School Building

Mental Health & Wellbeing


At St Luke’s CE School, we know that our role is to ensure that children and staff are able to manage times of change and stress, and that they are supported to flourish, reach their potential or access help when they need it. We believe mental health to be of the same importance as physical health and recognise the need to support both our children and our staff with this. We also have a role to ensure that children learn about what they can do to maintain positive mental health, what affects their mental health, how they can help reduce the stigma surrounding mental health issues, and where they can go if they need help and support.

Over the course of their education, children spend over 7,800 hours at school.  With such a huge amount of time spent in the classroom, schools provide an ideal environment for promoting good emotional wellbeing and identifying early behaviour changes and signs of mental distress. The social and emotional skills, knowledge and behaviours that young people learn in the classroom can help them to build resilience and set the pattern for how they will manage their mental health throughout their lives.  Emotional wellbeing is a clear indicator of academic achievement, success and satisfaction in later life. Evidence shows that mental health and wellbeing programmes in schools, can lead to significant improvements in children’s mental health, and social and emotional skills. Wellbeing provision in schools can also lead to reductions in classroom misbehaviour and bullying.

If you have any questions or comments about how we support our school community with mental health and wellbeing then please contact Mrs Debbie Conreen (SENDCo) via the school office on 0161 921 1800 or on the following email address: office@thrive-slce.com


Keeping You Safe in School

Keeping You Safe in School

In school you have three rights.

They are;

  • The right to feel and be safe.
  • The right to learn.
  • The right to be treated with respect.

All the adults in your school will make sure that you are always safe. We will always listen to your concerns and act to make sure that we carry on keeping you safe.

You can speak to any adult in school about your concerns or you can write them in your pastoral notebook; Mrs Whealing will read them and offer you any advice and support that she thinks you might need. Mrs. Lomas is here to help your parents and carers keep you safe outside school.

Mrs Heslop is the adult who has the special job of making sure that you are kept safe.

Are you sad or scared?

Are you sad or scared?

Is someone hurting you?

If you don't feel safe and don't know what to do we want you to contact ChildLine and they will help.

Please call 0800 1111 or visit ChildLine.org.uk

You have done nothing wrong. It's okay to talk to an adult you trust and ask for help.

Eatwell Guide

Eatwell Guide

Eating well and having a healthy lifestyle can help us feel our best and make a big difference to our long-term health. The Government has just published a new Eatwell Guide showing the proportions in which different types of foods are needed to have a well-balanced and healthy diet. The proportions shown are representative of your food consumption over the period of a day or even a week, not necessarily each meal time.

Introducing the Ollie App – a virtual friend (ParentZone/BBC Children In Need)

Ollee is a digital friend for children aged 8-11, created by Parent Zone and funded by BBC Children in Need’s A Million & Me initiative, which aims to make a difference to children’s emotional wellbeing.

It’s designed to help children reflect on how they feel and to process their experiences with the support and help of their parents and carers – and it does this by offering them advice about a range of subjects: school, family, friends, their body, the internet and the world. For each of these subjects, children can choose an emotion that matches how they feel about it: happy, angry, sad, confused, frustrated, stressed or worried.

Next, they can choose from a list of topics – for instance, a child who was worried about school might be able to select ‘I haven’t done my homework’ as the cause of their worry. Finally, they’ll see a page of advice about the topic, presented in child-friendly bite-sized chunks they can read then or save for later.

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