
Despite the marked increase in anxiety, depression, and suicidal behaviour among school-aged youth, millions of children with mental health needs never receive treatment. Too many are overlooked by "refer-test-place" approaches that only consider evidence of psychopathology without examining students' psychological well-being (or lack of well-being). Consequently, many vulnerable students slip through the cracks without receiving interventions.Fostering the Emotional Well-Being of Our Youth provides an alternative--a dual-factor model of students' mental health that integrates wellness and pathology into a single multi-tier system of mental health support. Philip J. Lazarus, Shannon M. Suldo, and Beth Doll, with foremost scholars in the field, explain what this paradigm shift means for school mental health professionals: why the promotion of well-being is important; how practitioners' day-to-day practices will change; and what the outcomes will be. This volume provides the tools to advocate for and implement supports that foster students' complete mental health.
This volume investigates the limitations of traditional school-based mental health models and proposes a dual-factor framework that integrates the promotion of well-being with the treatment of psychopathology. The authors, Beth Doll, Philip J. Lazarus, and Shannon M. Suldo, draw upon their expertise in school psychology to argue that current 'refer-test-place' systems fail to identify students who lack positive mental health despite not meeting clinical criteria for disorders. By synthesizing research from leading scholars, the text provides a comprehensive rationale for shifting school-based support systems toward a more holistic, multi-tiered approach that prioritizes both the prevention of illness and the cultivation of student wellness.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Practitioners and researchers frequently cite this work as a foundational text for modernizing school mental health services. Experts highlight the clarity of the proposed framework, noting that it offers a highly practical approach for educators and counselors seeking to move beyond reactive intervention models.
Page Count:
569
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190918896
ISBN-13:
9780190918897
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