Supporting Staff Wellbeing in Education Settings

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Supervision:
A form of
support within
schools and
education
settings
 
Dr Olivia Blick
 
 
Aims of this presentation
 
To develop an understanding of the term supervision
To have knowledge of the different functions and models of
supervision
To reflect on how you feel supervision would benefit your practice.
To consider how you feel supervision could be imbedded in your
setting
 
Staff wellbeing in schools
 
Mental Health and Wellbeing in schools
 
Teacher Wellbeing Index: mental health & wellbeing research
(educationsupport.org.uk)
 
Over the past five years:
 
Levels of stress and anxiety remain unsustainably
high
Excessive workload and lack of work-life balance
remain key drivers for poor mental health
Covid-19 has had a significant impact on wellbeing
A consistently high percentage of staff consider
leaving the profession
Staff are concerned they will be perceived
negatively if seeking support for mental health issues
Organisations have improved staff awareness of
wellbeing policies, as well as their implementation
 
77% 
of staff have experienced
symptoms of poor mental health related
to their work
 
72% 
report feelings of stress (rises
to 84% for senior leaders)
 
42% 
think their organisations culture has a
negative impact on their wellbeing
 
54% 
have considered leaving the sector
in the past two years due to pressures on
their mental health
 
More than half of staff (57%) would not be
confident in disclosing unmanageable stress or
mental health problems to their employer
Children presenting with mental
health needs – not knowing how
best to support them
Lack of opportunities to
spend time with colleagues
to share / off-load /
support / socialise
Quotes from school
staff within the
current climate
 
How can we support mental health and
wellbeing in schools?
 
Recommendations from the Teacher Wellbeing
Index:
Educator mental health must be at the heart
of education recovery and all education policy
Prioritise a culture of wellbeing and reduce
stigma
Look after your leadership
Support your staff
 
But why supervision?....
 
 
Supervision provides:
a safe and contained space
o
pportunities for reflection about the nature and
challenges of experiences
consideration of the emotional impact that very
often exists for
 
 
 
 
 
What is supervision?
Supervision is a
place to feel safe,
respected and
heard
Nourishing
Interactive
Creative
Enabling
Empowering
Collaborative
“…A place of trust where a healthy relationship gives
me a safe place to acknowledge and work with my
concerns, stresses, fears and joys as a worker”
 
What is the aim of supervision?
“…A regular,
protected time for
facilitated, in-depth
reflection on
practice”
Emotional
support
More open
More available
Reflective
practice
Problem solving
Sharing practice
Celebrate
successes
“Enabled clarity of thought and encouraged focus on own
wellbeing, which in turn enables me to support young
people more effectively”
 
How supervision has provided support to staff
in settings…
Feedback from a range of staff who have been receiving regular supervision from our
service
Greater emotional
resilience 
and 
less
burnout
Enabled 
c
larity of
thought
Solution focused 
support and 
problem solving 
with a
determination to go the extra mile 
for our
children/young people
Safety
, 
containment
 and 
understanding
.
Safe space
, 
emotional support
, 
reflecting as a
team
, impartial 
guidance
It gives me a 
professional space 
to 
reflect
Ideas for 
support
, 
confidence
 in the way I undertake the
role and 
re-energised
.
 
How does this differ from other forms of
supervision with line managers?
 
Not
 task orientated
Not
 associated with performance or delivery
 
Supervision is about supporting those involved to become more
effective for the child or young person
More emotional capacity
Enhanced confidence and a sense of empowerment
A place to feel safe, respected and heard
 
It provides a reflective space
Individual or with a group of peers
Was supervision as you would have expected?..
“Better than expected, for team insight and
managing personal wellbeing. I didn't know I
needed it until we started having it!”
 
How could supervision work in your
setting?
 
What we can offer:
Training and development of school systems to
support supervision
 
Training for staff in schools to develop as supervisors
 
Individual or groups sessions facilitated by an
experienced Supervisor within the P&TS
 
Bespoke packages tailored to you, your setting and
the needs of staff
 
Trauma Informed supervision
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This presentation emphasizes the importance of supervision and support for staff wellbeing in schools. It explores the need for effective supervision models, understanding the term "supervision," and the impact of mental health issues on education professionals. Highlighted are rising exclusion rates, staff experiencing poor mental health, stress levels, and the necessity for holistic support within schools. The presentation underscores the need for embedding supervision practices to enhance staff wellbeing and support child welfare effectively.

  • Staff Wellbeing
  • Supervision Support
  • Mental Health
  • Education Settings
  • School Support

Uploaded on Jul 31, 2024 | 1 Views


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  1. Supervision: A form of support within schools and education settings Dr Olivia Blick olivia.blick@suffolk.gov.uk Psychology and Therapeutic Services: Supervision Support | Suffolk County Council

  2. Aims of this presentation To develop an understanding of the term supervision To have knowledge of the different functions and models of supervision To reflect on how you feel supervision would benefit your practice. To consider how you feel supervision could be imbedded in your setting

  3. Staff wellbeing in schools Continued rise in exclusion rates and numbers of young people living with chronic adversity . Many children suffering complex trauma and have increasingly complex needs. Schools often in the position where they are required to support pupil mental health There are many factors that support and protect child wellbeing, these are cemented by positive relationships. This is intensely relational work and therefore it is a very emotionally charged profession. Education staff now take on roles that are far beyond that of simply an educator . Staff wellbeing is the corner stone of whole school support (Sue Roffey, 2019) Staff wellbeing is pivotal to being able to provide this holistic support. Schools are the only front-line service that doesn t get supervision

  4. Mental Health and Wellbeing in schools Over the past five years: 77% of staff have experienced symptoms of poor mental health related to their work 72% report feelings of stress (rises to 84% for senior leaders) 42% think their organisations culture has a negative impact on their wellbeing 54% have considered leaving the sector in the past two years due to pressures on their mental health Levels of stress and anxiety remain unsustainably high Excessive workload and lack of work-life balance remain key drivers for poor mental health Covid-19 has had a significant impact on wellbeing A consistently high percentage of staff consider leaving the profession Staff are concerned they will be perceived negatively if seeking support for mental health issues Organisations have improved staff awareness of wellbeing policies, as well as their implementation More than half of staff (57%) would not be confident in disclosing unmanageable stress or mental health problems to their employer Teacher Wellbeing Index: mental health & wellbeing research (educationsupport.org.uk)

  5. Alongside EBSA for pupils I m also wondering whether this will be evident in some staff? I think the fear that some staff are experiencing has been underestimated For some it is causing mini panic-attacks several times a day... Some staff relationships are suffering as a result of: blame / resentment / anger . Quotes from school staff within the current climate Lack of opportunities to spend time with colleagues to share / off-load / support / socialise Children presenting with mental health needs not knowing how best to support them It feels as though many / most schools are fire fighting at the moment, and just about coping I consider myself to be a fairly resilient character with a good support network and I m noticing that it s taking me twice as long to decompress at the end of a working day . What s it like for more vulnerable HTs? I m aware of SLT and HTs not wanting to call help-lines even when they need to, because they don t want to be seen as not coping

  6. How can we support mental health and wellbeing in schools? Recommendations from the Teacher Wellbeing Index: Educator mental health must be at the heart of education recovery and all education policy But why supervision?.... Prioritise a culture of wellbeing and reduce stigma Supervision provides: a safe and contained space opportunities for reflection about the nature and challenges of experiences consideration of the emotional impact that very often exists for Look after your leadership Support your staff

  7. What is supervision? Interactive Empowering Nourishing Supervision is a place to feel safe, respected and heard Creative Collaborative Enabling A place of trust where a healthy relationship gives me a safe place to acknowledge and work with my concerns, stresses, fears and joys as a worker

  8. What is the aim of supervision? Reflective practice Emotional support Problem solving A regular, protected time for facilitated, in-depth reflection on practice More open Sharing practice Celebrate successes More available Enabled clarity of thought and encouraged focus on own wellbeing, which in turn enables me to support young people more effectively

  9. How supervision has provided support to staff in settings Feedback from a range of staff who have been receiving regular supervision from our service Greater emotional resilience and less burnout Ideas for support, confidence in the way I undertake the role and re-energised. Enabled clarity of thought Safe space, emotional support, reflecting as a team, impartial guidance Solution focused support and problem solving with a determination to go the extra mile for our children/young people Safety, containment and understanding. It gives me a professional space to reflect

  10. How does this differ from other forms of supervision with line managers? Not task orientated Not associated with performance or delivery Supervision is about supporting those involved to become more effective for the child or young person More emotional capacity Enhanced confidence and a sense of empowerment A place to feel safe, respected and heard Was supervision as you would have expected?.. Better than expected, for team insight and managing personal wellbeing. I didn't know I needed it until we started having it! It provides a reflective space Individual or with a group of peers

  11. How could supervision work in your setting? What we can offer: Training and development of school systems to support supervision Training for staff in schools to develop as supervisors Individual or groups sessions facilitated by an experienced Supervisor within the P&TS Bespoke packages tailored to you, your setting and the needs of staff Trauma Informed supervision

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