Student mental health and well-being is one of the top priorities for learners, their families, educators, and school and district leaders. The experiences individuals bring into school—including trauma and poverty—can affect learning and make it challenging to develop and maintain a school climate in which all students feel a sense of safety and belonging.
Supporting students’ mental health needs involves teaching students how to build emotional resilience, providing them with adequate access to mental health services, and promoting a community culture where students and adults care for and support one another.
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Students, families, and school staff shared suggestions for improving student mental health, focusing on the following needs.
Explore the tiles below to learn more about projects and resources that aim to strengthen student mental health and well-being.
The Bristol Township School District team identified the challenge of addressing the role trauma plays in student mental health through a deep dive with a variety of school and community members including Bristol Cares Coalition, student, staff, and family surveys, and with their Equity Leadership Council.
Learning Salons fostered collaboration between districts and edtech/solution providers to co-design innovative and effective teaching and learning tools that addressed a problem of practice, including student mental health.
A licensed therapist, school counselor, and mental health consultant shares how she supports schools, administrators, and counselors to look at their current resources, assess needs, and make counseling services more accessible to all students.
Digital Promise’s premier film, Failure to Communicate: A 360° Experience about Learner Variability, breathes life into the definition of learner variability, showing what it looks and feels like in the classroom from the perspectives of a teacher and learner.