Engaging Adolescents in Secondary Schools

Author(s):  
Amy L. Reschly ◽  
Angie J. Pohl ◽  
Sandra L. Christenson ◽  
James J. Appleton

The chapter “Engaging Adolescents in Secondary Schools,” from the volume School Mental Health Services for Adolescents, covers the topics of student engagement, connections between engagement/disengagement and mental health, and interventions to enhance engagement. Student engagement is a construct with wide appeal to scholars and practitioners who study and work with school-age youth. Engagement interventions have the potential to enhance students’ functioning across academic, behavioral, and social-emotional domains. Tables of student engagement interventions, organized by type (academic, behavioral, cognitive, affective) and level of intensity (universal, targeted), in accordance with response-to-intervention (RTI)/multi-tiered system of support (MTSS) service-delivery models, are included, along with general implementation recommendations.

School Mental Health Services for Adolescents is composed of 15 chapters, written by well-known authors in the fields of psychology, education, social work, and counseling, who discuss and describe services for adolescents that can be implemented in secondary schools by school-based professionals. The authors present methods of overcoming implementation barriers through strategic service-delivery models. The volume is divided into three sections. The first chapters describe the history and need for services, explore the identity of professionals that serve as school mental health providers, and describe methods of engaging adolescents in school. The next chapters focus on issues of identification and referral for treatment in schools and provide a description of interventions. Proposed service delivery models are organized by target topics, including attention and organization, disruptive behavior, internalizing behaviors, autism spectrum disorders, substance abuse, and chronic health concerns. The final chapters describe assessment and the integration of school mental health in schools.


Author(s):  
Denise A. Soares ◽  
Catherine C. George ◽  
Kimberly J. Vannest

The chapter “Screening and Progress Monitoring in Secondary Schools,” in School Mental Health Services for Adolescents, examines social, emotional, and behavioral screening in secondary schools. Mental health disorders in adolescence are known to be associated with poor school and life outcomes, including academic underachievement, school dropout, drug use, and physical aggression. This chapter reviews universal screening at the secondary level, which provides evidence to help assess instruction in the school and identifies those students who may not be making expected progress. In addition, the authors describe barriers to screening. They present data on types of common problems, justification for engaging in screening, and methods for screening and progress monitoring, including guiding principles and time lines.


Author(s):  
Valsamma Eapen ◽  
Amelia Walter

Individuals with Intellectual Disability (ID) experience higher rates of psychiatric disorders than the general population, although findings are mixed with regard to the determinants of this increased prevalence. Despite growing recognition of the prevalence of mental health problems among individuals with ID, and the consequences this comorbidity carries for individuals, families and the wider community, there are multiple challenges in identifying and managing these concerns. Accurate diagnosis and effective intervention is currently hindered by factors including the applicability of standardised psychiatric classification systems, gaps in service delivery models and access to such services, as well as unmet training needs.


Author(s):  
Ann M. Roche ◽  
Roger S. Nicholas

This chapter addresses changes in the conceptualization of workforce development and its implications for mental health and addiction1 workers, services, and sectors. First we provide an overview of the background, historical and contextual factors impacting current approaches to workforce development. Next, an examination of systems thinking, service delivery models and goals, workforce planning, leadership and worker recruitment, retention and wellbeing are provided. Finally, theories of knowledge and innovation dissemination, learning models and theories, and emerging use of technology are examined.


2011 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yifeng Wei ◽  
Stan Kutcher ◽  
Magdalena Szumilas

Adolescence is a critical period for the promotion of mental health and the treatment of mental disorders. Schools are well-positioned to address adolescent mental health. This paper describes a school mental health model, “School-based Pathway to Care,” for Canadian secondary schools that links schools to primary care providers, mental health services, and the wider community, enabling them to address youth mental health in a collaborative manner. The model highlights the fundamental role of mental health literacy, gatekeeper training, and education/health system integration in improving adolescent mental health, and enhancing learning environments and academic outcomes.


Author(s):  
Nisha Elizabeth Mathew ◽  
Amelia Walter ◽  
Valsamma Eapen

There is limited evidence base regarding mental health issues in people with intellectual disability (ID), and hence, findings from the general population are often applied to ID groups. Available evidence suggests that individuals with ID experience higher rates of mental health disorders than the general population, although findings are mixed with regard to the determinants of this increased prevalence. Further, the consequences of this comorbidity for individuals, families, and the wider community are often overlooked including the multiple challenges in identifying and managing these concerns. Accurate diagnosis and effective intervention are currently hindered by factors including the applicability of standardized psychiatric classification systems, gaps in service delivery models and access to such services, as well as unmet training needs. It is critical that further research is carried out to examine the specific challenges facing individuals with ID along with facilitating appropriate mental health services to individuals with ID.


Author(s):  
Dakota King-White ◽  
Layla Kurt

Many students come to school with social, emotional, and mental health needs that affect them academically. Secondary students face unique emotional challenges within the academic setting, including relationship concerns, bullying, gender identity, social media, and other traumatic experiences, that could adversely impact them. In addition to addressing academic and behavior needs, the response to intervention (RTI) service delivery model encourages interventions to address the social and emotional needs of students at the secondary level. Although many individuals (e.g., teachers, coaches, principals) provide guidance to students academically, socially, and emotionally, school counselors possess the integral skills and training to support students in all these areas and to collaborate with others to address their needs. This chapter focuses on the secondary school counselor's role in supporting the RTI process by providing a tiered system of mental health support through collaboration and implementing other effective interventions.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deinera Exner-Cortens ◽  
Elizabeth Baker ◽  
Shawna Gray ◽  
Marisa Van Bavel ◽  
Rocio Ramirez Rivera ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Suicide is a leading cause of death among youth and a prominent concern for school mental health providers. Indeed, schools play a key role in suicide prevention, including participating in risk assessments with students expressing suicidal ideation. In the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, many schools now need to offer mental health services, including suicide risk assessment, via eHealth platforms. Post pandemic, the use of eHealth risk assessments will support more accessible services for youth living in rural and remote areas. However, as the remote environment is a new context for many schools, guidance is needed on best practices for eHealth suicide risk assessment among youth. OBJECTIVE This study aims to conduct a rapid, systematic scoping review to explore promising practices for conducting school-based suicide risk assessment among youth via eHealth (ie, information technologies that allow for remote communication). METHODS This review included peer-reviewed articles and gray literature published in English between 2000 and 2020. Although we did not find studies that specifically explored promising practices for school-based suicide risk assessment among youth via eHealth platforms, we found 12 peer-reviewed articles and 23 gray literature documents that contained relevant information addressing our broader study purpose; thus, these 35 sources were included in this review. RESULTS We identified five key recommendation themes for school-based suicide risk assessment among youth via eHealth platforms in the 12 peer-reviewed studies. These included accessibility, consent procedures, session logistics, safety planning, and internet privacy. Specific recommendation themes from the 23 gray literature documents substantially overlapped with and enhanced three of the themes identified in the peer-reviewed literature—consent procedures, session logistics, and safety planning. In addition, based on findings from the gray literature, we expanded the <i>accessibility</i> theme to a broader theme termed <i>youth engagement</i>, which included information on accessibility and building rapport, establishing a therapeutic space, and helping youth prepare for remote sessions. Finally, a new theme was identified in the gray literature findings, specifically concerning school mental health professional boundaries. A second key difference between the gray and peer-reviewed literature was the former’s focus on issues of equity and access and how technology can reinforce existing inequalities. CONCLUSIONS For school mental health providers in need of guidance, we believe that these six recommendation themes (ie, youth engagement, school mental health professional boundaries, consent procedures, session logistics, safety planning, and internet privacy) represent the most promising directions for school-based suicide risk assessment among youth using eHealth tools. However, suicide risk assessment among youth via eHealth platforms in school settings represents a critical research gap. On the basis of the findings of this review, we provide specific recommendations for future research, including the need to focus on the needs of diverse youth. CLINICALTRIAL


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