Hope and its Applications: A Scoping Review  

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53761/8zfa6336

Keywords:

hope, hope-based practices, higher education

Abstract

Despite a growing recognition and empirical base on hope and its value in educational contexts, there has been limited research into hope and hope-related strategies for transforming higher education (HE) teaching and learning practices. We report on a scoping review to uncover current perspectives of hope as contemplated and applied in contemporary HE teaching-learning contexts. Our study draws from six databases (A+ Education, ERIC, Education Source, Education Research Complete, PsychINFO, and Scopus) and thematically analysed 16 studies across the last decade to understand their context, theoretical framing, and practice-based orientations. Our findings highlight the range, use, and value of research into hope expressed as a multidimensional construct and variously understood through individual, sociocultural, and critical perspectives. While many studies adopt an individual view of hope as a measurable trait linked to student wellbeing and academic success, others emphasise relational, collective and community-based approaches, or frame hope as a transformative, collective force for social and political change. Each perspective engendered associated hope-based practices ranging from goal-setting, mindfulness training, dialogic and caring relationships with educators and students to cultivating possible education futures and justice-oriented teaching. We argue that this diversity reflects both the richness and the generative tensions that are thinly understood within current hope scholarship. Our findings contribute to the interdisciplinary, institutional planning and development of hope-based curricula and approaches and have implications for HE practice and the scholarship of hope.

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Author Biographies

  • Dr Elaine Khoo, Massey University, New Zealand

    Elaine Khoo is an Associate Professor in Digital Education at the Institute of Education, Massey University, Aotearoa New Zealand. She has expertise in digital pedagogies and works collaboratively with practitioners across educational contexts from the early years to compulsory schooling and tertiary levels of education to enhance teaching-learning across a range of digitally-supported contexts. She has recently completed a scoping review of hope and hope-based pedagogies in online higher education as a way of addressing the negative impact of emergency remote ways of learning on online learners during the COVID-19 pandemic. This work is expected to contribute to identifying future areas for research and practice on innovative pedagogical strategies that promote hope as a concept and hope-based pedagogies as transformative practices for teaching and learning in online higher education.

  • Dr Alice Beban, Massey University, New Zealand

    Alice Beban is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology at School of People, Environment and Planning, Massey University, New Zealand. Alice’s research, teaching, and service portfolios focus on environmental sociology from a feminist political ecology perspective, with research programmes in Cambodia, Thailand, the Mekong Delta, and Aotearoa New Zealand. Her recent research and teaching explores pedagogies and challenges of hope. She leads an initiative for high school students in Aotearoa NZ and internationally, ‘He Kaupapa Tūmanako / Project Hope’, that weaves together Mātauranga Māori and other social science conceptions of hope in a suite of distance education initiatives.

    She edited a 2025 Special Issue of NZ Sociology titled “Toward Sociologies of Hope in Aotearoa New Zealand”. Recent articles in this field include “Holding together Hope and despair: Transformative learning through virtual place-based education in Aotearoa, New Zealand” (2025).

  • Dr Clare M. Mouat, Massey University, New Zealand

    Dr Clare Mouat - MPIA, Senior Lecturer in Planning and Geography, at School of People, Environment and Planning, Massey University, New Zealand - is an interdisciplinary scholar-storyteller specialising in community, planning, and governance. Her work planning and designing for hope informs collaborations and a portfolio exploring innovation and infrastructures of care, repair, and flourishing futures, and influences law, and policy in multiple jurisdictions.  Clare serves as Associate Editor for Geographical Research, and on international committees such as the Institute of Australian Geographers and Australasian Cities Research Network. Her TEDxUWA talk championed ways of growing and greening democracy. From soil to outer space, she examines the sites, regimes, and relationships that serve and stifle flourishing futures for (non)humans as we imagine, plan, mobilise, democratise, and re-member community in ways that are vital to intergenerational wellbeing and governance on a warming planet.

  • Kymberley Kennedy, Massey University, New Zealand

    Kymber is a Master of Sustainable Development Goals student at Massey University with an interest in humans as a part of nature and the environment. While this was Kymber’s first research assistant position, they brought forward skills and techniques gained from an almost decade-long career in technical and environmental fields. Kymber enjoys the outdoors and finds inspiration for their work from being part of nature. Their future academic goal is to work on a doctoral research thesis.

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Published

2025-12-19

Data Availability Statement

Data is derived from a scoping review of the literature. Full datasets are available on request.

Issue

Section

Academic Development

How to Cite

Hope and its Applications: A Scoping Review  . (2025). Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice. https://doi.org/10.53761/8zfa6336