Wellbeing as a Core Indicator of School Quality

In February 2025, the Abu Dhabi Department of Education and Knowledge (ADEK) launched the Wellbeing Mark, a recognition program that places student and staff wellbeing at the centre of how school quality is defined. Wellbeing is positioned not as an add-on, but as a core indicator of effective schooling.

Set to roll out across all private and charter schools in Abu Dhabi from the 2025–26 academic year, the Wellbeing Mark represents a turning point in school evaluation. It moves beyond academic attainment alone to explicitly recognize the role of emotional, mental, and physical wellbeing in shaping meaningful educational outcomes.

What Is the
Wellbeing Mark?

The Wellbeing Mark is a transparent, measurable framework designed to help parents, educators, and communities understand how seriously schools take mental, emotional, and physical wellbeing.

Rather than focusing on compliance or box-ticking, the program aims to drive lasting cultural change within schools. For the first time, parents will have access to a clear, standardised indicator that signals whether a school meaningfully supports the wellbeing of both students and teachers.
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How Uluru Supports the SPIRE Framework

ADEK’s Wellbeing Mark is structured around the SPIRE framework, which recognizes five interconnected dimensions of wellbeing. Below is an outline of how Uluru directly supports and operationalises each domain in ways that are measurable, scalable, and aligned with school-level implementation.

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Self-Empowerment

Uluru is designed to build student agency by strengthening executive function skills such as planning, prioritization, time awareness, and follow-through. Through structured task scaffolding, reflective prompts, and real-time feedback, students develop a clearer sense of control over their workload and learning process.

Rather than relying on external enforcement, Uluru helps students internalise habits of self-regulation and ownership, directly supporting ADEK’s emphasis on empowerment as a core wellbeing indicator.

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Physical Wellbeing

While Uluru is not a physical health or fitness platform, it supports physical wellbeing by addressing cognitive overload, stress accumulation, and fatigue—factors that strongly influence sleep, energy levels, and overall health.

By helping students pace work, reduce last-minute pressure, and identify early signs of overwhelm, Uluru contributes to healthier daily routines and more sustainable learning behaviors that complement schools’ physical wellbeing initiatives.

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Intellectual Wellbeing

Uluru is curriculum-agnostic and focuses on strengthening the underlying cognitive skills required for learning across all subject areas. By helping students break complex assignments into manageable steps, estimate effort, and reflect on performance, Uluru supports deeper engagement and more meaningful learning.

This approach aligns with ADEK’s goal of fostering intellectual wellbeing by ensuring students are not only absorbing content, but also developing the cognitive awareness needed to learn effectively in diverse academic environments.

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Relational Wellbeing

Uluru supports relational wellbeing by improving communication and alignment between students, parents, and educators. The platform provides shared visibility into workload, stress points, and learning patterns, enabling more constructive conversations and reducing friction within the school community.

For parents, Uluru offers guidance on supportive language and positive reinforcement. For educators, it surfaces insights that help contextualise student behavior and performance without increasing administrative burden.

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Emotional Wellbeing

Uluru was developed with acute sensitivity to emotional regulation, anxiety, and stress responses that directly impact learning. Through reflective mood tracking and behavioral pattern recognition, the system helps identify stress triggers and early indicators of burnout or disengagement.

AI-supported coaching prompts translate these insights into practical interventions that support emotional awareness, resilience, and frustration tolerance—key components of emotional wellbeing under the SPIRE framework.

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Piloting the Wellbeing Mark Program Across Abu Dhabi Schools

During the 2024–25 academic year, 64 schools are participating in the pilot phase of the Wellbeing Mark, including 47 private schools and 17 charter schools.

This pilot phase allows ADEK to refine evaluation methods, ensure fairness across diverse school contexts, and establish clear validation criteria ahead of full-scale implementation. Insights gathered during this period will inform how wellbeing indicators are assessed and embedded across the wider school system.

Why This Matters: Impact on Students and Teachers

When students feel safe, supported, and empowered, they are more likely to engage deeply with learning, build resilience, and demonstrate stronger academic performance over time.

For teachers, schools that prioritize wellbeing consistently report higher job satisfaction, reduced burnout, and stronger, more trusting classroom relationships. These conditions directly influence teaching quality, retention, and overall school stability.

Supporting Evidence & Measurement

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Uluru generates anonymized, aggregate indicators that help schools evidence wellbeing practices in ways that are both measurable and policy-aligned, without exposing individual student data.

Through multi-dimensional behavioral inputs, including task completion patterns, time-on-task estimates, response latency, and optional wellbeing check-ins, Uluru identifies trends related to executive function development, stress load, and engagement over time.

At a school or cohort level, these signals can be translated into aggregate insights such as patterns of cognitive overload, fluctuations in student engagement, and indicators of resilience or burnout risk. These insights can support schools in demonstrating how wellbeing principles are being operationalised in daily practice, complementing qualitative observations and existing reporting mechanisms used during Wellbeing Mark evaluation.

Importantly, Uluru’s analytics are designed to support reflection and continuous improvement, not ranking or punitive comparison, aligning with ADEK’s emphasis on transparency, fairness, and cultural integrity.

Implementation Without Burden

Uluru is designed to integrate into existing school ecosystems without adding administrative or instructional burden for teachers.

The platform is curriculum-agnostic and operates alongside current learning management systems, assessment tools, and pastoral care structures. It does not require educators to redesign lessons, duplicate reporting, or adopt new grading practices. Instead, Uluru works in the background to surface patterns and insights already embedded in students’ learning behaviors.

For teachers, this means reduced friction rather than additional workload. Insights are presented in a clear, digestible format that helps contextualise student behavior, flag emerging challenges, and inform supportive interventions—without requiring constant monitoring or manual data entry.

This design directly addresses a common risk in wellbeing initiatives: that responsibility for implementation falls disproportionately on educators. Uluru helps schools meet wellbeing expectations while protecting teacher capacity and professional autonomy.

 

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Pilot & Partnership Readiness

Uluru is well suited to support schools participating in, or preparing for, the ADEK Wellbeing Mark pilot and full rollout.

The platform’s flexibility allows it to be adopted incrementally, enabling schools to begin aligning with SPIRE domains without large-scale structural change. Its ability to generate anonymised, aggregate insights makes it particularly relevant for pilot environments, where evidence generation, validation, and refinement of evaluation criteria are central.

As a partnership, Uluru can support ADEK and participating schools by:

In this way, Uluru functions not as a standalone program, but as enabling infrastructure—supporting ADEK’s goal of embedding wellbeing as a durable, measurable component of school quality across Abu Dhabi.