Abstract
Background: Schools have been identified as an important place in which to support adolescent
emotional health, although evidence as to which interventions are effective remains limited.
Relatively little is known about student and staff views regarding current school-based emotional
health provision and what they would like to see in the future, and this is what this study explored.
Methods: A random sample of 296 English secondary schools were surveyed to quantify current
level of emotional health provision. Qualitative student focus groups (27 groups, 154 students aged
12-14) and staff interviews (12 interviews, 15 individuals) were conducted in eight schools,
purposively sampled from the survey respondents to ensure a range of emotional health activity,
free school meal eligibility and location. Data were analysed thematically, following a constant
comparison approach.
Results: Emergent themes were grouped into three areas in which participants felt schools did or
could intervene: emotional health in the curriculum, support for those in distress, and the physical
and psychosocial environment. Little time was spent teaching about emotional health in the
curriculum, and most staff and students wanted more. Opportunities to explore emotions in other
curriculum subjects were valued. All schools provided some support for students experiencing
emotional distress, but the type and quality varied a great deal. Students wanted an increase in
school-based help sources that were confidential, available to all and sympathetic, and were
concerned that accessing support should not lead to stigma. Finally, staff and students emphasised
the need to consider the whole school environment in order to address sources of distress such
as bullying and teacher-student relationships, but also to increase activities that enhanced
emotional health.
Conclusion: Staff and students identified several ways in which schools can improve their support
of adolescent emotional health, both within and outside the curriculum. However, such changes
should be introduced as part of a wider consideration of how the whole school environment can
be more supportive of students' emotional health. Clearer guidance at policy level, more rigorous
evaluation of current interventions, and greater dissemination of good practice is necessary to
ensure adolescents' emotional health needs are addressed effectively within schools.
Translated title of the contribution | Supporting adolescent emotional health in schools: a mixed methods study of student and staff views in England |
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Original language | English |
Pages (from-to) | 403 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | BMC Public Health |
Volume | 9(403) |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Oct 2009 |