Facebook Tracking Pixel
Skip to main content

Month: October 2022

emotional wellness

Emotional Wellness in High School: Mental Health in Teens

October is Emotional Wellness Month! Taking time out of a busy school season to recognize emotional wellness means spending time disconnecting and giving the brain some TLC. Maintaining a healthy emotional balance helps high schoolers to make healthy choices, have good relationships, avoid burnout, and achieve their goals.

Emotional health is one aspect of mental health. It reflects one’s ability to cope with positive and negative emotions and become more aware of how feelings affect you. Poor emotional health can lead to various mental and physical ailments that may interfere with students’ day-to-day lives. Below are a few tips to bolster the emotional wellness of high school students.

1. Get Sleep

It’s no secret that high school students like staying up late. For years there has been literature about early class start times for high schoolers having detrimental effects on their sleep patterns. One solution is to go to bed earlier, but for many, that piece of advice is either ignored or simply impractical. If a student works a job in the evenings, for example, they may not be able to observe an earlier bedtime.

The Rose Academies is among the very few high schools that prioritize student sleep. By offering three session times throughout the day, students can pick the start time that works best for them. Getting adequate sleep certainly helps to improve performance in school and overall mood, making it a key component of maintaining emotional wellness.

2. Be Mindful

Being “present” helps to regulate emotions, helping students to process what they’re feeling without becoming overwhelmed. Time spent in high school is often very future-focused, with goals of graduation, college, and career at the forefront of students’ minds.

While setting goals is integral to a Rose Academy curriculum, our staff is committed to meeting students right where they are and designing a graduation plan that fits the student’s timeline. This helps students to focus on what’s right in front of them with less worry about the future (which can lead to overwhelm and burnout). Keeping high school students confidently engaged while working towards a larger goal is one way a Rose education fosters emotional wellness.

3. Allow Space to Grieve

Grief is a universal emotion that everyone experiences. We often associate grief with losing a loved one, but grief can result from any struggle with loss. This may include loss of identity, the loss of a future you had imagined for yourself, or the loss of a relationship. Grief takes many forms and can come up even in the circumstances deemed “not that bad” by others. 

Grief is a complex emotion experienced by many high schoolers. The temptation to mute those feelings and carry on with school as usual could be detrimental in the long run, resulting in both acute and chronic health issues. 

At the Rose Academies, students are more than just another name on a roster. With smaller class sizes and student bodies, every staff member knows each student by name and their story, support needs, and goals. At Rose, we take a more whole-person approach than traditional high schools, recognizing that students have lives outside of school. Achieving emotional wellness is an ongoing process, and at Rose, we aim to maintain the flexibility and support needed for each student to thrive.

To learn more about what makes a Rose Academy education different, we invite you to continue exploring our website. 

Shu-Ha-Ri-DŌ program

Embracing The Art of Learning at the Rose Academies

What does the “The Art of Learning” mean?

There is a concept found in traditional Japanese martial art systems known as “Shu-Ha-Ri.” This term refers to the three distinct phases of learning – anything at all. Along with these three phases is also a concept known as “DŌ” (sounds like dough), which refers to the entire path (of learning).

Shu-Ha-Ri-DŌ is a signature program of the Rose Academies. It is a unique approach to enable students to discover who they are, learn how to plan and advocate for themselves, and dream bigger about their own future life plans. 

The program’s primary objective is to engage students through a fun and exciting ‘game-like’ format, which is broken out into these four skill-building and character-development phases:

First is the SHU Phase:

The SHU Phase trains the Shu-Ha-Ri-DŌ student to learn how to plan and complete their academic goals to graduate high school and develop their skills to express and advocate for themselves.

Second is HA:

In the HA Phase, students expand their thinking by providing a proven framework known as the “HA Kata.” This method of learning How to Learn® trains students to recognize, use, and master the three levels of thought to analyze, synthesize, and stylize their thinking for any academic, social, or life situation.

Third, RI:

The RI Phase cultivates leadership skills by becoming mentors to their peers. Students also take concrete steps towards applying for jobs and enrolling in college or university after high school.

Fourth, DŌ:

The DŌ Phase provides the finishing touch in the student’s high school education. DŌ focuses on the lifelong skills of developing one’s own character in order to be a positive and productive member of their family and community.

Students earn credit through completing the program and report many lasting benefits of participating, such as confidence in public speaking and a positive outlook on their post-graduation trajectory. Students of the program earn an average of two additional credits compared to their peers and increase their attendance by over 30%. In addition to learning the value of showing up for themselves, mastery of the Shu-Ha-Ri-DŌ Program results in personal awareness, confidence, and intellectual prowess.

To learn more about the Shu-Ha-Ri-DŌ program, get involved, and enroll today, please visit our website