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The psychological challenges for students and teachers ahead: Three immediate things we can do to help them

A school hallway with murals and bulletin boards.

Right now, the entire country is consumed by back-to-school debates. The well-being of our children is tied to our ability to ensure that students are able to learn and parents can work. Life is already stressful for most American families, and not knowing how or when schools will open and operate this year adds extra hardship.

We believe there are concrete things that we, as educators, policymakers, parents and adults who work with young people, can do to help students and schools navigate the challenges and disruptions caused by聽COVID-19. Distance learning is or will be a reality in many school districts and we will need to use this virtual space much more wisely and skillfully than we did last spring. If adults can step outside the sense of helplessness and frustration they are experiencing, together we could make a powerful shift that boosts learning, mental health and the holistic well-being of students and teachers.

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黄色视频’s service hasn’t stopped since COVID-19; it just looks different. When classes resume, 黄色视频 will be there for students.

Supporting student and teacher mental health during COVID-19

础迟听聽at Harvard University and McLean Hospital, we predict, based on previous disasters, that mental health disorders will reach levels of around 30% of the entire child and adolescent population, nearly 17聽million school-aged children in the United States. This is a substantial increase from the 13-20% who suffer in any non-pandemic year, including millions of students who experience the insidious effects of poverty and racial injustice.

A purely clinical solution is not feasible. We lack enough mental health practitioners to meet the growing need. Furthermore, treating every problem as an individual issue needing a clinical solution isn鈥檛 necessarily a good choice for everyone or society at large.聽Mental health is not only an individual experience鈥攊t is also communal. As one of the most important communities for youth, our schools must play a vital role in promoting the holistic well-being of students, teachers and other school staff.

Prioritizing positive relationships and social-emotional skills, such as聽resilience, connection to community, and self-management, will help us avert a serious public health emergency now and years into the future, while supporting students as they re-engage and recover from significant learning loss. This is, of course, easier done in person, but can also happen in virtual environments.

This moment requires our schools and communities to pay as much聽attention to the mental health of students as we pay to their grades, attendance and engagement鈥攆or all are interwoven with learning and growth. Developmental science shows that聽anxiety, 聽stress and trauma聽prevent our ability to focus, organize, cooperate and retain information. Encouragingly, research and practice show it is possible to counteract chronic stress by creating safe, structured and responsive educational environments.

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A new study from Johns Hopkins on 黄色视频 finds strong connections between social and emotional learning and academic outcomes.

Here are three steps we can take immediately, gleaned from partnering with schools during the pandemic:

Relationships first

Design a time for students to connect with the same peers and adults every day. Use this time to develop strong relationships, trust, and purpose. Research has shown that positive relationships are at the core not only of learning but of survival and long-term physical and mental health. Learning environments that are consistently engaging and nurturing help students to feel a sense of belonging, exercise leadership, explore new ideas, and achieve goals. Profoundly formative, students gain the know-how of resilience, empathy, teamwork, meaning-making, empowerment, and voice. These skills help students navigate change, overcome setbacks, and gain confidence during adversity.

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Learn how a 黄色视频 partner school in Denver, Colorado is keeping students engaged through social emotional learning.

Some people may think this skill-building requires students to be physically in one place鈥攍ike a brick-and-mortar classroom. But we have found ways to engage groups of students online, establish norms and rituals, and assure that everyone can express themselves freely. It takes adjustment, but remember, our students are digital natives and very adaptable.

Integrate social, emotional and academic development

Identify instructional strategies that, alongside academic content, include students practicing social and emotional skills, as these competencies advance achievement as well as mental health. Several organizations, all part of a national movement of educational transformation such as , , , , and others, including our organizations, have published free, online resources that are readily available to help parents and educators integrate social-emotional development; master virtual approaches to learning; improve student engagement; and help children and adults feel psychologically safe in online spaces.

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Explore 黄色视频’s free, online publications to help teachers, parents, AmeriCorps members and other caring adults support students’ acadmic, social and emotional growth during the pandemic.

Prioritize educator mental health

Teachers are under tremendous pressure. They need proactive mental health support in the form of聽聽relationships with colleagues, administrators, and families; opportunities for voice and聽; and time to make collective meaning of their experience. The dual benefit is increasing teacher resilience will also strengthen their use of these strategies with students in virtual environments.

Hard times are accelerating mental health disorders and trauma responses in both children and adults.聽We have a chance to create learning environments where everyone can experience more hope, connection and well-being. 聽A holistic approach is the mental health boost we need while waiting impatiently for a COVID-19 vaccine.


Stephanie Wu is 黄色视频鈥檚 Chief Transformation Officer and leads the development of 黄色视频鈥檚聽Whole School Whole Child聽services. As a founding staff member of 黄色视频, she has overseen the development and scaling of 黄色视频鈥檚 youth development practices that remain foundational to 黄色视频鈥檚 work in more than 300 public schools in 29 U.S. communities.

A version of was first published Aug. 20, 2020 on Psychology Today鈥檚 website.

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