Consultation-Driven Mental Health Supports: A Social-Ecological Analysis of Teacher Strategies in Rural Schools
Keywords:
comprehensive school mental health, social-ecological model, school consultation, rural education, learner wellbeing, teacher supportAbstract
Learner mental health significantly affects academic performance, behaviour, and socio-emotional development, particularly in rural contexts where trained counsellors are scarce. This research-based paper employed a qualitative phenomenological methodology, using semi-structured interviews conducted with six teachers in rural secondary schools in the Vhembe District of South Africa. The purpose was to explore how teachers provide consultation-driven mental health support in environments where professional services are limited. The study found that teachers rely on seven interconnected strategies to support learners’ mental wellbeing. A major finding is that teachers provide informal counselling, conflict mediation, and emotional support because learners often lack parental or professional guidance. Another key finding is that rural adversity, poverty, parental migration, community violence, and unmet basic needs, intensifies learners’ emotional distress, requiring teachers to act as both caregivers and ecological consultants within the school community. Considering the findings, the study suggests that rural schools require strengthened consultation models, improved teacher training, and clearer policy support to enhance comprehensive school mental health systems and ensure that vulnerable learners receive coordinated, sustainable mental health care.
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