
Why Specialist FE Colleges Are the Blueprint for a Whole-College Mental Health Approach
The conversation around mental health in education often focuses on mainstream schools. However, as we mark Specialist FE Week, it’s crucial to shine a light on those settings—Special Schools, Pupil Referral Units (PRUs), and Specialist FE Colleges—that are dealing with the most complex needs.
The data is clear: Specialist FE provision isn’t just different from mainstream education; it operates on a fundamentally different philosophy. By viewing mental health and wellbeing as a foundational element of education, they provide a blueprint for what a truly integrated, whole-college mental health strategy should look like.
The Core Philosophical Divide: Purpose vs. Performance
The most significant difference between settings lies in the goals of support:
| Specialist Provision (Special Schools/PRUs) | Mainstream Provision (Secondary/FE Colleges) |
| Philosophy: MH and wellbeing are integral to the educational role. Dealing with mental health is as important, if not more important, than academic outcomes. | Philosophy: Support is generally driven by the need to enable students to achieve academically and remain in education. |
| Approach: Holistic, child-centred, and focused on understanding physical and mental health needs as barriers to learning. | Approach: Often more reactive, focusing heavily on raising awareness and reducing stigma, with support services focused on academic retention. |
Specialist settings operate with a moral imperative and a deep understanding that staff will struggle to teach effectively if students’ social and emotional needs are not addressed. This philosophy positions wellbeing not as a mitigating factor for attainment, but as the prerequisite for learning.
Staffing and Expertise: Bringing the Clinic In-House
A student in a Specialist FE college often presents with complex, co-occurring needs. The staffing model must reflect this high level of dependency, leading to a significant divergence in expertise:
- Specialist Settings: Typically employ a wide range of internal health professionals, including psychologists, play therapists, art therapists, and counsellors. Furthermore, the responsibility for mental health is widely distributed across all staff roles, not limited to a distinct pastoral team.
- Mainstream Settings: Staffing relies primarily on a strong, separate pastoral team or, more often, on external NHS services (CYPMHS). Crucially, reports indicate that mainstream staff may lack a deep understanding of mental health issues and hold misconceptions that these problems are quick and easy to ‘fix’.
This internal, multidisciplinary team is the engine of the holistic approach, allowing for flexible, child-centred provision that is individually tailored to a student’s needs. What might be a targeted activity in a mainstream college is often used universally in a special school due to the high level of need.
Funding and Flexibility: The EHCP Advantage
Funding structures underscore the disparity in provision. While mainstream schools and colleges generally fund mental health support through local authority money and report significant funding barriers (77% reported funding issues), Specialist FE settings have a clear advantage:
- EHCP-Driven Resources: Specialist settings have access to a wider range of funding streams, most notably those accessed through an Education, Health and Care Plan (EHCP).
- Flexible Budgets: Being smaller, with tailored provision and less emphasis on conventional academic targets, allows them to use their income more flexibly to meet student needs. Consequently, fewer specialist providers report funding as a barrier (47% of special schools, 60% of PRUs).
For mainstream settings struggling with rising demand (85% of FE colleges reported an increase in mental health difficulties), the challenge is clear: supporting high-level needs with low-level, constrained budgets.
The Takeaway: From Reactionary to Foundational
For too long, mental health support in mainstream settings has been reactive—flexing academic timetables, adapting deadlines, or allowing a student to leave a classroom to prevent escalation. While this flexibility helps retention, it is fundamentally focused on enabling academic success rather than comprehensively addressing the underlying need.
The Specialist FE model is like a specialist clinic: it views the profound, long-term mental and emotional needs of the young person as central to the entire care and educational plan. For students who may have struggled in secondary school, the transition to the vocational environment of FE can be psychologically positive (the Stage-Environment Fit), but only if the supportive foundation is secure.
The Specialist FE blueprint shows us that a truly effective Whole-College Approach requires:
- Mental Health to be recognised as a core educational pillar, not a supplementary service.
- Significant investment in internal, expert health professionals and comprehensive staff training.
- A commitment to a holistic, person-first philosophy driven by moral responsibility, not just academic results.
Apply the Blueprint: Next Steps for Your College
The lessons from Specialist FE Week are clear: the needs are complex, and the required expertise is high.
| Ready to Raise Your Staff Expertise? | Don’t Let Compassion Fatigue Set In | Join the Community of Experts |
| The complex needs highlighted this week require advanced skills and a trauma-informed lens. Explore our accredited training courses, including our certification in Trauma-Informed Practice and SEMH Leadership, designed to empower your staff to move beyond reactive support. | Supporting students with complex, high-risk needs is emotionally taxing. Protect your team and your provision with AMHIE’s dedicated Clinical Supervision and Coaching services for Mental Health Leads and Senior Teams, ensuring sustainability in high-demand roles. | Connect with Mental Health Leads, SENCOs, and senior leaders across the UK who are navigating complex SEMH and SEND challenges. Access exclusive guides, policy updates, and networking opportunities that inform best practice. |
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By Lily Blakeledge,
The Team at AMHIE 2/12/2025