First Advisor
Vandy Kanyako
Term of Graduation
January 2026
Date of Publication
1-1-2026
Document Type
Thesis
Language
English
Subjects
Conflict Resolution in Schools, Educational Reform, Instituionalization, Peace Education, School Climate
Physical Description
1 online resource ( pages)
Abstract
This study explores peace education as an institutional process within the Sultanate of Oman’s K–12 education system. Currently, Oman Vision 2040 articulates commitments to social cohesion, global citizenship, and holistic development. Existing empirical research indicates constant challenges related to bullying, student well-being, emotional distress, and school-related harm. This study conceptualizes peace education as a structural and relational mechanism embedded within institutional routines, leadership practices, and conflict-management responses. Using a qualitative integrative review design, the study examines peer-reviewed research, policy documents, and institutional analyses relevant to Oman, the Gulf region, and broader peace education scholarship. The analysis is guided by theoretical lenses drawn from peace and conflict studies, educational psychology, and culturally grounded peacebuilding theory. Deductive and inductive thematic coding were used to determine how schools conceptualize conflict, manage harm, and institutionalize or fragment peace-oriented practices. Results indicate that peace-related initiatives in Omani schools are present but structurally fragmented. Counseling services, social-emotional learning activities, disciplinary systems, and isolated peace programs operate in parallel as opposed to within a coherent institutional framework. Institutional responses to conflict frequently prioritize behavioral control and compliance over relational repair and skill-building. Leadership practices are a decisive factor in whether peace-oriented approaches remain peripheral or become embedded in daily school routines. Omani cultural and educational values strongly coincide with peace education principles, yet alignment alone does not ensure institutional embedding. The study finds that the main challenge is reconfiguring existing structures to support coordinated, reflective, and culturally grounded conflict management. Recommendations for implementation include leadership accountability for coordinating conflict, reflective use of school climate data, clarification of roles, teacher capacity-building for structured dialogue, and the translation of cultural values through daily institutional practice. Thus, reframing peace education as part of the institute, rather than supplementary, the context-sensitive frameworks offered are suitable for institutional integration with a centralized education system.
Rights
In Copyright. URI: http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).
Recommended Citation
Al Braiki, Mohamed, "Effectiveness of Peace Education and Recommendations for Implementation In the Sultanate of Oman's School Curriculum, Vision 2040" (2026). Dissertations and Theses. Paper 7016.