FUTURE TALENTED Spring Term 2019 - Issue 2 | Page 59

WELLBEING 1 Encourage your school to take part in Time to Talk Day Running on 7 February this year (but replicable in schools at other times) Time to Talk Day is all about bringing together the right ingredients to have a conversation about mental health. Whether that’s tea, biscuits and close friends or a room full of people challenging mental health stigma, get talking! Having conversations about mental health helps break down stereotypes, improves relationships, aids recovery and takes the stigma out of something that affects us all. There are lots of ways to have a conversation about mental health, and you don’t have to be an expert to talk. Download the Schools Conversation Pack plus editable posters and other resources to get started. bit.ly/TimeToTalkDay2019 2 3 5 TALK THE TALK Time to Change Champions are people with lived experience of mental health problems who use their insights to change the way people think and act about mental health. Being a champion is a flexible and voluntary commitment and you are only asked to do what you have time to do and what you feel comfortable doing. For example, this might involve having conversations about mental health with people around you, running a local Time to Change activity, or speaking up when people say damaging or stereotypical things about mental health. Training and resources are provided via a dedicated portal, helping you to build transferable skills such as public speaking and effective use of social media. You’ll also meet like-minded people in your community. bit.ly/YoungChampion Having taken part in a previous Time to Talk Day: 95 % of participating schools felt pupils would be more likely to talk about mental health 92 % 95 % felt staff would be more likely to talk about mental health said their school would be likely to organise more activities around mental health Create a wall in your school to help change attitudes to mental health Seek permission to create an information wall in a public space that shows everyone in your school that mental health shouldn’t be a taboo subject and that it’s a topic that everyone should be talking about. Time to Change provides materials to print and stick up, including pledge sheets and posters to help get you started. bit.ly/MentalHealthWall Get a teacher involved in Time to Change Ask a staff member to run an assembly or lesson about mental health: lesson plans and assemblies are available from Time to Change’s website. You can reach classmates this way and it might also get your teacher to think differently about the topic and to be more supportive to any of their own friends or family who are going through a hard time. bit.ly/InvolveYourTeacher 4 Write a blog about attitudes to mental health Become a Time to Change Champion Sharing your own story of mental health problems can help others think and talk about mental health. If you don’t want to set up your own blog, you can submit it directly to Time to Change to publish on its site. Remember to consider your audience, keep your blog simple and concise and think about your personal boundaries: ensure you’re comfortable with people reading your account before you commit to publishing it. bit.ly/BlogYourStory 6 Set up a young leaders group in your school to run Time to Change activities, events and campaigns The most successful campaigns in schools are led by young people, with buy-in from senior staff. Once you’ve gained permission from a teacher to launch your group, start with a shout-out in an assembly and ask other students to join. Time to Change’s Leadership and Campaigning Guide for Young People provides a practical guide to developing leadership skills and delivering campaigns. The skills you learn along the way will be highly transferable and sought after by further education organisations and employers. bit.ly/TTCYoungLeader ABOUT TIME TO CHANGE Led by mental health charities Mind and Rethink Mental Illness, Time to Change is a growing movement of people changing how we think and act about mental health problems. time-to-change.org.uk FUTURE TALENT // 59