• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Should Death Be Taught In Schools? Study Calls For Death Education Overhaul

March 21, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

As adults, we know death is a part of life; but for children, learning about it often comes down to your first brush with loss, be that a pet or parent. Is there a better way to prepare children for grief than waiting for a death to happen? New research suggests so, proposing that all children could benefit from better death education in schools, not just those who have already lost someone.

Grief doesn’t care if you’ve graduated, and yet 90 percent of teachers say they don’t feel sufficiently trained to support bereaved children, according to Child Bereavement UK. The stat seems counterintuitive in the face of the 86 percent of teachers who recognize that death is something that is going to come up within the school community.

Advertisement

A new small-scale study suggests that death education in schools should see an overhaul, advocating for its inclusion as a vital part of the curriculum. It worked closely with a bereavement charity to conduct interviews and activities with children, which included writing stories about grief, drawing pictures, and writing letters to imaginary people. They also asked them about their experiences of adults talking to them about loss, and it revealed a theme among advice given by adults.

“Children reported that adults often said – ‘you will feel sad’, or ‘you need to be brave for your mum’,” said study author Dr Sukhbinder Hamilton from the University of Portsmouth in a statement. “This isn’t helpful; the reality of grief is that it’s not constant and it comes and goes. For children, it is even more variable than adults. On the surface, children can seem fine but when adults try to put expectations onto them it adds confusion and emotional turmoil. What we should be doing is saying things like – ‘it’s ok to feel however you feel’. This way the adult is giving the child the control and space to deal with their grief.”

By introducing grief coping strategies and death education into the curriculum, the paper suggests we could better prepare both staff and students so that the school community can be a more productive place of healing for children who have lost loved ones. 

“Teachers often lack the time or feel ill-equipped to address the complex needs of students dealing with the loss of a loved one,” explained Hamilton. “The reality is that on average there will be two children in every class dealing with a bereavement of this kind. By providing a supportive environment, children are more likely to feel safe and thrive emotionally and academically.”

Advertisement

Death education is something Professor Ines Testoni of the University of Padova has been advocating for, urging that it can help us to process the loss of a loved one rather than resorting to clinging on to the relationships. It was something we discussed in an interview about whether technology helps or harms grief, which you can catch in the March issue of CURIOUS.

“Since the 1980s, researchers of Terror Management Theory have shown that our life is totally conditioned by the anguish of death and yet we are totally unaware of it,” explained Testoni. “In fact, society, on the one hand, helps us to do this by setting up ideologies (such as religious ideologies) that deny death and, on the other hand, by systematically removing serious thoughts and discourses concerning death.” 

“The need to keep at bay the paralysing terror that derives from the knowledge that we are mortal, however, means that many of our dysfunctional behaviours are caused by the removal of this awareness which also continues to act at an unconscious level, leveraging socially constructed beliefs as consolatory discourses.”

Perhaps it’s time that awareness began in the classroom.

Advertisement

The study is published in Mind, Brain and Education Journal.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – FIFA backs down on threat to fine Premier clubs who play South American players
  2. U.S. House passes abortion rights bill, outlook poor in Senate
  3. UBS clients raise $650 million for biggest yet biotech impact fund
  4. This Is What Cannabis Looks Like Under A Microscope – You Might Be Surprised

Source Link: Should Death Be Taught In Schools? Study Calls For Death Education Overhaul

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Can You Hear Electricity?
  • Newest Member Of The Solar System Just Announced, Capuchins Have Started Stealing Baby Howler Monkeys, And Much More This Week
  • Capuchin Kidnappers, Spinosaurus Daddy, And A New Member Of The Solar System
  • Plastic Rocks Are A “New And Terrifying” Phenomenon Coming To A Shore Near You
  • “We Also Tried Remote Control Cars Dressed As Females”: How Scientists Took On Rare Kākāpō Artificial Insemination
  • “Missing Americans”: US Excess Deaths Still Above Pre-COVID Levels, Upwards Of 1 Million
  • Clever Hawk Spotted Using Pedestrian Crossing To Catch Prey In New Jersey
  • There’s A Bold And Controversial Theory That Jesus Was A Hallucinogenic Mushroom
  • You Don’t Have 5 Senses, You Have Way More Than That
  • Space Oddity: The Atmosphere Of Titan Spins In A Different Way From The Saturnian Moon
  • Hummingbirds Have Rapidly Evolved In California Over The Past Century
  • The Moon’s Mysterious Magnetic Rocks Might Have A Cataclysmic Explanation
  • The Earth’s Core Is Leaking. The Result: More Gold
  • Over 40 Percent Of Kids In A US Study Thought Bacon Was A Plant
  • Fossil Mystery Reveals New Species Of 85-Million-Year-Old Sea Monster, And It’s “Very Odd”
  • Can’t Handle The Heat? A Potential “Anti-Spice” Could Tame Spicy Food
  • We Now Know When Denisovans, Neanderthals, And Modern Humans Inhabited Denisova Cave
  • Tailless Alligator Shocks Passersby On Highway In Southern Louisiana
  • What Is Trump’s “Golden Dome” Missile System And How Would It Actually Work?
  • Geophagia – Why Some People Eat Soil, And Whether You Should Try It Too (Spoiler: No)
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version