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How IT & Student Services Can Partner to Strengthen Student Mental Health Support

May is Mental Health Awareness Month, a time when schools spotlight the importance of student wellbeing. But truly supporting students’ emotional and mental health takes more than spirit weeks or guest speakers. It takes year-round systems, tools, and teamwork. Many districts have implemented student monitoring software to respond to student safety and wellness risks, and strengthen student mental health support. But these tools are often managed like other edtech. When that happens, powerful features that can help schools support their students’ mental health and wellness may go underused.

To get the most out of student monitoring, a more collaborative approach is needed. Student wellness monitoring like Securly Aware shouldn’t be managed by a sole team, but utilized collaboratively: a shared ownership between IT Teams and Student Services Teams working as partners.

When Student Wellness Monitoring Is Managed like Other Edtech, Mental Health Takes a Back Seat

Many districts first implemented student activity monitoring software to detect online threats and concerning behaviors. Naturally, IT teams took the lead: evaluating solutions, managing implementation, and handling alerts.

But the latest generation of student monitoring – like Securly Aware – goes far beyond risk detection. These tools support earlier identification and intervention of wellness risks by offering proactive mental health support features, including:

These features help prevent issues from escalating and are best managed by professionals trained to respond to students’ emotional needs: your Student Services team.

How IT & Student Services Can Partner to Strengthen Student Mental Health Support

When IT and Student Services collaborate on student wellness monitoring, schools can shift from reactive alerting to proactive student support. This partnership enables:

Why Student Wellness Monitoring Should Matter to IT

If you’re leading your district’s IT strategy, you’ve likely worked hard to choose and configure tools like Securly Aware. But if your Student Services team isn’t fully leveraging these tools for mental health support, you may be leaving value on the table – and vulnerable students at risk.

Partnering together ensures:

When you work together, you help shift your district from a reactive to a preventative model, creating a stronger, more sustainable support system for all students.

How to Build a Strong IT–Student Services Partnership

Not sure how to involve your Student Services team in the technology conversation? Start with these simple steps:

  1. Bring Student Services to the Table
    Invite them to explore how they could use Securly Aware’s insights – from case management to proactive features like the Wellness Widget and ThinkTwice.
  2. Define Roles & Workflows
    Collaborate on who handles different alert types, who monitors Wellness Levels, and how to respond to incidents involving bullying, self-harm, or critical risks. Don’t forget to organize OUs and ensure there’s scheduling coverage to keep eyes on alerts throughout the day.
  3. Review the Data Together
    Set a regular cadence to review Wellness Level trends and alert history jointly. As you gain a shared understanding of what the data reveals, the next steps will become clear and enable better decision-making.

Rethink Your Approach to Student Activity Monitoring

Mental Health Awareness Month should provide more than a one-time focus on students’ mental health. It’s better thought of as a reminder that your students’ wellbeing needs consistent attention all year long. It’s a heavy responsibility, but it’s a little easier to shoulder when it’s shared.

Securly Aware gives schools the tools to confidently and effectively support their students’ safety and wellness every day. And to realize its full potential, IT and Student Services must work together. When technology and trained professionals intersect, students get the support they truly need.

Want to strengthen your support for student mental health and wellness? Check out these resources: 

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