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Wellbeing in the classroom

Teachers play an important role in supporting student mental health and wellbeing. Schools can foster student wellbeing and development of social and emotional skills.

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Students spend a large amount of time at schools and in class. A teacher may be the first person to notice that a student needs extra support. They might notice signs of an emerging mental health concern. Students often trust their teacher to help them.

Teachers can:

Teachers also support students to develop social and emotional skills. They can also help students develop a positive attitude about self, school and civic engagement. These skills and attitudes support academic engagement.

If you’re concerned for a student’s mental health or wellbeing, follow your school processes for making a referral to the wellbeing team. The wellbeing team can work with the student and, where appropriate, parents to determine if support is needed.

Seek immediate support from a school leader if it is urgent. Call 000 if there is immediate risk of harm to the student. Do not manage the situation alone.

If you become aware of an incident, receive a disclosure or form a reasonable belief that a child has been abused or is at risk of abuse, you must follow all procedures for responding to and reporting abuse, including the Four Critical Actions for Schools.

Supporting student mental health and wellbeing

There are many ways teachers can support the mental health and wellbeing of their students. Many of them are things teachers do on a day-to-day basis, with every class and every student. Some students may need tailored or additional support.

It is also important that you take care of your own mental health and wellbeing.

As a teacher you aren’t expected to be a therapist. But you do play a key role in supporting student mental health and wellbeing. Evidence shows teachers can have a profound impact on the mental health and wellbeing of their students.

You can do this by:

The map of key mental health and wellbeing supports sets out key mental health and wellbeing supports for students in Victorian government schools across the 3 tiers of support.

Before having a sensitive conversation with a student

When considering a sensitive conversation with a student, ask yourself:

The map of key mental health and wellbeing supports provides more information on programs and workforces Victorian government schools can engage to provide students support for mental health and wellbeing.

Tier 1: School-wide mental health and wellbeing promotion

Universal interventions to help create a positive, inclusive, and supportive school climate.

Tier 2: Early intervention and cohort specific mental health support for students

School mental health support for students with specific needs or vulnerabilities.

Tier 3: Targeted and crisis mental health response in schools

Support for individual students with complex mental health needs or in crisis.

Some support options may operate across more than one tier or differ according to local circumstance. For example, in a specialist school, individual education plans may be developed for all students as a universal intervention.

Schools Mental Health Fund and Menu

The Schools Mental Health Fund supports Victorian government schools to select programs, staff and other support from an evidence-based menu. The Menu will help schools best meet their students’ mental health and wellbeing needs. School staff can find more information on the department’s Mental Health Fund and Menu Policy and Advisory Library page.

Mental health and wellbeing toolkit

The department’s online toolkit of guidance and resources for supporting student and staff mental health and wellbeing Schools - mental health and wellbeing toolkit.

Victorian Teaching and Learning Model (VTLM)

The Victorian Teaching and Learning Model 2.0 (VTLM 2.0) supports excellence in teaching and learning. It also supports teachers to create safe and inclusive classrooms.

Trauma informed resources

The HITS Trauma Informed Factsheets and Resources have a focus on engagement, wellbeing, readiness and continuity for learning in children and young people affected by community level trauma.

NIP early intervention approach (headspace)

An important way teachers can support student wellbeing is by using NIP it in the bud! which is an early intervention approach developed by headspace. For more information, refer to the SAFEMinds resources for schools.Bottom of Form

The SAFEMinds Safe and Healthy Minds Brief Intervention Kit can also support secondary students to become better problem solvers.

Orygen Early Intervention Guide

The Youth mental health early intervention guide (PDF, 186KB) sets out early warning signs, actions and supports for students.

Smiling Mind digital care packs

Smiling Mind has created Digital Care Packs to support the mental health of kids aged five to 12. Each pack includes brief learning tools as well as activities for children to use within the home or school environment. The tools will help students manage anxiety and promote positive mental health.

Feeling It: Mindfulness resources for secondary school students

We have partnered with Smiling Mind to bring students mindfulness resources and activities to help them stay positive and engaged in their education.

Diverse Learners Hub

The Diverse Learners Hub provides evidence-based advice, resources and guidance on meeting the learning and wellbeing needs and aspirations of diverse learners.

Teaching for wellbeing

The Victorian Curriculum

The Victorian Curriculum F-10 supports teaching skills that provide strong foundations for mental health and wellbeing of all students in schools.

Practicing digital safety and wellbeing

Learning about digital safety and wellbeing helps students build skills to use technology safely while looking after their mental health, relationships, and overall wellbeing. What students do online can affect their friendships, their focus in class, and schoolwork.

ScrollSafe’s resources support teachers of secondary-aged students to identify problematic social media use and facilitate classroom discussions that help young people reflect on their online habits. Using these resources, teachers can support students to identify strategies to manage their online safety, understand their digital footprint and how to protect their privacy online, and reflect on how spending time online impacts their wellbeing.

A guide for clinical mental health professionals working in secondary schools has also been developed. It provides practical advice on promoting positive mental health and digital wellbeing across the school community using a multi-tiered approach, as well as guidance on responding to the age-restriction legislation and how mental health professionals can support the digital wellbeing of young people under 16 years of age.

ScrollSafe are optional resources for schools and do not introduce new requirements for schools. They align to existing department policy and have been designed to integrate easily into Safe Socials and existing digital safety and wellbeing curriculum topics.

The resources are aimed at secondary-aged students, however primary school teachers may choose to discuss the resources with upper primary-aged students as appropriate.

FISO 2.0

The Framework for Improving Student Outcomes (FISO 2.0) is the continuous improvement framework for all Victorian government schools, with learning and wellbeing at the centre. Mental health and wellbeing programs and initiatives are aligned through the structures and processes outlined in FISO 2.0.

Personal and Social Capability

This involves students:

Health and Physical Education

Health and Physical Education enhances students understanding of their own and others’ health, safety, wellbeing and physical activity participation in varied and changing contexts. The curriculum focuses on supporting students to develop the understanding and skills they require to make healthy and safe choices that will boost their own and others’ health and wellbeing.

For more information:

Social and Emotional Learning in the classroom

Social and emotional learning (SEL) can help students learn the skills needed to build resilience. SEL can help them learn to manage their emotions, behaviour and relationships with others. It involves giving students opportunities to learn and practice social skills.

Resilience, Rights and Respectful Relationships

The Resilience, Rights and Respectful Relationships (RRRR) learning materials have been designed for teachers in primary and secondary schools to develop students’ social, emotional and positive relationship skills.

The RRRR learning materials cover eight topics of Social and Emotional Learning across all levels of primary and secondary education:

Resources for social and emotional learning

Multicultural education programs and resources

Multicultural education resources and information to help schools build intercultural capability and strengthen inclusion.

Education & training

Updated 26 March 2026



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