We鈥檝e seen a whirlwind of activity and a gathering of momentum for support for investment in school counselling over the past few weeks that I don鈥檛 think we鈥檝e ever seen before in England.
We鈥檙e hugely thankful to everyone who wrote to their MPs as part of our school counselling campaign.
Nearly 3,000 emails were sent and we鈥檙e already seeing how it鈥檚 caught the attention of MPs. The campaign has prompted both a parliamentary question and an Early Day Motion in the House of Commons, as well as positive responses from politicians across the party divides.
We鈥檝e spoken to several leading mental health charities who鈥檝e told us they鈥檙e also calling for school counselling investment.
And it鈥檚 been heart-warming to speak to and receive responses from members so pleased we鈥檙e campaigning on this issue.
Step closer
As a policy team, we feel we鈥檝e taken a step closer to our objective 鈥 getting the UK Government to invest in a paid counsellor in every secondary school, academy and FE college in England.
We鈥檝e been campaigning for greater investment in school counselling for years.
Our members have celebrated success in Northern Ireland, Wales and most recently Scotland. But England has remained the only country without a statutory funded service.聽
In June we felt like we may have turned the page to a new chapter in our work.
Critical time to invest
A day after we wrote to the Education Secretary, Gavin Williamson, saying this was a critical time to invest in school counselling, we were invited to a meeting with Department for Education officials.
This gave us with the opportunity to talk through our vision of a government-funded counselling programme for every school and college in England. We presented options exploring different models of delivery. We came away from that meeting full of hope.
The comprehensive spending review (CSR) provided us with our best chance to have our voice heard about the importance of school counselling investment. This is when the Chancellor looks at what the Government will commit to spending-wise for the following four years.
In September we called on members to write to MPs to put pressure on the Chancellor to consider the benefits of funding counselling provision in schools and colleges. We highlighted counselling was needed before the pandemic, but if funded now it could be part of the longer-term recovery plan too.
Cross party political support
Our collective voice gained momentum and what was really interesting was that there was cross party political support. From the MP responses we have seen, 45% confirmed they had written to Treasury Ministers on behalf of their constituents to ask them to consider school counselling in this year's CSR.聽
In the last few days we鈥檝e found out that Labour MP Jon Hemsworth has tabled an Early Day Motion referring to our campaign and calling on funding for school counselling to be allocated in the CSR. This could lead to a Parliamentary debate on the subject.
Conservative MP Nickie Aiken has submitted a parliamentary question to the Education Secretary asking if he will provide access to counselling for all children and young people in secondary schools and further education colleges.
Politicians are hearing our message
It鈥檚 fantastic that politicians are hearing our message 鈥 and joining our fight.
Other influential mental charities are supportive too. 聽Young Minds, the Centre for Mental Health and the Mental Health Foundation are onboard. The key message being that government must allocate funding to employ professionally trained counsellors and psychotherapists to work in every school.
What鈥檚 more, following our recent school and college counselling webinar, we now have the beginnings of an expert reference group made up of our members to help move this work forward.
We know from our conversations with members that funding in school is often tight, over-stretched and isn鈥檛 sustainable. Job security is a worry. This simply isn鈥檛 fair. It isn鈥檛 fair on the children and young people we work with and it isn鈥檛 fair on the highly trained practitioners who deliver these essential roles. That鈥檚 why we will continue to campaign for a paid counsellor in every school.
Campaign remains alive
Thanks to you we now have a number of MPs we can directly work to ensure the need for school counselling investment continues to be talked about and grows even more support.
We鈥檒l keep shouting about this and so this campaign remains alive. We鈥檒l have a further update on how you can be involved in this too very soon.
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Why we need all secondary schools and colleges to employ a counsellor
Ann Holden writes that "school counsellors add significant representation in an educational setting"

Government鈥檚 limited education recovery package will have 鈥渄evastating impact鈥 on children鈥檚 mental health
鈥淐hildren will pay the price of this failure to fully invest in their educational recovery鈥

How you can support our school counselling campaign
Sue Pattison and Maggie Robson, joint Chairs of 麻豆原创 Children, Young People and Families division, ask you to support our campaign for a paid counsellor in every secondary school, academy and FE college in England