Publication | Closed Access
‘Part of Who we are as a School Should Include Responsibility for Well‐Being’: Links between the School Environment, Mental Health and Behaviour
111
Citations
21
References
2006
Year
School CounselingEducationEarly Childhood EducationSchool OrganizationMental HealthChild Mental HealthPsychologyTeacher EducationEducational EquityEducational PolicySociology Of EducationPositive Mental HealthYouth Well-beingSchool FunctioningHealth SciencesChild Well-beingBehavioral Sciences‘ PartYoung PeopleSchool PsychologySocial-emotional WellbeingAdolescent LearningSchool Mental HealthMainstream SchoolSchool EnvironmentSchool Social WorkEducation Policy
Drawing from a Scottish study, this article examines ways in which the school environment can impact upon the well‐being of pupils and their associated behaviour. It identifies tensions between existing school structures and cultures and the promotion of positive mental health, particularly in relation to the curriculum, pastoral care, discipline and teacher/pupil relationships. In many cases, schools attempt to address mental well‐being by bolting fragmented initiatives onto existing systems, and we argue that a more fundamental review of values, policies and practices throughout the school is needed. This paper also looks at the roles of interagency workers in schools, and reports that, in most cases, these workers are seen as offering a parallel service to the mainstream school, targeted at the most troubled or troublesome pupils. We suggest that schools should draw on the skills and understandings of these workers to help build new cultures throughout the school for the benefit of all children and young people.
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