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Alyssa Rodriguez, a Chicago social worker, figured she’d see more students who felt anxious, frustrated by their schoolwork, or disoriented by unfamiliar routines. A month into school, she says she underestimated the challenge ahead.
Promotes the Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child (WSCC) framework through interviews and focus groups with state policymakers, educators, and students. This study provides policy opportunities to better integrate the WSCC framework and highlights elements of a healthy school environment.
Nationwide, stigma has eased and access to care has improved thanks to research, innovations and outreach programs shared at Depression on College Campuses conferences.
A recent surge of research, practice and think-tanks explores the needs of student parents in higher education. All the shared voices reaffirm that this population of students will require much greater efforts to expand college access success.
Going out to eat with friends is not a decision Maria said she gets to make anymore — she can’t afford it. Instead, she’s had to choose between purchasing textbooks or buying groceries. Maria is a part of the 32% of UT students surveyed who are food insecure, according to a report released by Student Government’s Food Insecurity Action Team at the end of the spring semester.
Remote mental health services gained popularity during the pandemic. That means colleges have a structure for serving students when they’re off campus.
Placing a student struggling with mental health on medical leave—a policy found on many college campuses today—does not necessarily facilitate recovery, experts contend. In fact, some worry that the policies—which vary widely from campus to campus—may have the opposite of their intended effect, permitting a college’s most vulnerable students to fall through the cracks.
The University of Texas System will spend $16.5 million dollars over the next five years to expand and improve student mental health services, student safety and alcohol education resources at its 13 campuses.
Hanover County is in the process of replacing John M. Gandy Elementary School in Ashland. Plans for the new building, discussed at a school board meeting last week, include nongendered, single-occupant bathrooms.