Protecting our school communities with Mental Health Supports
Our schools are the center of our communities and should be the safest, most just places. Our students can’t learn if they aren’t well. Increasingly, that means our students and educators must receive the mental health support they need, and schools must have the resources, staffing, and programs necessary to effectively address the challenges they face. By working together, we can help protect our school communities and get our students the help they need. As the leading champion of America’s public schools, NEA promotes solution-oriented advocacy to bring much-needed mental health support to students and educators.
Featured Micro-credential: Adult Social Emotional Learning
Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) is an integral part of education and human development. SEL is the process through which all young people and adults acquire and apply the knowledge, skills, and attitudes to develop healthy identities, manage emotions and achieve personal and collective goals, feel and show empathy for others, establish and maintain supportive relationships, and make responsible and caring decisions (CASEL, 2023).
This set of micro-credentials describes how five core social and emotional competencies are relevant in the daily lives of educators and ways to continually develop areas of competence as adults.
Background on the Scale of the Crisis
The COVID-19 pandemic increased stress among students, as well as educators grappling with being there for their students while coping with challenges of their own. However, this mental health crisis did not begin with the pandemic.
Before the pandemic, the CDC tracked that from 2009 and 2019, high school students’ reports of persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness increased from 26.1% to 36.7%. And nearly 1 in 5 children had a mental, emotional, or behavioral disorder, but only 20% of them received care from a mental health provider.
Now things have gotten even worse because of the devastation of COVID-19. For our students, more than 140,000 have lost a caregiver, with youth of color disproportionately affected. For our educators, a survey of U.S. public sector workers released in October found that K-12 public school educators were the most likely profession to report higher levels of anxiety, stress and burnout – and 55% are ready to leave the profession early.
We are in the midst of a crisis. It has become even more of an imperative to act with real solutions--more counselors, more resources and more support for students, educators, and their families.