Charlotte Reed is phase lead at Bosmere Junior School in
Hampshire. She tells us about her experience of senior mental
health lead training and how it’s helped her identify how the
school can further support its staff and pupils with their mental
health and wellbeing.
Our school has always been proactive in supporting pupils’ mental
health and wellbeing, so we welcomed the opportunity to formalise
our practice through the DfE’s senior mental health lead
training.
The training has helped our school to see where we already had
appropriate support in place, but also where further work was
needed. As soon as I completed the first training session, I did
an audit of our current practice, to identify which aspects of
our whole school approach could be improved.
The eight points below are the quick and
relatively simple fixes I incorporated into our mental health
strategic plan:
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Leadership and management: one of our
solutions was to appoint a mental health governor. We agreed a
role description and a list of possible questions from the
senior lead training that they could ask when monitoring mental
health support. We also made sure that mental health was
included in our safeguarding, behaviour, safety and diversity
policies. Having whole staff buy-in is also important, so we
added mental health and wellbeing to our regular Senior
Leadership Team meeting agenda, reporting achievements and
setting out next steps.
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Identifying need and monitoring the impact of
interventions: we currently use the software, CPOMs,
to record our safeguarding and behaviour concerns. By adding a
mental health tag, we can keep a record of pupils with a mental
health concern, the support provided and the impact of
interventions. We have since subdivided this tag, so that we
can also record family member mental health concerns, alongside
the pupil.
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Curriculum, teaching and learning: I
identified where mental health activities were already being
delivered, such as through Personal Social Health and Economic
(PSHE) lessons or assemblies. I then mapped these out across
the wider curriculum, so mental health and wellbeing could be
embedded through our whole school vision.
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Pupil voice: we tweaked a questionnaire from
the senior mental health lead training and set it as a survey
for pupils to complete. This enabled us to then create more
tailored support groups for different years and genders based
on their responses. Pupil mental health and wellbeing displays
have also now been created based on pupil need.
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Staff development: a mental health board in
our staff room ensures staff wellbeing is considered. This
board has links to resources and websites, as well phone
numbers for support. Any new initiatives, which might be useful
for particular groups of children, are shared here. There is
currently information pertaining to World Mental Health Day
2022. A new staff mental health and wellbeing policy is also
being developed.
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Working with parents and carers: our parent
information board gives families access to information they may
need about support for their children. We have an open-door
policy, and our Home School Link Worker meets parents and
pupils every morning so they know they can access immediate
support if needed. We also hold regular coffee mornings for
parents and these focus on common areas of need. For example,
September focused on separation anxiety, as this was a specific
concern for many of our parents and pupils at the start of a
new school year.
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Direct targeted support and appropriate
referrals: we are currently part of the Mental Health Support
Team rollout, which will help provide further support and
referrals so that pupils requiring more targeted or specialist
mental health support and advice can receive this when they
need it. I was made aware of the importance of signing up to
these teams through the senior mental health lead training.
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Our ethos promotes respect: we want all our
children to be part of a set of values we call HEARTS: Healthy,
Empathetic, Aspirational, Respectful. Trustworthy and Safe.
These underpin our whole curriculum and there is a half termly
focus on each one where pupils are rewarded for demonstrating
that behaviour.
By pulling together everything we were already doing as a school
community, and making a few small, but impactful changes, I was
able to make sure that we are fully covering the eight aspects of
a whole school approach to mental health and wellbeing. The
school now has an improved support offer, and the training has
been hugely helpful in identifying areas where more work is
needed over the next year.
Get further information about Senior mental health lead
training
Head to
gov.uk to find out more about the grant funding
available for mental health lead training for your school or
college. You can choose from over 100
courses aimed at beginner, intermediate or advanced
levels, and can also use your grant for supply cover while
undertaking training.