Schools
Bereaved pupils need sustained support, not just crisis intervention
Published June 4, 2026
The death of a parent, sibling or close family member represents one of the most significant adverse childhood experiences, with profound implications for a young person's educational engagement and emotional wellbeing. Yet too often, support for bereaved children follows a crisis-only model—intensive immediate assistance that fades just as the reality of long-term grief begins to take hold. This approach fails to recognise that bereavement is not a single event but a journey that evolves over months and years, requiring sustained pastoral care within schools and wider children's services.
Research consistently demonstrates that bereaved children are at heightened risk of poor attendance, reduced attainment, and social isolation, with some becoming vulnerable to exclusion or missing education entirely. Moving beyond crisis intervention towards continuity of care means embedding bereavement awareness within school pastoral systems, ensuring staff are trained to recognise grief's changing manifestations, and maintaining links with specialist support services long after the initial loss. For local authorities, this represents both an inclusion imperative—ensuring these children remain connected to education—and a preventative investment that reduces downstream pressure on mental health and social care services.
Lead Members for Children's Services must scrutinise local provision to ensure it offers more than immediate crisis response. This includes mapping local bereavement support services, reviewing the accessibility of counselling in schools, and considering how family hubs and Early Help networks can provide the relational continuity that grieving families need. By treating bereavement support as an integral part of our inclusion and early help strategies, councils can better fulfil their corporate parenting responsibilities and ensure no child faces grief alone.
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