Teachers have the ability to bring awareness and take shame out of mental health issues by talking about it from an early age
Students need adults who care, show concern, who they can trust and who will listen to them. Not all students have parents who can do this for them. Teachers have a great opportunity to be this person. Caring adults make
themselves available to students, listen attentively, and reflect meaningfully on
the concerns students raise, sometimes offering advice for students to consider.
If we as teachers truly get to know our students, we will also see warning signs of when they need help
When I first started teachers college, I didn't understand how important it was to build relationships with students. I now know that providing a safe, welcoming atmosphere for all students is so crucial to their emotional health, mental health and academic performance. There is still so much stigma and shame surrounding metal health, and I believe we need to do a better job as educators to take the time and discuss it and teach it through the curriculum to help normalize it. Great relationships with our students also lets teachers potentially intervene with a student who might be struggling.
I know how important this is, and logistically how it works. In my experience, sometimes the teacher can help, but sometimes they can't. My questions are, how do you help someone who doesn't want to be helped? Who won't talk to you and shuts you out? How do you support someone and encourage them when they have no self worth? Is even grade 5 too late to reverse the damage that's been done to a person mind? How do we cope when there is no support from parents? What if the parents are suffering with mental health issues? What role does social media and technology play in this?