Status of Emotional Well-Being of Elementary School Students in Bhoirymbong Block, Meghalaya: A Cross-Sectional Quantitative Study

Authors

Dr. B. Umesh Kumar Sharma

Assistant Professor, North East Regional Institute of Education (NERIE) National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT), Shillong, Meghalaya (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51584/IJRIAS.2026.110200030

Subject Category: Education

Volume/Issue: 11/2 | Page No: 332-339

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-02-19

Accepted: 2026-02-24

Published: 2026-03-02

Abstract

Emotional well-being is fundamental to children’s academic engagement, social development, and long-term mental health. The present cross-sectional quantitative study examined the emotional well-being of 264 elementary school students from eight government schools in Bhoirymbong Block, Meghalaya. A validated, child-friendly questionnaire assessed multiple domains including overall emotional status, worry, happiness, loneliness, peer relationships, school perception, fear of teachers, and examination anxiety. Descriptive findings indicated that 74.9% of students demonstrated healthy emotional status; however, emotional vulnerability increased significantly across grade levels. Inferential analyses revealed significant grade differences in emotional vulnerability, F(2, 261) = 9.34, p < .001, and a gender difference in examination anxiety, with girls reporting higher anxiety. Multiple regression analysis showed that fear of teachers (β = .34), examination anxiety (β = .29), and loneliness (β = .21) significantly predicted emotional vulnerability, explaining 32% of the variance, while peer trust functioned as a protective factor. Findings highlight the critical role of school climate and assessment practices in shaping emotional outcomes and underscore the need for emotionally responsive pedagogy and structured social-emotional learning frameworks in elementary education.

Keywords

emotional well-being, elementary students, examination anxiety, teacher-student relationship, school climate, social-emotional learning

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