It seems things are more complicated now at schools, and many schools are considering student mental health days.
Yes, you read it right, students around America are now allowed to miss school due to “mental health days”.
However, there are some worries about this new school policy because it is prone to abuse. This can be used to avoid a touch assignment or a problem at school. Skipping tests or hiding from conflict ends up making the problem bigger, not better. And avoiding things that make kids anxious makes the anxiety worse.
A mental health day should be “a day off from school to rest and recharge,” according to the Child Mind Institute.
According to reports, several states across the US have enacted laws that allow students K-12 to take mental health days. Illinois is not the first or only state to offer student mental health days. Over the last two years, Ariz., Colo., Conn., Ill., Maine, Nev., Ore., and Va. have also passed similar bills.
Well, the days of truancy officers are now over…
Chicago students welcome the chance to take mental health days under new law. https://t.co/sR7PQRBywd pic.twitter.com/6VE4mBG8Bq
— Chalkbeat (@Chalkbeat) July 26, 2022
More details of this story from ‘Chalk Beat Chicago’:
With working 25 hours a week at her minimum wage job at an ice cream shop, juggling a stressful workload with AP and honors classes, and dealing with anxiety, sometimes Jones College Prep sophomore Meghan Cuddy just needs a break.
“I feel depressed and miserable a lot of the time in my life,” said Cuddy. “ When I don’t go to school or specific classes, I’m definitely more upbeat than I would typically be. A lot of my misery is derived from specific classes like my math class.”
Like other students in Illinois, Cuddy is now able to take up to five excused mental health days, after a new law went into effect at the beginning of the calendar year. The law came at a critical time as youth are experiencing the mental effects of the pandemic and rising violence in Chicago.
A bill proposed in the Ohio House would give K-12 students three mental health days a year, defining mental health days as a “school day during which a student attends to the student’s emotional and psychological well-being in lieu of attending school.”https://t.co/1O0qNft2pc
— Honesty For Ohio Education (@Honesty4OhioEd) July 25, 2022
‘The Center Square’ dropped these details:
Ohio could join 11 other states and allow students to miss school if they feel the need to stay home that day for their mental health.
A bill proposed in the Ohio House would give K-12 students three mental health days a year, defining mental health days as a “school day during which a student attends to the student’s emotional and psychological well-being in lieu of attending school.”
“We need to break the stigma surrounding taking care of our mental health,” said Rep. Jessica Miranda, D-Forest Park. “With this legislation, we’re letting our children know that prioritizing their mental health is not only acceptable, it’s critical for achieving a healthy lifestyle. This mindset will help them succeed in school and beyond.”
House Bill 619 would open the door for districts to create student mental health day policies, allowing for up to three days of excused absences. If a district allows the days, it must allow them in each of its buildings.
Also, districts could establish an in-school mental health program for students to attend instead of regular classes.
Sources: WLT, Chalk Beat Chicago, The Center Square