This post was originally published on Word In Black
By: Aziah Siidy
Every day across the United States, students look forward to seeing one particular person when they walk into school. It’s not a classmate or a teacher. It’s their school counselor — the one person they feel truly hears, protects, and values them during the time they spend on campus.
But when that counselor has potentially hundreds of students assigned to them, it’s tough to really check in with each and every student about their individual emotional well-being and mental health.
With the challenge of post-pandemic learning loss, along with the mental health crisis among Black youth, students, families, mental health staff like counselors, school psychologists, and nurses need all the help they can get.