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Charlotte Oliver

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Charlotte Oliver,

Charlotte Oliver

Opinion

Finally, a positive step for tackling mental health in schools

January 14, 2016 17:00
2 min read

Ten years ago, I was nearing the end of my time at a high-ranking all-girls’ school widely known for two things: its excellent academic results, and its high volume of pupils who suffered from eating disorders.

The two traits were unavoidable; the former, proclaimed to us at every opportunity – a stern warning, should one of us dare be the sorry soul who let their standards slip. The latter, noticeable in the pallid faces of girls who skipped lunch, spending their free hour instead writing essays in the library or smoking Marlboro Lights down the road.

Don’t get me wrong: I absolutely loved school. Loved the friends, loved the lessons – a poster girl for teacher’s pet supremo. But I look back at my time there and memories of teachers’ inaction when it came to tackling depression and self-harm slowly come to mind, smashing the nostalgia in its tracks.

Meaningful mental health education, I now see with hindsight, was sparse and ineffective. While intermittent PSHE lessons offered the “holistic” side to our curricular pursuits - normally in the form of a cringeworthy self-help manual - no one really took notice. How could we? We were too busy stressing about our GCSEs.

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