Students attend Youngstown State University with a wide range of life experiences and backgrounds. It is important to recognize the impact students' lives have on their experiences and learning in your classroom. You can do several things as faculty to recognize the way life outside the classroom impacts learning: support overall wellness for your students, build flexibility in your course design, teach with your students' strengths in mind, and connect your students to support.
In 2021, the CDC reported that the percentage of American high schoolers feeling “persistent feelings of sadness or hopelessness” increased from 26% in 2009 to 44% in 2021. Depression is rising for teenagers and young adults across demographics (Thompson, 2022). The American Academy of Pediatrics notes that the “pandemic has intensified the crisis” with “dramatic increases in Emergency Department visits for all mental health emergencies.” COVID-19 resulted in “more than 140,000 children in the United States [loosing] a primary and/or secondary caregiver, with youth of color disproportionately impacted” (AAP, 2022). In Fall of 2021, 73% of college students participating in the American College Health Association National College Health Assessment self-reported experiencing “moderate or serious psychological distress” (Pappano, 2022).
The dramatic increases in mental health challenges for college students is evident (Lipson et al., 2022), but what does that mean for you as faculty? The Counseling Center is a critical resource for students, but students have varying levels of comfort with seeking out services. As faculty, you are the first point of contact for students in need.
Drawing on research, best practices, and guidance from mental health experts, Coleman (2022) curated a list of best practices for instructors in supporting mental health in the college classroom:
In a recent Trends Report, the Higher Learning Commission notes that “this is the time to embrace new models of learning, those which are best for the future audiences served, not merely the historical foundations of the past” (HLC, 2022). Having flexible courses policies is a best practice for supporting students’ mental health (Coleman, 2022), as well as supporting students from marginalized backgrounds (Fuentes et al., 2020). Practices such as “requiring a medical note to deem an absence as excused… may reinforce classism and assume that all students have access and transportation to health care” (Fuentes et al., 2020).
One of the keys to flexible course design is to start with the end in mind and think about your course learning outcomes. Any time you weigh a potential new policy or practice in your class, consider it under the umbrella of your learning outcomes and ask, “Will this help or hinder student learning?” Schedule a consult with an ITL (Institute for Teaching and Learning) staff member to review your syllabus, course design, and brainstorm ideas to support your students’ learning.
Students come to our classrooms at YSU (Youngstown State University) with a wide range of prior experiences and backgrounds, including incredibly different levels of educational preparation and perceptions of schooling based on their K-12 education. Students entering college with less preparation are commonly thought of as at risk, deficient, or disadvantaged, with students frequently “blamed” for their performance, rather than the “imperfect educational systems that produced them” (Ormand, 2019). Additionally, the “burden of the fix usually falls entirely on the individual by suggesting that they try harder and ultimately conform to the practices of the dominant culture” (Kennedy, 2021).
It is easy to fall into the trap of thinking about what students lack, rather than the strengths they bring from their prior experiences. So, what are a few teaching strategies could you employ to teach from an asset-based mindset (Lopez & Louis, 2009)?
A survey of 75,000+ college graduates "found that alumni who strongly agree that a professor 'cared about them as a person' are more engaged in their work, more emotionally attached to their alma mater, and experience higher levels of wellbeing" (Matson & Clark, 2020). As faculty, you have regular interaction with your students over the course of a semester and can play a critical role in helping connect students to support on campus. An easy first step in making students aware of campus support is linking to the Common Syllabus Student Resources Page in your syllabus. This page is maintained so that students have up-to-date information about what is available to them.
Beyond linking to the Student Resources Page in your syllabus, ITL recommends you have knowledge of the following two “hubs” for information on campus:
When students are struggling in your course (whether because of chronic absences, lack of engagement, or poor performance), faculty should be utilizing the Faculty Academic Alert System to alert student support staff (advisors, tutoring centers, etc.) to reach out to students. The Faculty Academic Alert System is accessed through your Penguin Portal; step-by-step instructions and videos can be found here.
