Education professionals observe mental health challenges in their students and staff daily. Which places them in a unique position to assist with evaluating school-based mental health services.
But how can a strong mental health program transform your school environment into a space where students thrive academically and emotionally and staff feel confident, supported, and empowered to succeed?
Could the right mental health program make a difference?
Schools commonly approach mental health and wellbeing by assigning indirect or supportive mental health tasks to existing staff, hiring case management professionals directly, or employing mental health providers through the district.
These levels of support provide positive options for educators. Yet, it's important to note that the most significant result of the effectiveness of school-based mental health services hinges on their ability to meet the mental wellbeing of a school's student body and staff. An effective mental health strategy should focus on individual and personalized needs.
Understanding the mental health services available at your school is necessary if you hope to create an environment that promotes mental wellbeing.
With regular evaluations of the existing strategies in place, you'll better identify whether these programs are meeting the needs of students and staff to create a more supportive environment.
Begin by evaluating your school's mental health program and assessing its accessibility to all students and staff, with flexible options for support.
Observe if it addresses a diverse set of student and staff needs, cultural competence that respects the cultural, linguistic, and socioeconomic backgrounds of your school's community. Determine if outcome tracking provides clear metrics on whether mental wellbeing is improving. Are you seeing success?
If there are no school-based mental health services currently in place, recognizing the everyday challenges students and staff face with their mental health can guide you.
When student mental wellbeing is on the decline, warnings signs can look like:
Simultaneously, teachers' mental health will wane through signs of fatigue and overwhelm, struggles with keeping control of the classroom, and a noticeable uptick in sick days or time-off requests.
The lack of available school mental health resources to support educators is one cause of teacher burnout and often leads to high staff turnover.
Meeting these health challenges requires you to identify effective strategies that address the diverse needs of mental wellbeing for both students and staff. The following considerations can help guide you with the development of an effective school-based mental health strategy.
For many schools and districts, implementing student mental health services requires a significant investment. Which means delivering measurable and meaningful outcomes is critical.
To ensure that the services you select meet the individual needs of your school's community, consider the following questions:
For educators, meeting the mental health challenges facing schools today can feel overwhelming.
However, with thoughtful consideration, continued assessment, and guided support, your school's mental health program can create an environment for students to thrive emotionally and academically and allow staff to feel supported, confident, and empowered to succeed.
To discover how the right program can make a lasting difference for your school community, Explore School-Based Mental Health Services.