Teaching Intrapersonal Conflict: A Necessity in a Post COVID World

Sanae Elmoudden
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Abstract


At the university level, mental health and mental illness education is still limited to clinical disciplines. However, Post COVID-19 mental health issues have become an epidemic that the university cannot ignore. Left alone to clinical disciplines, mental health issues appear as a health disturbance instead of a daily process of internal negotiations in need of acceptance and promotion.  Indeed, the normalization of mental health can lead students to seek the required help with no fear of diagnosis stigma. By interviewing students and faculty about their mental health journey during COVID and Post-COVID 19, this paper proposes different spaces where the normalization of mental health can be integrated easily within Higher Education. One of the spaces alluded to in the paper is an inclusive language that incorporates neurodiversity mental illness. However, the main purpose of this focuses on intrapersonal conflict as a discursive space where teaching can become mindful.

Keywords


Intrapersonal Conflict, Mental health, Higher Education, Inclusivity, Normalization

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References


Elmoudden, S. (2023). Teaching intrapersonal conflict: A necessity in a post COVID world. International Journal on Social and Education Sciences (IJonSES), 5(3), 736-745. https://doi.org/10.46328/ijonses.583




DOI: https://doi.org/10.46328/ijonses.583

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International Journal on Social and Education Sciences (IJonSES) - ISSN: 2688-7061


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International Society for Technology, Education and Science (ISTES)

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Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.