7 Ways to Build a Positive Mental Health Culture in Your Classroom
Kali ThorpeKali Thorpe
Articles by Kali
When we talk about mental health, we often think about depression, anxiety, and Schizophrenia, and there may be some negative stigma around it.
Mental health encompasses our social, emotional, and psychological wellbeing. It’s similar to how we would take care of our bodies – like taking vitamins or getting a checkup. Mental health is what’s going on inside our brains.
I’m a middle school teacher and being in a room with 30 other kids and talking about your feelings is not something students want to do willingly. But if you normalize it, it just becomes something in your classroom that they’re OK with.
But how do you start that process? How do you get them to want to open up?
Mental health affects discipline and behavior concerns, too. Many fights stem from miscommunications and misunderstandings, so if we put a focus on conflict resolution and healthy coping skills for anger and frustration, the hope is that they will default to one of those skills instead physical altercations. I think if we put a focus on mental health, we’d see a decrease in negative behaviors.
From there, you can start building relationships with your students authentically – show you care about them and want to get to know them. I notice around October to November that we have established our climate and culture and the students feel more comfortable opening up.
If you do the safety deposit box exercise or the I Want my Teacher to Know activity, prepare yourself for when you read them. It won’t be easy, and there may be tears. But when you see what these beautiful little humans are going through every day, it will solidify the importance of mental health in the classroom. That’s what motivates me.
Mental health encompasses our social, emotional, and psychological wellbeing. It’s similar to how we would take care of our bodies – like taking vitamins or getting a checkup. Mental health is what’s going on inside our brains.
I’m a middle school teacher and being in a room with 30 other kids and talking about your feelings is not something students want to do willingly. But if you normalize it, it just becomes something in your classroom that they’re OK with.
But how do you start that process? How do you get them to want to open up?
- Find your why.
Mental health affects discipline and behavior concerns, too. Many fights stem from miscommunications and misunderstandings, so if we put a focus on conflict resolution and healthy coping skills for anger and frustration, the hope is that they will default to one of those skills instead physical altercations. I think if we put a focus on mental health, we’d see a decrease in negative behaviors.
- Set the tone.
From there, you can start building relationships with your students authentically – show you care about them and want to get to know them. I notice around October to November that we have established our climate and culture and the students feel more comfortable opening up.
- Be vulnerable and authentic.
- Look through their eyes.
- Watch them grow.
- Check the pulse.
- Be ready for the journey.
If you do the safety deposit box exercise or the I Want my Teacher to Know activity, prepare yourself for when you read them. It won’t be easy, and there may be tears. But when you see what these beautiful little humans are going through every day, it will solidify the importance of mental health in the classroom. That’s what motivates me.