Refer students to community services
Your school can refer students to a range of specialist support services that are available in the community. This complements your actions to support the student at school.
Specialist support services assist with:
- safety, wellbeing and mental and physical health concerns
- problem behaviours
- legal advice
- financial help.
Specialist support services are available to assist:
- victim survivors of abuse
- people who self-harm
- children and young people
- parents and families
- metropolitan, regional and rural communities
- Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities
- culturally and linguistically diverse communities
- people with disabilities
- LGBTIQA+ communities.
Students can also access further support and information directly. You can provide them with a list of helplines and websites.
Identify a suitable service
Before you engage with students and their parents or carers, highlight which services are likely to be the most suitable. This will depend on:
- the type of abuse the student experienced
- the support that the students need
- any history that the students have with community services.
Help students connect to a service
Talk to students and their parents or carers about the services that are available. This can help them choose the service that best meets their needs.
Ideally, a student will self-refer to a service, with the help and support of their parents or carers. However, your school can help to connect a student to a service. You could do this by making a phone call to the service with, or on behalf of, the student.
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