Mental Health and Well-Being

We want all children to feel mentally well, grow up happy, and learn how to navigate life's challenges. It's not always easy to know what to do. We're here to help! 

Students and parents/caregivers can use the form below to request mental health and wellbeing support for a student.

Who We Are

Our Student Support & Wellbeing Team provides a full range of mental health services, from wellness promotion to clinical counselling. Using a board-wide, tiered framework, we ensure that support is tailored to each student’s unique needs. Our team is made up of the following:

What they DO:

  • School wide mental health activities

  • Classroom programming such as MindUP

  • Small group work (Bullying prevention, digital citizenship, general coping strategies and skill building)

  • Resiliency and wellbeing screening

  • Goal setting and skill building with students

  • They participate as team members during crisis assessments.

  • Student drop-ins

What they DON'T do:

  • Perform formal mental health assessments.

  • Clinical counseling 

  • Treat eating disorders or substance abuse issues.

  • Manage medication.

What they DO:

  • Provide clinical counseling

  • Mental health and behavioural assessments

  • Lead crisis assessments and interventions (e.g., suicide risk)

  • Manage cases and help refer students and families to community services

  • Provide compassionate care 

  • Teach coping strategies

What they DON'T do:

  • Provide therapy for substance abuse or addictions

  • Manage or educate on medications

  • General classroom-level instruction

  • Do not treat eating disorders 

What they DO:

  • Prolonged attendance referrals as per the Ministry guidelines

  • Chronic/habitual attendance referrals

  • School Success Team planning for student engagement

  • Off-site/home visits

  • Liaison for parent and school engagement

  • Liaison for community and refer to services where required

  • Support improved punctuality

What they DON'T do:

  • Provide clinical counselling
  • Classroom programming

  • Provide formal mental health assessments

MHANs are not SCCDSB employees. They are external service providers who support our students. 

What they DO:

  • Manage student transitions between schools and hospitals/treatment facilities.

  • Specific support for substance use and addictions.

  • Education and management regarding mental health medications.

  • Assist families in navigating the medical system.

  • Handle referrals for eating disorders.

What they DON'T do:

  • Psychological assessments.

  • Psychological counseling.

  • Lead crisis interventions.

  • Perform compassionate care work.

Leads and manages student mental health services by overseeing programs, staff, and strategies that promote student wellbeing and ensure access to effective mental health support.

Promotes community and individual wellbeing by designing, implementing, and evaluating evidence based school health strategies and programs in collaboration with school staff.

Supports educators across the board by providing social‑emotional learning (SEL) expertise, helping teachers build SEL practices, and guiding the effective use of SEL curriculum in classrooms.

What is Mental Health?

Everyone has mental health. Like physical health, it exists on a spectrum. We all experience stress, burnout, or overwhelm without necessarily having a mental illness. Mental illnesses (e.g., depression, bipolar disorder, OCD) are medical conditions—not personal weaknesses.

Why mental health matters: It helps you

  • Manage stress

  • Work productively

  • Build healthy relationships

  • Contribute to your community

  • Support your physical health

Mental health is your emotional, psychological, and social well‑being—not just the absence of illness. Feeling stressed or anxious at times is a normal part of mental health and doesn’t necessarily mean you have an anxiety disorder.

Mental illness is a diagnosable condition that affects thinking, mood, or behaviour and causes significant distress or difficulty in daily life. With the right supports, a person can have a mental illness and still experience good mental health.

Mental Health Continuum

Where to go for help?

Access School Mental Health Ontario's Helpline Hub to find where to go for help 24/7. 

BeSafe Chatham-Kent: A free mobile app to help you during a crisis. Download it here.

For help connecting to local community resources in your area, please reach out to your school social worker—they can guide you to the services that best fit your needs.