News

Call for 'safe havens' to be part of schools' mental health strategies

Mental health
Funding must be made available for schools to set up "safe havens" and to employ dedicated staff to support students struggling with mental health issues, teachers have said.

A motion passed by members of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers at their annual conference in Liverpool over Easter warned that as many as three children in every classroom have a diagnosable mental health disorder.

Bella Hewes, a specialist dyslexic tutor from Oxford who moved the motion, told the conference that so-called "safe havens" could be a key strategy in helping pupils struggling with issues such as depression and stress.

Safe havens could be physical spaces in the school building where children can go to feel safe if they are struggling with mental health-related or other issues.

The debate came after the findings of an ATL survey, released at the conference, showed that 91 per cent of 861 school staff who responded said that they knew of children in their schools who had mental health issues.

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