NTLSN · Crash Course · Wellbeing

Supporting student wellbeing — a crash course

How you teach affects how students feel, and how they feel affects how they learn. Four short lessons on supporting wellbeing within your role, then a self-check.

The one thing to remember: you're a teacher, not a counsellor — but your design and teaching shape wellbeing more than you think. Your job is to notice, normalise, and refer.
4 lessons~10 min read1 self-checkGrounded in Enhancing Student Wellbeing (Baik et al.) & sector practice

The lessons

1
Design for wellbeingCurriculum that doesn't harm

A lot of student stress is designed in — bunched deadlines, unclear expectations, no belonging. Good design removes avoidable harm.

  • Spread assessment; avoid the all-at-once crunch across subjects.
  • Make expectations and support clear and findable.
  • Build belonging and early connection — it protects wellbeing.
2
Notice distressSee the early signs

You're often the first to see a student struggling — through their work and their absence. Noticing early matters.

  • Watch for change: withdrawal, missed work, a drop in engagement.
  • Take a quiet word seriously; don't wait for a crisis.
  • Know that disclosure may come to you — be ready to respond.
3
Respond & referYour role has boundaries

Responding well doesn't mean becoming a counsellor. It means listening, normalising help-seeking, and connecting the student to professional support.

  • Listen without judgement; you don't have to fix it.
  • Normalise support: ‘lots of students use this, here's how’.
  • Refer to your institution's services; for risk of harm, act immediately per policy.
4
Look after yourselfYou can't pour from empty

Supporting students has a cost. Sustainable teaching includes boundaries and your own support.

  • Hold boundaries — you're one part of a support system, not all of it.
  • Debrief and use staff support after hard conversations.
  • Protect your own wellbeing; model that it's allowed.
◇ Bring it together — from the NTLSN commons

For your teaching this semester — a quick self-check

My assessment is spread, not bunched into a crunch.
Expectations and support are clear and easy to find.
I build early belonging and connection.
I know the early signs of a struggling student.
I know how to respond, refer, and act on risk per policy.
I hold boundaries and look after my own wellbeing.
Source & attribution. Curated from sector wellbeing-in-curriculum good practice (including the Australian ‘Enhancing Student Wellbeing’ resource, Baik, Larcombe et al.) indexed by the NTLSN commons. This is teaching practice, not clinical or mental-health advice. If a student is at risk of harm, follow your institution's process and contact professional support services immediately.
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