摘要
Little is known about the relationship between students* perceptions of their behaviour and intellectual status within the classroom and their happiness. Educational practitioners consistently confront misbehaviour and academic failure; whether this is an indicator of student happiness is unclear. In this exploratory research two hundred and fifty six students were asked to self-rate their happiness via a faces scale. These students also completed a self-concept scale focussed on behavioural adjustment and intellectual and school status to determine whether these were factors that impacted on their happiness. Additionally, parents and teachers rated the participant*s happiness. The findings of this research indicate that the students* perceptions of their behaviour and academic capability accounted for variance in their self-rated happiness. Both sub-scales accounted for more variance in the students* self-reported happiness than the teachers* and parents* ratings. The findings of this research are consistent with the few previous studies that attribute social factors such as belonging to childhood happiness.