Elizabeth Ivens looks at how Prep Schools are leading the way in creating a blueprint for emotional health for young children…
HAPPINESS lessons for children as young as eight will be on the agenda for some maintained schools from this month, in the wake of stark warnings about the state of our children’s mental health.
The lessons will form part of one of three trials currently being planned by the Government to tackle the issue. The idea may have been borrowed from the independent sector – happiness lessons were pioneered at Wellington College by its then Head Anthony Seldon – but it is the emphasis on the young age of children being targeted that has hit the headlines.
The tip of the iceberg
Sadly, the crisis in mental health care for teenagers has become increasingly well-known and talked about, but many are unaware that the latest NHS statistics show a huge rise in very young children needing help – 65,000 children under 11 – with more than one in six of these five and under.
These may well be the tip of the iceberg, as many children who need help never become an official statistic. And with experts agreeing that more than half of mental health disorders manifest themselves first in childhood, this is clearly a crucial time to tackle early signs.
While the Government’s “Preventive” mental health programmes – targeting wellbeing for children between Year Four and Year Eight – are to be trialled in 100 primary schools and 50 secondaries, many independent schools have long worked on the assumption that prevention is better than cure.
Instilling social and emotional learning
Increasing numbers of Prep Schools have been embracing a holistic approach from as early as age four, and Dragon School in Oxford, has been working for nearly two decades on incorporating what it calls “social and emotional learning” into the very fabric of its education.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Summer 2017-Ausgabe von Independent School Parent.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der Summer 2017-Ausgabe von Independent School Parent.
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