Promising Practices for School Organization of Mental Health Supports

This brief synthesizes research insights to examine how schools can better organize mental health supports to meet growing student needs. It highlights why schools have become the primary access point for youth mental health care, the systemic barriers that limit effective support, and the equity implications of current approaches. Drawing on evidence-based and promising practices, the brief outlines strategies that help schools move from reactive, crisis-driven responses toward coordinated, preventive systems—such as embedding services in schools, partnering with community providers, using universal screening, and leveraging educators as key implementers—while also identifying common practices that can unintentionally exacerbate disparities or undermine student well-being.

We gratefully acknowledge the EdResearch for Action Advisory Board members— Abby Quirk, Jill Gurtner, Karissa Sullivan, Sarah Chin, Shannon Garfield —whose expertise as education leaders brought critical, practice-driven insights to guide this brief.

Jennifer Greif Green | Boston University

Joni Williams Splett | University of Florida

January 2026 | Brief No. 38

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Central Question

How can schools effectively leverage resources to meet students’ mental health needs?

Key Insights

BREAKING DOWN THE ISSUE

  • Youth depression, anxiety, and suicide have risen over the past decade.
  • Students with mental health challenges are less likely to graduate on time and more likely to miss school and struggle academically.
  • Over half of youth in need of mental health services do not receive them, especially in underserved communities facing provider shortages and financial barriers.
  • Schools are the primary source of mental health care for children, yet only 56% of school leaders believe their schools can effectively provide mental health services to all students in need.
  • The primary barriers to providing mental health care in schools are: (1) staff and provider shortages, (2) funding and resource constraints,  (3) challenges in identifying student needs and bias, and (4) misaligned roles and focus on reactive rather than preventative activities.

EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICES

  • Locating mental health services within schools significantly increases service uptake and improves mental health outcomes for students.
  • Effective collaboration between school leaders, school-based mental health professionals, and community mental health providers expands available services and improves student access to mental health supports.
  • Schools that provide a continuum of supports and services (including school-wide programming and targeted supports for students with greater need) use resources more efficiently and are better prepared to address student needs.
  • Universal mental health screenings are linked to higher rates of mental health service use among students with mild to moderate disorders.
  • Educators are critical to effective school-based mental health support, not only in delivering targeted, evidence-based practices, but also in influencing peers to adopt them.
  • When schools implement practices that are grounded in students’ lived experiences, family norms, and community contexts, students are more likely to trust providers, engage in services, and benefit from interventions.

PRACTICES TO AVOID

  • Reliance on disciplinary actions and emergency services to address student mental health needs can escalate crises and disproportionately impact marginalized students.
  • When school-based mental health providers are assigned non-mental health tasks, schools underuse their expertise, and students may not receive adequate support.
  • When schools treat academics and mental health as a zero-sum game, they will miss opportunities to effectively support students with the highest needs who are often struggling in both areas.

Breaking Down the Issue

What is mental health?

Mental health refers to the emotional, psychological, and social well-being of individuals that affects their ability to cope with daily life, learning, and their community.

Youth depression, anxiety, and suicide have risen over the past decade.

Students with mental health challenges are less likely to graduate on time and more likely to miss school and struggle academically.

Over half of youth in need of mental health services do not receive them, especially in underserved communities facing provider shortages and financial barriers.

Schools are the primary source of mental health care for children, yet only 56% of school leaders believe their schools can effectively provide mental health services to all students in need. 

The primary barriers to providing mental health care in schools are: 

Evidence-Based and Promising Practices

Multiple models of school-based mental health service delivery have been designed to address challenges to providing preventive and comprehensive support to students. These models generally include the following five research-backed strategies: locating mental health services within schools, collaborating with community mental health providers, providing a comprehensive continuum of services, using universal screenings, and leveraging existing staff and resources. 

Locating mental health services within schools significantly increases service uptake and improves mental health outcomes for students.

Effective collaboration between school leaders, school-based mental health professionals, and community mental health providers expands available services and improves student access to mental health supports.

Schools that provide a continuum of supports and services (including school-wide programming and targeted supports for students with greater need) use resources more efficiently and are better prepared to address student needs. 

Universal mental health screenings are linked to higher rates of mental health service use among students with mild to moderate disorders.

  • Research-based mental health screeners help schools proactively identify students who may need support before issues escalate. Screeners help schools move beyond relying solely on teacher referrals or visible behavior, which can be inconsistent or biased, and ensure all students, not just those who act out or are already receiving attention, are considered for support.
  • Dual-factor screeners assess both students’ challenges and strengths, helping schools focus on promoting positive mental health, not just reducing symptoms. 
  • Schools do not need to screen every student annually; many use targeted screenings at key grade levels or transition points (e.g., 3rd, 5th, and 7th grade) to monitor changes.
  • Successful implementation of screening requires the following:
    • Collecting and storing screening data securely and ensuring access to data is only provided to trained personnel.
    • Communicating with families to explain the purpose and process of screenings, as well as their rights in the process, helps build trust and reduces misunderstandings or concerns about how data will be used. Including and prioritizing family, community, and student voice is a key component of equity-focused mental health screening.
    • Using multiple informants improves the accuracy of screening results. Teacher-completed screeners tend to be more reliable for assessing externalizing symptoms, like acting-out behaviors. For internalizing symptoms like anxiety or depression that may not be as visible to adults, self-report measures are recommended.
    • Establishing clear systems for promptly reviewing screening results and connecting students to appropriate interventions helps ensure timely support. Implementation guidelines and materials can be found here and here
  • Piloting the screening process on a small scale allows schools to troubleshoot logistics, train staff, and build trust with families before expanding the effort system-wide. 

Educators are critical to effective school-based mental health support, not only in delivering targeted, evidence-based practices, but also in influencing peers to adopt them.

When schools implement practices that are grounded in students’ lived experiences, family norms, and community contexts, students are more likely to trust providers, engage in services, and benefit from interventions.

  • Existing frameworks, such as the culturally responsive, antiracist, and equitable (CARE) approach, provide foundations for schools to center equity in their MTSS models and provision of mental health services, which include building family-school-community partnerships for minoritized communities and supporting and training the workforce. 

While it is important for all school mental health professionals to provide culturally and linguistically sustaining services, a diverse, representative workforce improves communication, builds trust, and leads to more equitable identification and support of students’ mental health needs.

Practices to Avoid

Reliance on disciplinary actions and emergency services to address student mental health needs can escalate crises and disproportionately impact marginalized students.

When school-based mental health providers are assigned non-mental health tasks, schools underuse their expertise, and students may not receive adequate support.

  • Mental health providers in schools report spending large portions of their time on administrative tasks, testing, supervision, or discipline-related duties that fall outside their mental health expertise. This misalignment reduces their capacity to deliver preventive care, provide counseling, support crisis response, or collaborate with teachers and families to address student needs. 
  • When school mental health teams don’t have clearly defined roles, staff may duplicate efforts, miss critical tasks, or be pulled into duties outside their expertise, leading to confusion and inefficiency. By clarifying each team member’s role and leveraging their specific strengths, schools can better coordinate efforts and ensure that providers have the time and focus to deliver preventive care and early intervention. 

When schools treat academics and mental health as a zero-sum game, they will miss opportunities to effectively support students with the highest needs who are often struggling in both areas. 

  • Research is clear that improved mental health and well-being are associated with improved academic functioning. Both can and should be prioritized in school settings. 
  • Teacher preparation can set the tone for integrating mental health and well-being in teachers’ conceptualization of their professional role. Just as early childhood and elementary educators often focus on whole-child wellbeing, extending this practice through adolescence acknowledges the many youth who concurrently struggle academically and emotionally.

This EdResearch for Action Project brief is a collaboration among:

Funding for this research was provided by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The findings and conclusions contained within are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect positions or policies of the foundation.

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