educational practices have seen the light of day. Indeed, some of these have been included in the school timetable of many schools around the world, especially in America – through writing exercises, group discussion, life coaching, problem resolution, and meditation exercises – with a view of teaching students to realign their learned explanatory styles, to de-dramatize situations, to regulate their emotions, to reinforce their social skills, or to increase their motivation (Seligman, 2007). The skills that these techniques are supposed to foster are intended to teach students to lead more positive, more self-responsible, and happier lives.

Similarly, self-determination theorists (SDT) also argue that there are universal human needs, the satisfaction of which is central to human flourishing. Also, through empirical research, their project consists in determining the elements of human experience that are the most conducive to human thriving (Ryan, Curren, & Deci, 2013). However, the approach differs from positive psychology in that according to these theorists, conceptions of happiness that derive from positive psychology (developing certain traits of character) do not produce an appropriate account of what is required for a human to thrive (Ryan and Martela, 2016). Happiness, they argue, derives from a good, worthwhile way of living; it is only a “byproduct” of a way of life that is rich and meaningful. Hence, it cannot really be sought out in and for itself, which would explain why materialistic ways of living do not tend to produce happiness in the end. Such a way of living may include “pursuing intrinsic goals, living autonomously, being mindful, being benevolent” (ibid., p. 1). Hence, proponents of SDT do not define the traits of happiness per se that should be acquired, but rather identify ways of living that can make for a good and flourishing life and might indirectly make one happy.

Many other philosophical accounts (i.e., Brighouse, 2006; White, 2001; Kristjánsson, 2016; Noddings, 2003) follow a similar line of argument. They consider it possible to identify what it means to live a good and flourishing life, one that feels both satisfying and meaningful, and that has objective value, and proceed to characterize the good life to be pursued through educational policies or practices. White (2001) for example, who is much influenced by the work of James Griffin (1989) and Joseph Raz (1986), recognizes that certain (pre)conditions are necessary for human flourishing (i.e., social, economic, political, physical, and psychological conditions) and argues that “[a] fulfilling life is built around successful and wholehearted, intrinsically motivated involvement in worthwhile activities” (p. 64). After a discussion about what makes for a worthwhile activity, he discusses the question of how the school can and should contribute to students’ capacity to lead flourishing lives and suggests changes that could be made to the traditional curriculum to offer more fulfilling possibilities. Similarly, Harry Brighouse (2006) defines flourishing using Richard Layard’s “big seven” elements (Layard, 2011) that influence happiness (i.e., financial situation, family relationships, work, community and friends, health, personal freedom, and personal values) and considers that schooling should equip students to lead flourishing lives by offering a rich curriculum. He also claims that the question of happiness should be addressed more directly in schools, that students should learn about family life, parenting, emotional development, work–life balance, how to organize their finances, what flourishing is, the place of consumption, and how to use leisure time (ibid., pp. 54–55). As will be discussed later, he offers a rich reflection on the extent to which it is legitimate to define wellbeing, or flourishing, in advance for students and how this relates to the autonomy of students. Kristján Kristjánsson (2016), for his part, considers that these views of flourishing, although compelling, are missing something important, what he calls a certain fullness, a sense of transcendence, and suggests that philosophers of education should adopt an extended or more enchanted view of flourishing, one that includes transpersonal values, ecstatic experiences, that is to say, “emotions directed at ideals or idealisations, such as beauty, truth and goodness” (p. 8). According to Kristjánsson, this enchanted view need not be supernaturalistic, although he considers that theistic religions and works of art may be important resources for this type of flourishing. Again, in wanting to enrich the meaning of flourishing, what is searched for is a predefined understanding of what it means to be happy or lead a flourishing life.

In the line of thought of the ethics of care, Nel Noddings (2003) also advocates that schools should teach in such a way as to enhance student happiness. Again, she also acknowledges the existence of a variety of ways of conceiving the good life and the impossibility of imposing a single conception of the good. Her discussion of the subject is nuanced and acknowledges the complexity of the issues involved. Nevertheless, she cannot avoid defining the values and the dispositions that the school should instill and cultivate in students so that they may lead happy lives in the present and in the future. The distinctive feature of her argument is to highlight a relational approach to wellbeing by acknowledging the importance of the interdependence of subjects and the creation of conditions that allow for mutually supportive relationships – like those that should exist in the home. Noddings goes on to list certain qualities to the development of which the school should contribute: “politeness, wit, cultivated taste, unhurried serenity, a talent for listening, hospitality (and) the ability to respond positively to others and not just to fulfill assigned duties” (ibid., p. 35). There are very marked differences in language and focus between the propositions put forward by positive psychology, Noddings, and liberal philosophers of education. Positive psychology emphasizes the acquisition of skills and the adoption of positive attitudes such as optimism, commitment, and resilience, while Noddings defines, albeit in a nuanced manner, the interpersonal qualities that must be fostered to build a happy society: attentiveness, hospitality, listening. The specific qualities that contribute to human flourishing are not postulated by liberal philosophers of education. But they do propose an idea of what a flourishing subject is – that is, one who engages in objectively worthwhile and meaningful activities.

As Wolbert, De Ruyter, and Schinkel (2019) have argued, these accounts mostly rely on an ideal theory approach (p. 29). Their aim is to clarify and conceptualize this very notion of wellbeing, happiness, flourishing, or the good life and use it as a guiding principle for action, from which to derive educational practices and policies. They are careful in not giving too much of a substantive definition of what the good life should look like, but still they portray an idealized image, or vision, of what is aimed for. According to the authors, an ideal theory can lack in relevance if it fails to take into consideration much of real-life complexities: “too many parents, schools and children are so far removed from the ideal that describing an ideal blueprint has little meaning,” they say (ibid., p. 35). The authors then outline a “nonideal theory approach” and discuss two options. The first, in line with Amartya Sen’s capability approach (2002), is that we should focus on the needs of children in particular contexts and theorize how these can be met in real life, and the other is that we should take contextual variables into account in theorizing the ideal itself. This would be a form of realistic idealism in which theory is concerned with what is possible in real-life situations. These are very important points, however the notion that there is a predominant model of happiness or flourishing, and that there should be one, even if it is more realistic and non-ideal, seems to remain. The question I would like to address in the next section is to what extent the meaning of wellbeing or flourishing should be predefined at all.

Normalizing Effects of Student Wellbeing as an Aim: Some Criticisms
Against the notion that wellbeing should be if not the main aim of schooling, then one of its priorities, many critics have argued that wellbeing or flourishing should in no way be predefined and considered as an aim. Even scholars from the flourishing tradition itself have started to doubt its relevance as an educational aim. For example, in his paper on the educational virtue of flourishing, Carr claims that “flourishing is limited to the shaping of affect and appetite for fairly basic character developmental purposes and serves to identify no very clear, common, or uncontroversial moral or other educational aims” (2021, p. 405). The arguments vary considerably and draw on different traditions of thought, but one aspect that runs through most of them, and that will be the focus of this section, is the idea that defining wellbeing as an aim, through ideal or non-ideal theory, cannot do away with the issue of determining in advance a norm of happiness or flourishing, of what a flourishing student should be, do, or look like. This might ultimately reveal itself to be problematic, especially from an educational standpoint, because the normativity that is embedded in any definition of wellbeing or flourishing, and the practices that follow, may hinder the possibility for students to define what is a good and flourishing life for themselves in the end. As we shall see, predefined models of wellbeing or flourishing may contribute to the development of pedagogical practices that influence and shape subjectivities in paternalistic ways.

The first critical stance that argues in this direction is one defended by Kathryn Ecclestone and Dennis Hayes, according to whom the focus on student wellbeing or flourishing has led to a dangerous “therapeutic turn” in education (2008). Authors following this line of thought generally refer to a specific cultural trend coined the “self-esteem movement,” inspired by humanist psychology, which was itself a reaction to what was previously seen as an overemphasis on instructional concerns in schools. Against traditional views of schooling, many psychologists have developed theories and practices that were more sensitive to the “whole child development,” to his or her inner life, and the importance of social and emotional skills. Several cultural critics have denounced these trends for creating individualistic subjects incapable of founding communities (Rieff, 1966; Lasch, 1979) or for creating vulnerable people who interpret everything they experience according to their inner life and feelings (Furedi, 2004). Similarly, some have argued that focusing too much on our feelings and on experiences of closeness and warmth with others can make it difficult for someone to form a public self. Richard Sennett (1992), for example, argues that although developing such a public figure may arguably be criticized for creating a sense of self that is impersonal or inauthentic (because it relies primarily on the superego, which in Freud’s framework is a self that has been distorted by social conventions), it may contribute to the development of a certain self-detachment (a distance with the purely instinctual id), which serves as a layer of protection against the aggressions of public life. Following this line of thought, Ecclestone and Hayes (2008) argue that the concern for students’ inner life and self-esteem, and the rise of pedagogical activities (e.g., drawing “feeling” trees, having circle time) designed specifically to make students feel at ease, and to let them express their emotions, paradoxically produces the opposite result in that they bring to the fore concerns that, generally speaking, students did not have before: “They normalize the bad experiences of a minority of children as universal difficulties that ‘we all have’” (p. 44). In other words, they consider that the emotional wellbeing agenda relies on a diminished view of human potential that undermines development and contributes to labelling. Furthermore, and perhaps most importantly, Ecclestone and Hayes (2008) contend that the wish to protect students from all negative emotions and the expectation that all students should acquire self-confidence, learn with enthusiasm, and develop a certain emotional intelligence, ends up formatting the way children must experience and express their emotions and the way in which they must experience academic learning. As they put it, it imposes an “orthodoxy of appropriate feeling” (ibid., p. 42). They give many different examples of ways in which school practices impose the norms of what is deemed appropriate to students, through smoothing transitions (breathing or meditation exercises, for example), nurture groups (discussion sessions about emotions, for example), or assessment practices, or through the existing curriculum (reflective writing, for example), imposing ways of making sense of things and themselves that are “almost impossible to challenge” (ibid., p. 45).

In a somehow similar way, many contemporary critics argue that the dominant conceptions of wellbeing, informed most notably by positive psychology and the cognitive sciences, promote practices and values that contribute to the shaping of neoliberal subjectivities (Dardot & Laval, 2009; Cabanas and Illouz, 2019). In its report on the wellbeing of students, the OECD (2017) states the importance of creating a school environment that is conducive to wellbeing by underscoring the importance of learning certain skills: how to be optimistic, develop self-control, be able to work with others, or be able to choose one’s academic and professional career (pp. 236–241). These social and emotional skills are meant to help students foster positive emotions, be motivated, feel responsible for the course of their studies, and know how to self-regulate efficiently in order to be successful. Such ideas reflect to various degrees some key aspects of the literature on the aim of wellbeing and the ideal of helping students lead autonomous, meaningful lives, but many also argue that this is a delusion. As Kingfisher (2013) puts is, it is no coincidence that positive thinking, self-regulation, self-examination, and entrepreneurialism, which are the qualities promoted in wellbeing discourses and practices (such as meditation classes, problem-resolution techniques, self-regulation of emotions techniques, and the like) are also the qualities required for the neoliberal economy.

In line with a Foucauldian perspective (to which I will return later), the notion that wellbeing should be an aim of schooling is interpreted as an instrument for the fabrication of neoliberal or entrepreneurial subjects who should be flexible, responsible, proactive, and adapted for the benefit of the economic system. This argument has been developed extensively, for example in a paper provocatively intitled “Making Little Neo-Liberals: The Production of Ideal Child/Learner Subjectivities in Primary School through Choice, Self-Improvement and ‘Growth Mindsets’” (Bradbury, 2019). It has also been carefully analyzed in the context of the importation of mindfulness and yoga in schools (see, for example, Jackson, 2019) and the importation of self-regulation techniques more broadly (see, for example, Schwimmer, 2021). In this framework, wellbeing techniques in schools are interpreted as part of a neoliberal apparatus of governmentality, which involves state incentives for self-government in line with the competitive logic of neoliberalism.

A predefined model of wellbeing or flourishing, such as the PERMA model, is considered worrisome not only because it is aligned with the economic demands of our time, but more broadly perhaps because it imposes a one-size-fits-all model of happiness based on positivity. Referring to the work of Sara Ahmed (2010), Jackson and Bingham (2018) argue that “happiness can be used in communities as a tool to maintain a status quo that does not intrinsically aid the cultivation of all members’ happiness equally” (p. 228). Ahmed has shown quite convincingly how happiness has served historically as a justification for different forms of assimilation. For example, on the pretext that Indigenous people were not “happy” according to established Western expectations, it seemed justified to civilize them. Even if the wish for them to find happiness might have been sincere, what was wished for was that they would find happiness without compromising the established equilibrium of Western societies, thus imposing a moral order for all. The same may be said about the place of women in society, as it is often expected that they find happiness without disrupting their assigned role as good girls or home keepers, for example. The woman who refuses to be happy in her assigned role might be seen as acting in bad faith or being a “killjoy” (Ahmed, 2010). This view sees happiness as an individualized and internalized matter, a question of personal choice in which the person is responsible for being happy or not (Jackson & Bingham, 2018). Some personal characteristics or qualities are deemed important for my flourishing (optimism, wit, empathy, purpose), I have the internal capacity to develop them through various forms of exercises, and hence, I should make sure to develop them. This psychologized view fails to recognize that emotions are also very much relational and that requiring that someone be happy may be oppressive in some contexts. Drawing on this, Jackson and Bingham claim that the expectation that every student should find happiness fails to acknowledge that unequal, pre-existing social and political conditions and relations might understandably prevent equal flourishing for all. Moreover, they are concerned that the wellbeing agenda, with its injunction to feel happy, may be used as an instrument to make students, especially those from underprivileged backgrounds, compliant and ensure that they accept and maintain the status quo.

Finally, against the notion that wellbeing should be an aim of schooling, many have developed an argument inspired by existentialism. Suffering and pain are complex, paradoxical, and inevitable dimensions of human existence and thus schools should give them more importance. In his book Happiness, Hope, and Despair, Peter Roberts (2015) contends that schooling should play an important role in helping young people to learn about and to better understand human suffering. He argues that it is normal and even desirable that school should be a source of some discomfort, doubt, and uneasiness, seeing how these feelings can help us grow as individuals by forcing us take a step back. The existentialist philosopher Kierkegaard (1989), for example, sees despair as a distinguishing and meritorious human feature that anyone should be aware of. It is a matter of self-consciousness in a way. In a world in which we expect students to be open-minded, that is, open to revising their first order beliefs, some form of anguish is to be expected (ibid.). According to this line of argument, then, wellbeing as a goal carries the risk of diverting our attention from the educational potential of discomfort or even of suffering caused, for instance, either by the obligation to participate in activities that one initially finds senseless or by finding oneself involved in disharmonious situations or relationships. Hence, the idea of a wellbeing-centred school could prove counterproductive. Judith Suissa (2008, p. 82) also reminds us, for example, that education is challenging, unsettling, and possibly liberating in a manner that entails pain and that happiness-oriented education seeks to avoid such an experience. She argues that the criterion of life satisfaction on which positive psychology relies, although holistic, is an insufficient expression of what makes for a life well lived. It does not account for the value, the importance, and the meanings that people ascribe to their experiences, nor to the complexity of the meaning-making processes that underlie them. In other words, it seems impossible to develop a predefined understanding of wellbeing or flourishing that includes all the nuances and complexity of an actual life. Hence, a definition will always be somewhat reductive and serve as an orientation that might prove alienating for some, in some contexts.

It could be argued that the philosophical approaches discussed earlier give rich and fine accounts of happiness, or flourishing, that do take the existential, moral, relational, and even political aspects of existence into consideration, acknowledging the importance of developing meaningful relationships or some transcendental values that makes a life meaningful, for example. Indeed, many approaches described above recognize this complexity. Although they might not be normalizing in a strict sense of imposing one and only one definition of the good life, such accounts remain in some way paternalistic in the sense that they cannot do without having to define to some extent what makes for a flourishing life for someone else, as Brighouse acknowledges (2006, p. 42).

Indeed, according to Brighouse, this paternalistic dimension, although it makes some feel uncomfortable, is inevitable in any educational endeavour. He argues it is the role of parents, teachers, and school administrators to determine, in part, what is best for children, for their development and their future, and thus they have a legitimate authority when it comes to bringing up and educating children (ibid., p. 43). He gives examples such as forcing children to eat their vegetables or practising piano or studying. Notwithstanding the problem of whether the state school should indeed have such an authority, one can readily recognize that there might be a difference between coercing a child into learning about literature or science, and initiating him or her to a particular way of living a good life. They both act on an emotional and aesthetic level, but the latter touches the fundamental ethical question of how to live in a more direct way, and of how to choose to live authentically. Imposing a certain language and ways to go about it seems to run against the liberal value of individual freedom that most wellbeing scholars are trying to defend in the first place. Anticipating such criticism, Brighouse insists: “I do not say that they should be forced to live their lives in a particular way”; the schools’ paternalistic duty is not to decide for the children, but “to provide children with plentiful opportunities to develop the resources for a flourishing life” (ibid, p. 52). However, this distinction seems to rely on a particular understanding of what it means to decide how to live for oneself, of what it means to be autonomous and be able to govern oneself.[1] And one could ask to what extent developing those “resources that make for a flourishing life” actually allows one to decide freely. The next two sections examine this question.

On Self-Government
As mentioned, authors who argue for wellbeing, happiness, or flourishing as an aim of schooling generally consider autonomy to be a fundamental part of what it entails, because people vary in the kind of life that will enable them to flourish, and for this reason, they should have the opportunity to enter ways of living that were not predetermined for them by the way they were brought up (see, for example, Brighouse, 2006, p. 15). For people to really flourish, they must identify with a conception of the good life that is objectively good and they must do so “from the inside” (ibid., p. 17), which “requires the resources and liberties that justice requires for people to live well by their own judgement” (ibid., p. 18). This means that students who come from a variety of backgrounds, for example, should be exposed to authentic alternative ways of living, and that they should learn the reflective skills that will allow them to choose autonomously between real alternatives (pp. 18–19). This claim is discussed in much detail in Brighouse’s chapter on self-government. One interesting thing about this description is that it takes into account many indirect effects of the school (the environment, the composition, the ethos) that may intervene on the choices that are made possible to students, and thus provides a rich account of the way power and coercion are actually exercised.

According to Skinner’s work on the genealogy of the concept of liberty (2016), power has traditionally been viewed as the absence of interference or constraint, and is thus usually seen as being exercised by an identifiable source onto the subject to prevent the subject from choosing freely. This source could be an external agent (such as a state, a parent, or a teacher) or the subject themselves (when they are acting solely out of passion or in an inauthentic way to fit social expectations, for example, or through false consciousness). Autonomy is thus often viewed as requiring an absence of interferences from outside agents or from oneself. Brighouse seems to follow this line of thought: if students are presented with authentic alternative choices or possibilities, if they have the capacity to exercise reflective reasoning, and if they are in an environment in which they can act on their judgements, they should have the freedom to choose their own conceptions of the good life – they will be able to exercise autonomy.

However, this general way of conceiving of self-government and autonomy still seems to rely on the idea that autonomy is a practice of freedom of choice, and that this is sufficient for self-governing. This is where the thought of Foucault might prove useful. The liberal accounts of autonomy, and their place in the conduct of a good or flourishing life, seem to be lacking a recognition that our conduct is inevitably conducted, that power is inevitably exercised, and that even self-government may be governed by an outside source of power. In other words, from a Foucauldian perspective, the practices and structures that scholars of students’ wellbeing advocate are part of a governing apparatus and constitute a way of directing students’ conduct. To show how this works, and how it affects the way we should understand the place of autonomy in any conception of “student wellbeing,” I will now turn to Foucault’s view on the concept of self-government, and the importance he gives to what he calls the care of the self.

As Foucault (2010) has carefully shown, modern power is characterized by a concern over coercing citizens as little as possible. The liberal state, and thus a liberal education, refuses to explicitly impose norms, principles, or ways of doing or thinking. However, according to him, the liberal state and schooling encourages these norms or behaviours differently, by making subjects/students want themfrom the inside, to reuse Brighouse’s expression (Foucault, 2010). This power is not exercised through direct instruction or with the clear intention of closing students’ minds by limiting their access to different views. On the contrary, it encourages free choice. However, it acts on the relationship that people develop with themselves, the way they “care for the self,” to use Foucault’s vocabulary. This is different from what Skinner calls “inauthenticity” (following social expectations) in the sense that the target of modern power is precisely the authentic will of the person. It is also slightly different from false consciousness or hegemony in the sense that it has nothing to do with social classes or any binary notion of ruler/ruled. Indeed, according to Foucault, modern political power is diffuse, it cannot be localized, it operates through the general discourses of the time, in common everyday speech, interactions, and activities. It operates through an ethics of truth (what is seen as possible and desirable by individual people) that is not the result of rational deliberations, of peer pressure about how one should live after considering different options, or any other linear source, but that is, rather, motivated by subtle incentives or disincentives in the context of concrete experiences that make people desire certain things in the most authentic way.

According to Foucault, the origin of this form of power is to be found in Christianity, in what Foucault calls pastoral power: practices of directing someone’s conscience such as confession or prayer (Foucault, 2005; 2009). According to Foucault, and contrary to common belief, although pastoral power has been secularized, we have not completely gotten rid of it. A concrete example, lengthily analyzed by Dardot and Laval (2009), concerns the neoliberal incentive to perform and become competitive. The neoliberal state does not compel its citizens to become a certain way; it creates the right conditions, the proper stage, in which they will want to become competitive without even having the chance to rationally evaluate if they actually want to or not. For example, through the multiplication of tests and exams, of opportunities for one to stand out (prizes, bursaries), of specialists of achievement, students are progressively invited to position themselves in a world of performance and competition without really having much of a choice. Stepping back from this requires more than reflective reasoning: it requires an active form of resistance.

Hence, the target of modern power is precisely the relationship that people entertain with themselves in the multiple dimensions of their lives, in its most intimate and ordinary details, “the production of an interior, secret and hidden truth” (Foucault, in Lorenzini, 2015, p. 61) – all that affects the way they choose to govern themselves. Foucault coined the concept of “conduct” to examine the techniques and procedures developed by pastoral power in the Western world to govern human beings. Conduct refers to an activity of conduction as well as the way we conduct ourselves; to exercise power (to govern) is thus to try to conduct the conducts of others, to try to act on their possibilities of action, on the way they choose to govern themselves (ibid.). This is a three-dimensional process: conduct someone, being conducted, conduct oneself. The last dimension can be said to be autonomous only if one is able to accept or refuse, and for this to be a real possibility, one does not only need to be able to observe other possibilities and reflect on them, but one also must be able to critique and resist, and this means that one must engage in concrete practices or exercises of “counter-conduct.”

If we accept the idea that modern political power is exercised through the way people are encouraged to relate to themselves, and thus through the exercises they practise of everyday life in which they develop this relationship, then the important analytical tool is not only the discourse, the external conditions, but mostly the daily, ordinary techniques that are being practised in schools, what Foucault calls “technologies of the self” (2005, 2009) and what Lorenzini (2015), inspired by Cavell, calls “techniques of the ordinary.” The techniques are at the centre of all schooling practices: they take the form of reading, writing, or discussing, or of bodily exercises such as sitting, training, meditating, being attentive, memorizing, working the imagination, or remaining silent.[2] These techniques may be educative in many ways: they can help students to work on themselves, develop their minds, control their own thoughts and behaviours, or identify who they are and what their life projects might be, all forms of exercise that contribute to what Foucault calls the care of the self. However, according to Foucault, they can also induce a relationship to the self that is far from autonomous because they often rely on a form of obedience, whether in the form of a pastoral power or of a more liberal one, in which freedom of choice might be preserved on the surface but in which the choice is actually constrained to consenting to the rule of the majority or the market (ibid., p.72).

The reason for this detour through Foucault’s theory is to insist on the fact that for some form of self-government (or autonomy) to be a real possibility in real existences (and not just an abstract, juridical one), one needs to engage in counter-conducts and to experience other ways of conducting oneself. This requires a critical attitude, which is not to be understood simply as the skill of critical thinking, that is, the skill of putting something into question or denouncing it. It refers to an ethos, an ethics (of truth); a way of being, caring, thinking; a refusal to being conducted in such a way, to such an extent; and the actual practice of something different (Foucault, 1997). For Foucault, as for other philosophers such as Hadot and Cavell (Lorenzini, 2015), this opens a new space in the political sphere, the sphere of ethics, understood not as a set of normative principles but as a practical way of life and of caring for oneself.

To come back to the notion of wellbeing as an aim of schooling, we can recall that in educational research, there is a general tendency to define wellbeing and its conditions of realization, and to reflect on how to pursue it through various practices and procedures. The critical literature on this topic is, as we have seen, already well developed. One problem that seems to run across it, as I have tried to show, is the tendency towards normalization: defining a notion of wellbeing to be pursued can lead to various forms of psychologization, reductions, and exclusions. Against this critical literature, one could argue that the type of normalization that the aim of wellbeing induces is not problematic because it does not impede people’s capacity to decide how they ought to live. Through the activities that schools provide to foster wellbeing, one could argue that what is offered are “resources” for flourishing and not the promotion of a way of life. In this section, I introduced Foucault’s notion of self-government and technologies of the self to show that the techniques and exercises that are being practised daily in schools cannot be dissociated from the practical ethics of everyday life that they promote and suggested that they could inadvertently constitute tools of normalization instead of leading to autonomy. What now remains to be explored is whether or not these exercises allow for some degree of autonomy in the way they lead people to conduct themselves, to self-govern, in the details of their daily ordinary lives.

Ordinary Techniques of Care for the Self: Adaptation Versus Adjustment
In order to reflect on the degree of autonomy allowed by certain school exercises, more specifically exercises that have to do with wellbeing and self-government, I now briefly examine two categories of practices (or technologies of the self): techniques of self-regulation and techniques of self-expression. The purpose of this last section is to show that these techniques do not automatically lead to autonomy or flourishing, and that, as a matter of fact, they generally do not because of their cooptation by a system overly focused on achievement competition. However, I also claim here that they could perhaps potentially be liberatory if they were used as tools of care for the self (epimeleia heautou), although this seems unlikely in our present time (Foucault, 2005). As suggested, to care for the self is to live well, or ethically, in Foucault’s view: it is to ask the question of how one ought to live deliberately, not simply following implicit rules or conventions, but affirming the self through concrete exercises of transformation – technologies of the self that allow one to act on their body and soul, their thoughts, conducts, and ways of being (ibid.).

Techniques of self-regulation are taught to help students to appease themselves, reduce their stress, concentrate, be attentive to the situation, and most importantly, control their emotions, behaviours, and thoughts (Shanker, 2013). They come in different forms – meditation, relaxation, cardiac coherency, breathing, drawing, time management, problem-resolution techniques, physical exercises such as yoga or stretching – and their main purpose is to create a classroom climate that is conducive to learning. As such, autoregulation techniques are directly associated with the conception of wellbeing presented in the first section, with notions of social and emotional skills as well as autonomy and meaningful learning.

These techniques can be conducted by people in a variety of ways and that is precisely where the ethical dimension stated above comes into play. The type of relationship that someone develops with themselves will define the ethical substance of their conduct: is it a relation of obedience, of guidance, of inspiration, of critique, of resistance? The techniques in themselves have little meaning outside the relationship the person develops with them, and this seems like an important blind spot of our educational systems. Educators initiate students daily into a set of techniques with very little regard for the way students relate to them. However, this relationship has to do with the type of subjectivity they are developing through them. Is it one in which the students are asked to blindly apply the techniques to achieve what the system expects of them? Or is it one in which they learn how to care for the self, how to give shape to their own lives? Do the exercises that are practised encourage an attitude of critique regarding what is expected, an attitude of openness to self-transformation or towards self-affirmation?

As mentioned, self-regulation skills are usually taught in schools to help students develop emotional and cognitive self-control (Shanker, 2013). However, they can easily be coopted to the benefit of other forces, especially economic ones (Schwimmer, 2021; Danis & Schwimmer, 2022). Indeed, self-regulation techniques are often used in the context of schooling as tools to help reduce the anxiety and stress caused by the pressure imposed on students to achieve in different domains. In such contexts, self-regulation is instrumental: it is primarily a tool that schools use for the purpose of achievement, a tool that students are invited to use to adapt to a system obsessed with performance.[3] In this context, the relationship that one develops with oneself is somehow predetermined by a field of finalized actions oriented towards ends that have been extrinsically defined and that do not necessarily help the students to enter a relationship of care for the self. On the contrary, some even argue that techniques of self-regulation can contribute to developing an alienated relationship with the self because they implicitly teach people to accept the status quo and to transform themselves in order to fit, adapt, and cope with the educational (or more widely the political and economic) system as it is, even if it is debilitating for them (see, for example, Dardot & Laval, 2009; Møllgaard, 2008; Critchley, 2008). The example of mindfulness is illuminating here. Empirical research conducted with teachers who use self-regulation techniques in their classrooms has shown that they mostly do so from an adaptative perspective to create a calm classroom climate in preparation for learning (Danis & Schwimmer, 2022; Garcia, Fraysse, & Bataille, 2021). The practice of mindfulness is rarely conducted as a genuine exercise of care for the self, but more often as a tool for something else. If students are repeatedly introduced to the technique of mindfulness as a preparation for something that has been determined by the teacher, there is little chance that they will develop a relationship of ownership with it. In other words, the context in which one is introduced to a daily routine will most certainly inform the meaning of that practice. Perhaps, to follow Foucault’s perspective, to be able to experience it in a way that is not instrumental or subjected to values of achievement or competition, and that is potentially liberatory would require that the practice be recontextualized and reframed as a counter-conduct. Mindfulness would have to be experienced as a genuine alternative detached from any concerns for achievement or obedience, and even as a way to practise resistance, which, in our current context, seems fairly unrealistic.

Besides self-regulation techniques, wellbeing is often pursued through techniques of self-expression. These techniques can also take various forms such as reflective practices (reflective writing, reflective drawing), dialogue with another (whether it is the teacher, an educational psychologist, or another student), and group discussion. They are generally introduced to students to help them identify their feelings and thoughts, and to communicate them properly and thus resolve conflicts (inner conflicts or conflicts with others) that they may be experiencing (Danis & Schwimmer, 2022). Popular among educators are techniques such as the worry box, the “feeling” tree, or circle time, in which students are invited to name and share their worries and their feelings. Being able to put words on what you are experiencing is an important way to grow as a person. However, as is the case for self-regulation techniques, these exercises can also be predetermined from the outside in a way that may prove restrictive. As Ecclestone and Hayes (2008) have argued, when such exercises are programmed in such a way that vocabularies are imposed on students, they can paradoxically contribute to imposing a certain orthodoxy of feeling instead of letting students explore more freely ways of expressing themselves.

Here again, techniques of self-expression can hence be assimilated by students in a variety of ways: they can either incite students to adapt to pre-defined models of speech, or become productive tools of adjustment. Adjustment, contrary to adaptation, reflects a complex relationship to the existing world in which a person works on self-understanding, affirmation, and transformation, through attention, listening, and conversation. The techniques, instead of contributing to normalization processes, can thus also help students to individualize as subjects and become self-reliant. But to be as such, self-regulation and self-expression need to be reframed as open-ended and free from any predetermined goal. Again, this requires a particular sensitivity to the way these techniques are introduced to students, the context and the language that is used. If a mindfulness technique is systematically introduced before exams or explicitly as an instrument to help students calm down before a lesson, then its instrumental function will implicitly be transmitted, and students will probably be prone to develop an instrumental relationship with it. In a similar way, if students are systemically invited to name and discuss their emotional life using a set of predetermined concepts (such as joy, anger, or sadness), they might not be inclined to explore other distinctions or ways of expressing it that would be a better “fit” for them, to use Cavell’s expression (2015), with their own personal experience.

Conclusion
Theories centred on wellbeing, happiness, or human flourishing as a goal of schooling cannot do without establishing a certain norm of flourishing. Although they might not necessarily always provide a clear list of the traits and behaviours that must be developed to flourish, or exactly what type of model of “happiness” needs to be reached, these theories usually provide a clear picture of what conditions and/or resources are required to be able to lead a flourishing life. These resources are considered to leave a person free to choose his or her conception of the good life because they are presented as distinct from the person, as tools that may or may not be used. What I have tried to show in this paper is that these resources cannot be detached and exteriorized so easily from those who use or enact them because they are practices – exercises that are intimately related to the way people conduct and relate to themselves. They are the fabric that constitutes the subjectivities in their most authentic forms.

What I have tried to show is that these exercises can only allow for some degree of autonomy in the way they lead people to conduct themselves, to self-govern in their daily ordinary lives, if they can be experienced in a way that has not been predetermined. This requires that teachers and other educationists refrain from imposing a predefined notion of what is wellbeing or flourishing for the students. It requires a particular attention to the contexts and conditions in which they are introduced, and which give them their meaning and their force. Flourishing is not something that should be characterized in advance; it is something students should be invited to define for themselves through a process of progressive adjustment (as opposed to simple adaptation) to a real-life perspective that is there, but that can also be changed. This requires that students have a chance not only to encounter a variety of ways of living and reflect on them, but to engage in everyday school exercises, conducts, and conversations in a way that leaves them some space to experience them in an undetermined way.

Parties annexes
Biographical note
Marina Schwimmer is Professor of Educational Foundations at Université du Québec à Montréal. She works mainly in the field of philosophy of education from a poststructuralist perspective and is interested in various educational issues related to translation, criticism, teacher ethics, and the culture of well-being.

Notes
[1]It might be anecdotal, but it seems interesting to note that most proponents of wellbeing as an aim are men while critics are mainly women, as if they had a particular sensitivity regarding such paternalistic views.
[2]Inspired by Foucault, and Hadot and Cavell, Lorenzini (2015) identifies five sets of techniques that contribute to this ethical process of constitution of the self: attention techniques (concentration on the self, delimitation of the present, attention to the particular), thought techniques (meditation, self-examination, discipline of representations, direction of conscience, gaze and imagination exercises), speech techniques (writing, reading, listening, dialogue, conversation, parrhêsia), corporeal techniques (body training, use of pleasures, cynic despoliation), and refusal techniques (civil disobedience and the courage of eccentricity).
[3]Liz Jackson (2019) has also analyzed this danger carefully in her provocative paper entitled “Must Children Sit Still?: The Dark Biopolitics of Mindfulness and Yoga in Education.”
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Should Wellbeing Be a Goal of Schooling?Marina Schwimmer


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Diffusion numérique : 6 mai 2024URIhttps://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1111134aradresse copiéeune erreur s'est produiteDOIhttps://doi.org/10.7202/1111134aradresse copiéeune erreur s'est produite


Un article de la revue Philosophical Inquiry in Education

Volume 30, numéro 3, 2023, p. 179–192

All Rights Reserved © Marina Schwimmer, 2023

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Revisiting “Pedagogy of Discomfort” Through the Combined Lenses of “Inconvenience” and “Affective Infrastructure”: Pedagogical and Political Insights

Plan de l’articleRetour au début
Résumé
Introduction
Wellbeing as an Overarching Aim of Schooling
Normalizing Effects of Student Wellbeing as an Aim: Some Criticisms
On Self-Government
Ordinary Techniques of Care for the Self: Adaptation Versus Adjustment
Conclusion
Biographical note
Notes
Bibliography
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Résumés
Abstract

Several philosophers and psychologists of education have taken the position that wellbeing should be at the heart of our educational system, if not its primary goal. The aim of this paper is to outline, question, and challenge this position. 

  • It starts by discussing the main approaches that consider student wellbeing as the primary goal of the educational system – the propositions of positive psychology and those of certain educational philosophers and psychologists. 
  • It follows with an examination of some major social critiques of the idea of wellbeing as a goal of schooling. Drawing mainly on Foucault, the paper questions the extent to which the aim of wellbeing contributes to normalization and hinders the possibility of self-government
  • The paper concludes that wellbeing should not be conceived as a goal, but rather as an ongoing preoccupation of care for the self.
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Corps de l’article
Introduction


The wellbeing of students in school is a worldwide social concern today. It constitutes one of the fundamental aims of contemporary educational systems. Students’ experience of stress, anxiety, and depression is a major source of worry for the actors of educational systems, so much so that it warrants government intervention. The OECD has even begun measuring student wellbeing: in 2015, it commissioned a Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study to be carried out in 72 countries (OECD, 2017). The study concluded that, depending on the country, 12 to 20% of 15-year-old students reported a high level of dissatisfaction with their lives and a considerable degree of uneasiness in school.


National policies reflect in quite different ways the concern for student wellbeing in school. In 2014, the French Ministry of Education published Une école bienveillante, which provides guidelines for spontaneous interventions when students are in particular need. In 2005, the UK Department for Education issued a publication that listed the social emotional skills that students should learn in school to ensure their healthy development, and which would help lead to their success later in life. Even the countries that foster competitiveness and are particularly focused on academic performance have begun to institute policies mindful of student wellbeing. For example, certain schools in South Korea have introduced school terms without academic assessment (OECD, 2017). Although the policies implemented for the wellbeing of students may vary from country to country, they bear witness to a common concern: the responsibility of the school in the face of student stress, anxiety, and depression.


Two major discourses account for this new concern. The first, held primarily by the OECD, regards student wellbeing as a necessary condition for learning, for performing, and for contributing to the economic development of a country. The second, resulting from the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1989, regards wellbeing more and more as an inalienable right (Bradshaw, 2019, p. 97).


Dating back to progressive theorists of the early 20th century, through the radical deschooling and libertarian education movement of the 1960s and 1970s, when many theorists were influenced by psychoanalysis and trends in humanistic psychology, and until recent advances in psychology and the neurosciences, educational theorists and psychologists have taken the position that wellbeing should be at the heart of our educational system, if not its primary goal. Others, on the contrary, have denounced this project as ill-informed or even dangerous. The aim of this paper is twofold. First, it provides an overview of key positions in this ongoing debate over wellbeing as an aim of schooling and argues that what mainly separates the defenders and their opponents is the idea that an education aiming at wellbeing contributes to students’ autonomy, or their capacity to “self-govern.” Following this overview, the paper then discusses Michel Foucault’s work on self-government to problematize the very notion of autonomy and to develop a middle-ground framework in which wellbeing is conceived as an ongoing concern for the care of the self rather than as an ideal or non-ideal model to be attained. The main claim is that the pedagogical approaches developed and implemented as part of a focus on students’ wellbeing can end up inhibiting their possibilities for developing autonomy through a form of normalization and through enacting forms of subjectification, but can also prevent this and even be liberatory if treated with caution. To put it differently, what is argued for is a form of via negativa in which teachers and other educationists should refrain from defining wellbeing, happiness, or flourishing in advance and consider the question as one that should remain open for the students to explore themselves.
Wellbeing as an Overarching Aim of Schooling


An aim or a goal is a statement of principles or ideals that stem from values, from philosophical ideas, and from the aspirations of a social group or a society. In education, goals are set in terms of exit profiles: at the end of their educational journey, students will ideally have such and such qualities and such and such skills, and they will conduct themselves in such and such manner. The notion of a goal, therefore, cannot be dissociated from the acts undertaken to reach it (Gross & Prandi, 2004). Indeed, if student wellbeing must be a goal, we must have “a clear picture of what wellbeing is,” as John White puts it (2011, p. 2).


The ample literature we have on the subject shows that there are various conceptions of wellbeing and more specifically student wellbeing. Some are more individualistic while others are more collective; some are subjective (determined on the basis of how people feel, or report to be feeling) while others are objective (determined on the basis of an objective, universal set of goods or conditions), or a mixture of the two (Bradshaw, 2019; Kristjánsson, 2017). Amongst these conceptions, there is the hedonistic view (wellbeing as the experience of positive or negative states, and in particular states of satisfaction) and the eudaimonic view (which defines wellbeing as independence, acceptance of oneself, and having a meaningful life). The present format does not allow me to elaborate on these distinctions. What is important to keep in mind, however, is that despite concerns about not imposing a singular norm and defining for others what makes for a happy life, it seems, nevertheless, impossible to discuss wellbeing as a final goal of schooling without establishing some set of normative features. In support of this argument, let us briefly examine some contemporary conceptions theorized in the literature today according to which wellbeing should be a main goal of schooling.


Positive psychology is certainly the most influential approach today in defining wellbeing as a goal of schooling in educational and political discourses. Developed in the work of Martin Seligman in the 1980s and 1990s, it is generally adopted by international institutions such as the OECD, and it is at the heart of a rising number of pedagogical initiatives across the world under the banner of “positive education.” According to this line of thinking, emotional wellbeing is made up of a set of social emotional features that should be cultivated in individuals (Seligman, 2002). These psychologists, contrary to classical psychologists, who study the mentally ill and the deviant, began to study people who consider themselves happy, optimistic, and accomplished, to identify the correlative traits of character (e.g., compassion, pro-social tendencies, altruism) and thus provide the means to develop these traits and enable people to lead happier lives. The PERMA model is the result of these studies. It synthesizes the five major components of happiness: positive emotions, positive engagement, positive relationship, positive meaning, and positive accomplishment (Seligman and al., 2009). More recently positive health was added to the list (ibid.). To help students acquire these traits, different educational practices have seen the light of day. Indeed, some of these have been included in the school timetable of many schools around the world, especially in America – through writing exercises, group discussion, life coaching, problem resolution, and meditation exercises – with a view of teaching students to realign their learned explanatory styles, to de-dramatize situations, to regulate their emotions, to reinforce their social skills, or to increase their motivation (Seligman, 2007). The skills that these techniques are supposed to foster are intended to teach students to lead more positive, more self-responsible, and happier lives.


Similarly, self-determination theorists (SDT) also argue that there are universal human needs, the satisfaction of which is central to human flourishing. Also, through empirical research, their project consists in determining the elements of human experience that are the most conducive to human thriving (Ryan, Curren, & Deci, 2013). However, the approach differs from positive psychology in that according to these theorists, conceptions of happiness that derive from positive psychology (developing certain traits of character) do not produce an appropriate account of what is required for a human to thrive (Ryan and Martela, 2016). Happiness, they argue, derives from a good, worthwhile way of living; it is only a “byproduct” of a way of life that is rich and meaningful. Hence, it cannot really be sought out in and for itself, which would explain why materialistic ways of living do not tend to produce happiness in the end. Such a way of living may include “pursuing intrinsic goals, living autonomously, being mindful, being benevolent” (ibid., p. 1). Hence, proponents of SDT do not define the traits of happiness per se that should be acquired, but rather identify ways of living that can make for a good and flourishing life and might indirectly make one happy.


Many other philosophical accounts (i.e., Brighouse, 2006; White, 2001; Kristjánsson, 2016; Noddings, 2003) follow a similar line of argument. They consider it possible to identify what it means to live a good and flourishing life, one that feels both satisfying and meaningful, and that has objective value, and proceed to characterize the good life to be pursued through educational policies or practices. White (2001) for example, who is much influenced by the work of James Griffin (1989) and Joseph Raz (1986), recognizes that certain (pre)conditions are necessary for human flourishing (i.e., social, economic, political, physical, and psychological conditions) and argues that “[a] fulfilling life is built around successful and wholehearted, intrinsically motivated involvement in worthwhile activities” (p. 64). After a discussion about what makes for a worthwhile activity, he discusses the question of how the school can and should contribute to students’ capacity to lead flourishing lives and suggests changes that could be made to the traditional curriculum to offer more fulfilling possibilities. Similarly, Harry Brighouse (2006) defines flourishing using Richard Layard’s “big seven” elements (Layard, 2011) that influence happiness (i.e., financial situation, family relationships, work, community and friends, health, personal freedom, and personal values) and considers that schooling should equip students to lead flourishing lives by offering a rich curriculum. He also claims that the question of happiness should be addressed more directly in schools, that students should learn about family life, parenting, emotional development, work–life balance, how to organize their finances, what flourishing is, the place of consumption, and how to use leisure time (ibid., pp. 54–55). As will be discussed later, he offers a rich reflection on the extent to which it is legitimate to define wellbeing, or flourishing, in advance for students and how this relates to the autonomy of students. Kristján Kristjánsson (2016), for his part, considers that these views of flourishing, although compelling, are missing something important, what he calls a certain fullness, a sense of transcendence, and suggests that philosophers of education should adopt an extended or more enchanted view of flourishing, one that includes transpersonal values, ecstatic experiences, that is to say, “emotions directed at ideals or idealisations, such as beauty, truth and goodness” (p. 8). According to Kristjánsson, this enchanted view need not be supernaturalistic, although he considers that theistic religions and works of art may be important resources for this type of flourishing. Again, in wanting to enrich the meaning of flourishing, what is searched for is a predefined understanding of what it means to be happy or lead a flourishing life.


In the line of thought of the ethics of care, Nel Noddings (2003) also advocates that schools should teach in such a way as to enhance student happiness. Again, she also acknowledges the existence of a variety of ways of conceiving the good life and the impossibility of imposing a single conception of the good. Her discussion of the subject is nuanced and acknowledges the complexity of the issues involved. Nevertheless, she cannot avoid defining the values and the dispositions that the school should instill and cultivate in students so that they may lead happy lives in the present and in the future. The distinctive feature of her argument is to highlight a relational approach to wellbeing by acknowledging the importance of the interdependence of subjects and the creation of conditions that allow for mutually supportive relationships – like those that should exist in the home. Noddings goes on to list certain qualities to the development of which the school should contribute: “politeness, wit, cultivated taste, unhurried serenity, a talent for listening, hospitality (and) the ability to respond positively to others and not just to fulfill assigned duties” (ibid., p. 35). There are very marked differences in language and focus between the propositions put forward by positive psychology, Noddings, and liberal philosophers of education. Positive psychology emphasizes the acquisition of skills and the adoption of positive attitudes such as optimism, commitment, and resilience, while Noddings defines, albeit in a nuanced manner, the interpersonal qualities that must be fostered to build a happy society: attentiveness, hospitality, listening. The specific qualities that contribute to human flourishing are not postulated by liberal philosophers of education. But they do propose an idea of what a flourishing subject is – that is, one who engages in objectively worthwhile and meaningful activities.


As Wolbert, De Ruyter, and Schinkel (2019) have argued, these accounts mostly rely on an ideal theory approach (p. 29). Their aim is to clarify and conceptualize this very notion of wellbeing, happiness, flourishing, or the good life and use it as a guiding principle for action, from which to derive educational practices and policies. They are careful in not giving too much of a substantive definition of what the good life should look like, but still they portray an idealized image, or vision, of what is aimed for. According to the authors, an ideal theory can lack in relevance if it fails to take into consideration much of real-life complexities: “too many parents, schools and children are so far removed from the ideal that describing an ideal blueprint has little meaning,” they say (ibid., p. 35). The authors then outline a “nonideal theory approach” and discuss two options. The first, in line with Amartya Sen’s capability approach (2002), is that we should focus on the needs of children in particular contexts and theorize how these can be met in real life, and the other is that we should take contextual variables into account in theorizing the ideal itself. This would be a form of realistic idealism in which theory is concerned with what is possible in real-life situations. These are very important points, however the notion that there is a predominant model of happiness or flourishing, and that there should be one, even if it is more realistic and non-ideal, seems to remain. The question I would like to address in the next section is to what extent the meaning of wellbeing or flourishing should be predefined at all.
Normalizing Effects of Student Wellbeing as an Aim: Some Criticisms


Against the notion that wellbeing should be if not the main aim of schooling, then one of its priorities, many critics have argued that wellbeing or flourishing should in no way be predefined and considered as an aim. Even scholars from the flourishing tradition itself have started to doubt its relevance as an educational aim. For example, in his paper on the educational virtue of flourishing, Carr claims that “flourishing is limited to the shaping of affect and appetite for fairly basic character developmental purposes and serves to identify no very clear, common, or uncontroversial moral or other educational aims” (2021, p. 405). The arguments vary considerably and draw on different traditions of thought, but one aspect that runs through most of them, and that will be the focus of this section, is the idea that defining wellbeing as an aim, through ideal or non-ideal theory, cannot do away with the issue of determining in advance a norm of happiness or flourishing, of what a flourishing student should be, do, or look like. This might ultimately reveal itself to be problematic, especially from an educational standpoint, because the normativity that is embedded in any definition of wellbeing or flourishing, and the practices that follow, may hinder the possibility for students to define what is a good and flourishing life for themselves in the end. As we shall see, predefined models of wellbeing or flourishing may contribute to the development of pedagogical practices that influence and shape subjectivities in paternalistic ways.


The first critical stance that argues in this direction is one defended by Kathryn Ecclestone and Dennis Hayes, according to whom the focus on student wellbeing or flourishing has led to a dangerous “therapeutic turn” in education (2008). Authors following this line of thought generally refer to a specific cultural trend coined the “self-esteem movement,” inspired by humanist psychology, which was itself a reaction to what was previously seen as an overemphasis on instructional concerns in schools. Against traditional views of schooling, many psychologists have developed theories and practices that were more sensitive to the “whole child development,” to his or her inner life, and the importance of social and emotional skills. Several cultural critics have denounced these trends for creating individualistic subjects incapable of founding communities (Rieff, 1966; Lasch, 1979) or for creating vulnerable people who interpret everything they experience according to their inner life and feelings (Furedi, 2004). Similarly, some have argued that focusing too much on our feelings and on experiences of closeness and warmth with others can make it difficult for someone to form a public self. Richard Sennett (1992), for example, argues that although developing such a public figure may arguably be criticized for creating a sense of self that is impersonal or inauthentic (because it relies primarily on the superego, which in Freud’s framework is a self that has been distorted by social conventions), it may contribute to the development of a certain self-detachment (a distance with the purely instinctual id), which serves as a layer of protection against the aggressions of public life. Following this line of thought, Ecclestone and Hayes (2008) argue that the concern for students’ inner life and self-esteem, and the rise of pedagogical activities (e.g., drawing “feeling” trees, having circle time) designed specifically to make students feel at ease, and to let them express their emotions, paradoxically produces the opposite result in that they bring to the fore concerns that, generally speaking, students did not have before: “They normalize the bad experiences of a minority of children as universal difficulties that ‘we all have’” (p. 44). In other words, they consider that the emotional wellbeing agenda relies on a diminished view of human potential that undermines development and contributes to labelling. Furthermore, and perhaps most importantly, Ecclestone and Hayes (2008) contend that the wish to protect students from all negative emotions and the expectation that all students should acquire self-confidence, learn with enthusiasm, and develop a certain emotional intelligence, ends up formatting the way children must experience and express their emotions and the way in which they must experience academic learning. As they put it, it imposes an “orthodoxy of appropriate feeling” (ibid., p. 42). They give many different examples of ways in which school practices impose the norms of what is deemed appropriate to students, through smoothing transitions (breathing or meditation exercises, for example), nurture groups (discussion sessions about emotions, for example), or assessment practices, or through the existing curriculum (reflective writing, for example), imposing ways of making sense of things and themselves that are “almost impossible to challenge” (ibid., p. 45).


In a somehow similar way, many contemporary critics argue that the dominant conceptions of wellbeing, informed most notably by positive psychology and the cognitive sciences, promote practices and values that contribute to the shaping of neoliberal subjectivities (Dardot & Laval, 2009; Cabanas and Illouz, 2019). In its report on the wellbeing of students, the OECD (2017) states the importance of creating a school environment that is conducive to wellbeing by underscoring the importance of learning certain skills: how to be optimistic, develop self-control, be able to work with others, or be able to choose one’s academic and professional career (pp. 236–241). These social and emotional skills are meant to help students foster positive emotions, be motivated, feel responsible for the course of their studies, and know how to self-regulate efficiently in order to be successful. Such ideas reflect to various degrees some key aspects of the literature on the aim of wellbeing and the ideal of helping students lead autonomous, meaningful lives, but many also argue that this is a delusion. As Kingfisher (2013) puts is, it is no coincidence that positive thinking, self-regulation, self-examination, and entrepreneurialism, which are the qualities promoted in wellbeing discourses and practices (such as meditation classes, problem-resolution techniques, self-regulation of emotions techniques, and the like) are also the qualities required for the neoliberal economy.


In line with a Foucauldian perspective (to which I will return later), the notion that wellbeing should be an aim of schooling is interpreted as an instrument for the fabrication of neoliberal or entrepreneurial subjects who should be flexible, responsible, proactive, and adapted for the benefit of the economic system. This argument has been developed extensively, for example in a paper provocatively intitled “Making Little Neo-Liberals: The Production of Ideal Child/Learner Subjectivities in Primary School through Choice, Self-Improvement and ‘Growth Mindsets’” (Bradbury, 2019). It has also been carefully analyzed in the context of the importation of mindfulness and yoga in schools (see, for example, Jackson, 2019) and the importation of self-regulation techniques more broadly (see, for example, Schwimmer, 2021). In this framework, wellbeing techniques in schools are interpreted as part of a neoliberal apparatus of governmentality, which involves state incentives for self-government in line with the competitive logic of neoliberalism.


A predefined model of wellbeing or flourishing, such as the PERMA model, is considered worrisome not only because it is aligned with the economic demands of our time, but more broadly perhaps because it imposes a one-size-fits-all model of happiness based on positivity. Referring to the work of Sara Ahmed (2010), Jackson and Bingham (2018) argue that “happiness can be used in communities as a tool to maintain a status quo that does not intrinsically aid the cultivation of all members’ happiness equally” (p. 228). Ahmed has shown quite convincingly how happiness has served historically as a justification for different forms of assimilation. For example, on the pretext that Indigenous people were not “happy” according to established Western expectations, it seemed justified to civilize them. Even if the wish for them to find happiness might have been sincere, what was wished for was that they would find happiness without compromising the established equilibrium of Western societies, thus imposing a moral order for all. The same may be said about the place of women in society, as it is often expected that they find happiness without disrupting their assigned role as good girls or home keepers, for example. The woman who refuses to be happy in her assigned role might be seen as acting in bad faith or being a “killjoy” (Ahmed, 2010). This view sees happiness as an individualized and internalized matter, a question of personal choice in which the person is responsible for being happy or not (Jackson & Bingham, 2018). Some personal characteristics or qualities are deemed important for my flourishing (optimism, wit, empathy, purpose), I have the internal capacity to develop them through various forms of exercises, and hence, I should make sure to develop them. This psychologized view fails to recognize that emotions are also very much relational and that requiring that someone be happy may be oppressive in some contexts. Drawing on this, Jackson and Bingham claim that the expectation that every student should find happiness fails to acknowledge that unequal, pre-existing social and political conditions and relations might understandably prevent equal flourishing for all. Moreover, they are concerned that the wellbeing agenda, with its injunction to feel happy, may be used as an instrument to make students, especially those from underprivileged backgrounds, compliant and ensure that they accept and maintain the status quo.


Finally, against the notion that wellbeing should be an aim of schooling, many have developed an argument inspired by existentialism. Suffering and pain are complex, paradoxical, and inevitable dimensions of human existence and thus schools should give them more importance. In his book Happiness, Hope, and Despair, Peter Roberts (2015) contends that schooling should play an important role in helping young people to learn about and to better understand human suffering. He argues that it is normal and even desirable that school should be a source of some discomfort, doubt, and uneasiness, seeing how these feelings can help us grow as individuals by forcing us take a step back. The existentialist philosopher Kierkegaard (1989), for example, sees despair as a distinguishing and meritorious human feature that anyone should be aware of. It is a matter of self-consciousness in a way. In a world in which we expect students to be open-minded, that is, open to revising their first order beliefs, some form of anguish is to be expected (ibid.). According to this line of argument, then, wellbeing as a goal carries the risk of diverting our attention from the educational potential of discomfort or even of suffering caused, for instance, either by the obligation to participate in activities that one initially finds senseless or by finding oneself involved in disharmonious situations or relationships. Hence, the idea of a wellbeing-centred school could prove counterproductive. Judith Suissa (2008, p. 82) also reminds us, for example, that education is challenging, unsettling, and possibly liberating in a manner that entails pain and that happiness-oriented education seeks to avoid such an experience. She argues that the criterion of life satisfaction on which positive psychology relies, although holistic, is an insufficient expression of what makes for a life well lived. It does not account for the value, the importance, and the meanings that people ascribe to their experiences, nor to the complexity of the meaning-making processes that underlie them. In other words, it seems impossible to develop a predefined understanding of wellbeing or flourishing that includes all the nuances and complexity of an actual life. Hence, a definition will always be somewhat reductive and serve as an orientation that might prove alienating for some, in some contexts.


It could be argued that the philosophical approaches discussed earlier give rich and fine accounts of happiness, or flourishing, that do take the existential, moral, relational, and even political aspects of existence into consideration, acknowledging the importance of developing meaningful relationships or some transcendental values that makes a life meaningful, for example. Indeed, many approaches described above recognize this complexity. Although they might not be normalizing in a strict sense of imposing one and only one definition of the good life, such accounts remain in some way paternalistic in the sense that they cannot do without having to define to some extent what makes for a flourishing life for someone else, as Brighouse acknowledges (2006, p. 42).


Indeed, according to Brighouse, this paternalistic dimension, although it makes some feel uncomfortable, is inevitable in any educational endeavour. He argues it is the role of parents, teachers, and school administrators to determine, in part, what is best for children, for their development and their future, and thus they have a legitimate authority when it comes to bringing up and educating children (ibid., p. 43). He gives examples such as forcing children to eat their vegetables or practising piano or studying. Notwithstanding the problem of whether the state school should indeed have such an authority, one can readily recognize that there might be a difference between coercing a child into learning about literature or science, and initiating him or her to a particular way of living a good life. They both act on an emotional and aesthetic level, but the latter touches the fundamental ethical question of how to live in a more direct way, and of how to choose to live authentically. Imposing a certain language and ways to go about it seems to run against the liberal value of individual freedom that most wellbeing scholars are trying to defend in the first place. Anticipating such criticism, Brighouse insists: “I do not say that they should be forced to live their lives in a particular way”; the schools’ paternalistic duty is not to decide for the children, but “to provide children with plentiful opportunities to develop the resources for a flourishing life” (ibid, p. 52). However, this distinction seems to rely on a particular understanding of what it means to decide how to live for oneself, of what it means to be autonomous and be able to govern oneself.[1] And one could ask to what extent developing those “resources that make for a flourishing life” actually allows one to decide freely. The next two sections examine this question.
On Self-Government


As mentioned, authors who argue for wellbeing, happiness, or flourishing as an aim of schooling generally consider autonomy to be a fundamental part of what it entails, because people vary in the kind of life that will enable them to flourish, and for this reason, they should have the opportunity to enter ways of living that were not predetermined for them by the way they were brought up (see, for example, Brighouse, 2006, p. 15). For people to really flourish, they must identify with a conception of the good life that is objectively good and they must do so “from the inside” (ibid., p. 17), which “requires the resources and liberties that justice requires for people to live well by their own judgement” (ibid., p. 18). This means that students who come from a variety of backgrounds, for example, should be exposed to authentic alternative ways of living, and that they should learn the reflective skills that will allow them to choose autonomously between real alternatives (pp. 18–19). This claim is discussed in much detail in Brighouse’s chapter on self-government. One interesting thing about this description is that it takes into account many indirect effects of the school (the environment, the composition, the ethos) that may intervene on the choices that are made possible to students, and thus provides a rich account of the way power and coercion are actually exercised.


According to Skinner’s work on the genealogy of the concept of liberty (2016), power has traditionally been viewed as the absence of interference or constraint, and is thus usually seen as being exercised by an identifiable source onto the subject to prevent the subject from choosing freely. This source could be an external agent (such as a state, a parent, or a teacher) or the subject themselves (when they are acting solely out of passion or in an inauthentic way to fit social expectations, for example, or through false consciousness). Autonomy is thus often viewed as requiring an absence of interferences from outside agents or from oneself. Brighouse seems to follow this line of thought: if students are presented with authentic alternative choices or possibilities, if they have the capacity to exercise reflective reasoning, and if they are in an environment in which they can act on their judgements, they should have the freedom to choose their own conceptions of the good life – they will be able to exercise autonomy.


However, this general way of conceiving of self-government and autonomy still seems to rely on the idea that autonomy is a practice of freedom of choice, and that this is sufficient for self-governing. This is where the thought of Foucault might prove useful. The liberal accounts of autonomy, and their place in the conduct of a good or flourishing life, seem to be lacking a recognition that our conduct is inevitably conducted, that power is inevitably exercised, and that even self-government may be governed by an outside source of power. In other words, from a Foucauldian perspective, the practices and structures that scholars of students’ wellbeing advocate are part of a governing apparatus and constitute a way of directing students’ conduct. To show how this works, and how it affects the way we should understand the place of autonomy in any conception of “student wellbeing,” I will now turn to Foucault’s view on the concept of self-government, and the importance he gives to what he calls the care of the self.


As Foucault (2010) has carefully shown, modern power is characterized by a concern over coercing citizens as little as possible. The liberal state, and thus a liberal education, refuses to explicitly impose norms, principles, or ways of doing or thinking. However, according to him, the liberal state and schooling encourages these norms or behaviours differently, by making subjects/students want themfrom the inside, to reuse Brighouse’s expression (Foucault, 2010). This power is not exercised through direct instruction or with the clear intention of closing students’ minds by limiting their access to different views. On the contrary, it encourages free choice. However, it acts on the relationship that people develop with themselves, the way they “care for the self,” to use Foucault’s vocabulary. This is different from what Skinner calls “inauthenticity” (following social expectations) in the sense that the target of modern power is precisely the authentic will of the person. It is also slightly different from false consciousness or hegemony in the sense that it has nothing to do with social classes or any binary notion of ruler/ruled. Indeed, according to Foucault, modern political power is diffuse, it cannot be localized, it operates through the general discourses of the time, in common everyday speech, interactions, and activities. It operates through an ethics of truth (what is seen as possible and desirable by individual people) that is not the result of rational deliberations, of peer pressure about how one should live after considering different options, or any other linear source, but that is, rather, motivated by subtle incentives or disincentives in the context of concrete experiences that make people desire certain things in the most authentic way.


According to Foucault, the origin of this form of power is to be found in Christianity, in what Foucault calls pastoral power: practices of directing someone’s conscience such as confession or prayer (Foucault, 2005; 2009). According to Foucault, and contrary to common belief, although pastoral power has been secularized, we have not completely gotten rid of it. A concrete example, lengthily analyzed by Dardot and Laval (2009), concerns the neoliberal incentive to perform and become competitive. The neoliberal state does not compel its citizens to become a certain way; it creates the right conditions, the proper stage, in which they will want to become competitive without even having the chance to rationally evaluate if they actually want to or not. For example, through the multiplication of tests and exams, of opportunities for one to stand out (prizes, bursaries), of specialists of achievement, students are progressively invited to position themselves in a world of performance and competition without really having much of a choice. Stepping back from this requires more than reflective reasoning: it requires an active form of resistance.


Hence, the target of modern power is precisely the relationship that people entertain with themselves in the multiple dimensions of their lives, in its most intimate and ordinary details, “the production of an interior, secret and hidden truth” (Foucault, in Lorenzini, 2015, p. 61) – all that affects the way they choose to govern themselves. Foucault coined the concept of “conduct” to examine the techniques and procedures developed by pastoral power in the Western world to govern human beings. Conduct refers to an activity of conduction as well as the way we conduct ourselves; to exercise power (to govern) is thus to try to conduct the conducts of others, to try to act on their possibilities of action, on the way they choose to govern themselves (ibid.). This is a three-dimensional process: conduct someone, being conducted, conduct oneself. The last dimension can be said to be autonomous only if one is able to accept or refuse, and for this to be a real possibility, one does not only need to be able to observe other possibilities and reflect on them, but one also must be able to critique and resist, and this means that one must engage in concrete practices or exercises of “counter-conduct.”


If we accept the idea that modern political power is exercised through the way people are encouraged to relate to themselves, and thus through the exercises they practise of everyday life in which they develop this relationship, then the important analytical tool is not only the discourse, the external conditions, but mostly the daily, ordinary techniques that are being practised in schools, what Foucault calls “technologies of the self” (2005, 2009) and what Lorenzini (2015), inspired by Cavell, calls “techniques of the ordinary.” The techniques are at the centre of all schooling practices: they take the form of reading, writing, or discussing, or of bodily exercises such as sitting, training, meditating, being attentive, memorizing, working the imagination, or remaining silent.[2] These techniques may be educative in many ways: they can help students to work on themselves, develop their minds, control their own thoughts and behaviours, or identify who they are and what their life projects might be, all forms of exercise that contribute to what Foucault calls the care of the self. However, according to Foucault, they can also induce a relationship to the self that is far from autonomous because they often rely on a form of obedience, whether in the form of a pastoral power or of a more liberal one, in which freedom of choice might be preserved on the surface but in which the choice is actually constrained to consenting to the rule of the majority or the market (ibid., p.72).


The reason for this detour through Foucault’s theory is to insist on the fact that for some form of self-government (or autonomy) to be a real possibility in real existences (and not just an abstract, juridical one), one needs to engage in counter-conducts and to experience other ways of conducting oneself. This requires a critical attitude, which is not to be understood simply as the skill of critical thinking, that is, the skill of putting something into question or denouncing it. It refers to an ethos, an ethics (of truth); a way of being, caring, thinking; a refusal to being conducted in such a way, to such an extent; and the actual practice of something different (Foucault, 1997). For Foucault, as for other philosophers such as Hadot and Cavell (Lorenzini, 2015), this opens a new space in the political sphere, the sphere of ethics, understood not as a set of normative principles but as a practical way of life and of caring for oneself.


To come back to the notion of wellbeing as an aim of schooling, we can recall that in educational research, there is a general tendency to define wellbeing and its conditions of realization, and to reflect on how to pursue it through various practices and procedures. The critical literature on this topic is, as we have seen, already well developed. One problem that seems to run across it, as I have tried to show, is the tendency towards normalization: defining a notion of wellbeing to be pursued can lead to various forms of psychologization, reductions, and exclusions. Against this critical literature, one could argue that the type of normalization that the aim of wellbeing induces is not problematic because it does not impede people’s capacity to decide how they ought to live. Through the activities that schools provide to foster wellbeing, one could argue that what is offered are “resources” for flourishing and not the promotion of a way of life. In this section, I introduced Foucault’s notion of self-government and technologies of the self to show that the techniques and exercises that are being practised daily in schools cannot be dissociated from the practical ethics of everyday life that they promote and suggested that they could inadvertently constitute tools of normalization instead of leading to autonomy. What now remains to be explored is whether or not these exercises allow for some degree of autonomy in the way they lead people to conduct themselves, to self-govern, in the details of their daily ordinary lives.
Ordinary Techniques of Care for the Self: Adaptation Versus Adjustment


In order to reflect on the degree of autonomy allowed by certain school exercises, more specifically exercises that have to do with wellbeing and self-government, I now briefly examine two categories of practices (or technologies of the self): techniques of self-regulation and techniques of self-expression. The purpose of this last section is to show that these techniques do not automatically lead to autonomy or flourishing, and that, as a matter of fact, they generally do not because of their cooptation by a system overly focused on achievement competition. However, I also claim here that they could perhaps potentially be liberatory if they were used as tools of care for the self (epimeleia heautou), although this seems unlikely in our present time (Foucault, 2005). As suggested, to care for the self is to live well, or ethically, in Foucault’s view: it is to ask the question of how one ought to live deliberately, not simply following implicit rules or conventions, but affirming the self through concrete exercises of transformation – technologies of the self that allow one to act on their body and soul, their thoughts, conducts, and ways of being (ibid.).


Techniques of self-regulation are taught to help students to appease themselves, reduce their stress, concentrate, be attentive to the situation, and most importantly, control their emotions, behaviours, and thoughts (Shanker, 2013). They come in different forms – meditation, relaxation, cardiac coherency, breathing, drawing, time management, problem-resolution techniques, physical exercises such as yoga or stretching – and their main purpose is to create a classroom climate that is conducive to learning. As such, autoregulation techniques are directly associated with the conception of wellbeing presented in the first section, with notions of social and emotional skills as well as autonomy and meaningful learning.


These techniques can be conducted by people in a variety of ways and that is precisely where the ethical dimension stated above comes into play. The type of relationship that someone develops with themselves will define the ethical substance of their conduct: is it a relation of obedience, of guidance, of inspiration, of critique, of resistance? The techniques in themselves have little meaning outside the relationship the person develops with them, and this seems like an important blind spot of our educational systems. Educators initiate students daily into a set of techniques with very little regard for the way students relate to them. However, this relationship has to do with the type of subjectivity they are developing through them. Is it one in which the students are asked to blindly apply the techniques to achieve what the system expects of them? Or is it one in which they learn how to care for the self, how to give shape to their own lives? Do the exercises that are practised encourage an attitude of critique regarding what is expected, an attitude of openness to self-transformation or towards self-affirmation?


As mentioned, self-regulation skills are usually taught in schools to help students develop emotional and cognitive self-control (Shanker, 2013). However, they can easily be coopted to the benefit of other forces, especially economic ones (Schwimmer, 2021; Danis & Schwimmer, 2022). Indeed, self-regulation techniques are often used in the context of schooling as tools to help reduce the anxiety and stress caused by the pressure imposed on students to achieve in different domains. In such contexts, self-regulation is instrumental: it is primarily a tool that schools use for the purpose of achievement, a tool that students are invited to use to adapt to a system obsessed with performance.[3] In this context, the relationship that one develops with oneself is somehow predetermined by a field of finalized actions oriented towards ends that have been extrinsically defined and that do not necessarily help the students to enter a relationship of care for the self. On the contrary, some even argue that techniques of self-regulation can contribute to developing an alienated relationship with the self because they implicitly teach people to accept the status quo and to transform themselves in order to fit, adapt, and cope with the educational (or more widely the political and economic) system as it is, even if it is debilitating for them (see, for example, Dardot & Laval, 2009; Møllgaard, 2008; Critchley, 2008). The example of mindfulness is illuminating here. Empirical research conducted with teachers who use self-regulation techniques in their classrooms has shown that they mostly do so from an adaptative perspective to create a calm classroom climate in preparation for learning (Danis & Schwimmer, 2022; Garcia, Fraysse, & Bataille, 2021). The practice of mindfulness is rarely conducted as a genuine exercise of care for the self, but more often as a tool for something else. If students are repeatedly introduced to the technique of mindfulness as a preparation for something that has been determined by the teacher, there is little chance that they will develop a relationship of ownership with it. In other words, the context in which one is introduced to a daily routine will most certainly inform the meaning of that practice. Perhaps, to follow Foucault’s perspective, to be able to experience it in a way that is not instrumental or subjected to values of achievement or competition, and that is potentially liberatory would require that the practice be recontextualized and reframed as a counter-conduct. Mindfulness would have to be experienced as a genuine alternative detached from any concerns for achievement or obedience, and even as a way to practise resistance, which, in our current context, seems fairly unrealistic.


Besides self-regulation techniques, wellbeing is often pursued through techniques of self-expression. These techniques can also take various forms such as reflective practices (reflective writing, reflective drawing), dialogue with another (whether it is the teacher, an educational psychologist, or another student), and group discussion. They are generally introduced to students to help them identify their feelings and thoughts, and to communicate them properly and thus resolve conflicts (inner conflicts or conflicts with others) that they may be experiencing (Danis & Schwimmer, 2022). Popular among educators are techniques such as the worry box, the “feeling” tree, or circle time, in which students are invited to name and share their worries and their feelings. Being able to put words on what you are experiencing is an important way to grow as a person. However, as is the case for self-regulation techniques, these exercises can also be predetermined from the outside in a way that may prove restrictive. As Ecclestone and Hayes (2008) have argued, when such exercises are programmed in such a way that vocabularies are imposed on students, they can paradoxically contribute to imposing a certain orthodoxy of feeling instead of letting students explore more freely ways of expressing themselves.


Here again, techniques of self-expression can hence be assimilated by students in a variety of ways: they can either incite students to adapt to pre-defined models of speech, or become productive tools of adjustment. Adjustment, contrary to adaptation, reflects a complex relationship to the existing world in which a person works on self-understanding, affirmation, and transformation, through attention, listening, and conversation. The techniques, instead of contributing to normalization processes, can thus also help students to individualize as subjects and become self-reliant. But to be as such, self-regulation and self-expression need to be reframed as open-ended and free from any predetermined goal. Again, this requires a particular sensitivity to the way these techniques are introduced to students, the context and the language that is used. If a mindfulness technique is systematically introduced before exams or explicitly as an instrument to help students calm down before a lesson, then its instrumental function will implicitly be transmitted, and students will probably be prone to develop an instrumental relationship with it. In a similar way, if students are systemically invited to name and discuss their emotional life using a set of predetermined concepts (such as joy, anger, or sadness), they might not be inclined to explore other distinctions or ways of expressing it that would be a better “fit” for them, to use Cavell’s expression (2015), with their own personal experience.
Conclusion


Theories centred on wellbeing, happiness, or human flourishing as a goal of schooling cannot do without establishing a certain norm of flourishing. Although they might not necessarily always provide a clear list of the traits and behaviours that must be developed to flourish, or exactly what type of model of “happiness” needs to be reached, these theories usually provide a clear picture of what conditions and/or resources are required to be able to lead a flourishing life. These resources are considered to leave a person free to choose his or her conception of the good life because they are presented as distinct from the person, as tools that may or may not be used. What I have tried to show in this paper is that these resources cannot be detached and exteriorized so easily from those who use or enact them because they are practices – exercises that are intimately related to the way people conduct and relate to themselves. They are the fabric that constitutes the subjectivities in their most authentic forms.


What I have tried to show is that these exercises can only allow for some degree of autonomy in the way they lead people to conduct themselves, to self-govern in their daily ordinary lives, if they can be experienced in a way that has not been predetermined. This requires that teachers and other educationists refrain from imposing a predefined notion of what is wellbeing or flourishing for the students. It requires a particular attention to the contexts and conditions in which they are introduced, and which give them their meaning and their force. Flourishing is not something that should be characterized in advance; it is something students should be invited to define for themselves through a process of progressive adjustment (as opposed to simple adaptation) to a real-life perspective that is there, but that can also be changed. This requires that students have a chance not only to encounter a variety of ways of living and reflect on them, but to engage in everyday school exercises, conducts, and conversations in a way that leaves them some space to experience them in an undetermined way.

Parties annexes
Biographical note


Marina Schwimmer is Professor of Educational Foundations at Université du Québec à Montréal. She works mainly in the field of philosophy of education from a poststructuralist perspective and is interested in various educational issues related to translation, criticism, teacher ethics, and the culture of well-being.
Notes[1]

It might be anecdotal, but it seems interesting to note that most proponents of wellbeing as an aim are men while critics are mainly women, as if they had a particular sensitivity regarding such paternalistic views.
[2]

Inspired by Foucault, and Hadot and Cavell, Lorenzini (2015) identifies five sets of techniques that contribute to this ethical process of constitution of the self: attention techniques (concentration on the self, delimitation of the present, attention to the particular), thought techniques (meditation, self-examination, discipline of representations, direction of conscience, gaze and imagination exercises), speech techniques (writing, reading, listening, dialogue, conversation, parrhêsia), corporeal techniques (body training, use of pleasures, cynic despoliation), and refusal techniques (civil disobedience and the courage of eccentricity).
[3]

Liz Jackson (2019) has also analyzed this danger carefully in her provocative paper entitled “Must Children Sit Still?: The Dark Biopolitics of Mindfulness and Yoga in Education.”
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