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At Religious Schools, Gen Z Students Are Breaking Mental Health Stigmas

Survey finds they seek counseling and support at higher rates than in secular schools.

Christianity Today July 21, 2022
SDI Productions / Getty

The high levels of involvement by teachers and professors at Christian schools have correlated with more referrals for mental health care during the pandemic.

Students at faith-based schools may be more willing to seek support because they are encouraged to do so by teachers or professors, said Stephen Brand, a licensed professional counselor in private practice and outpatient therapist at Renew Counseling Center at Southern Nazarene University (SNU) in Oklahoma.

Brand said the smaller student-to-professor ratio at schools like SNU means students develop more personal relationships with professors and often open up about difficulties in their lives. Scott Secor, who codirects the SNU center, said many of the students they treat are referred by residence life staff, professors, and coaches.

During the last school year, up to 30 percent of Gen Z students received mental health support from their schools, according to a new study from Springtide Research Institute. At religious schools, they sought out that support and said they felt cared for by the adults who worked there at higher rates.

Between fall 2021 and spring 2022, Springtide surveyed 3,139 students aged 13–25, including 313 students at religious (primarily Christian) secondary schools and colleges. The survey has a margin of error of 3 percent and 5 percent for the religious schools subgroup.

According to the Springtide research, 59 percent students at religious schools reported that they had talked with a mental health counselor for help, compared with 46 percent at nonreligious schools, according to Springtide.

Teens and young adults at religious schools were also more likely to see their schools as places where adults care about them; three quarters said adults at school make an effort to get to know them, compared to 62 percent of students at public schools.

“Over the past couple of years, the level of distress has increased exponentially with COVID-19 and the isolation resulting from [it],” Secor said. “Anxiety is a primary issue and is impacting young people greater than at any other time I’ve witnessed as a clinician. Depression follows along with anxiety, but generally the psychological distress young people are facing is at concerning levels.”

In the recent study, students at religious schools reported being hospitalized or medicated for mental health issues (35% compared with 26% secular school students) and seeing a mental health professional (44% versus 39% secular school students) at the same or higher rates than their peers at nonreligious schools.

These findings surprised Josh Packard, executive director of Springtide Research Institute, but he saw them as good signs.

“There is something in these communities that destigmatizes treatment [so] that students and their parents are willing to seek treatment,” said Packard. “It’s not that there’s a higher prevalence of mental health needs. They are willing and/or able to access treatment for these things.”

The students that Brand sees at SNU are usually struggling with the responsibilities of adulthood. He estimates these coming-of-age struggles make up 60 to 70 percent of the problems facing students in counseling, while 30 to 40 percent of the students in his office are battling issues like substance abuse, suicidal thoughts, and crisis.

Cara Dixon wonders whether schools could do more to help students cope before they need medication or hospitalization.

“When you build in emotional education and help students understand their experience, they are able to build a support system that doesn’t have to get to the place of screaming for help,” said Dixon, a licensed professional counselor in the Philadelphia suburbs who has worked with Christian colleges and Christian pre-K–12 schools.

Without these support systems, school administrators scramble to figure out in the moment how to stop a crisis, depleting their time and attention.

Dixon said since the pandemic began, she’s seen Christian schools discussing mental health and thriving. She has seen more referrals from the Christian community to her private practice as Christians realize they need help in these areas.

In July, the Association of Christian Schools International (ACSI) released Leading Insights: Mental Health and Well-Being, a monograph on promoting mental health and well-being within Christian schools. Dixon contributed a chapter to the book.

As mental health sinks for Americans in general, schools have focused on how they can help students. For many schools, partnering faith with mental health provides students with the support they need.

“Students were no longer asking me, ‘How should I live?’ They started asking me, ‘Why should I live?'” said Varun Soni, dean of religious life at the University of Southern California.

Overall, the survey found nearly seven in ten (69%) of students at religious schools reported that they feel equipped to handle life and its difficulties, compared with 57 percent of students at public schools.

The Springtide research named three qualities that make an organization friendly to mental health needs: It enables social connections, communicates achievable expectations, and helps young people develop a sense of purpose.

Yet when Springtide asked students about discovering their life purpose, only 17 percent of young people who said they are religious reported that a religious institution helps them discover their meaning in life. Packard noted another 16 percent of students said that nothing helped them discover their life’s purpose. He said religious institutions can no longer take for granted that students are learning about their life’s purpose unless someone shows them.

“I can’t think of anyone better equipped to help you figure out your purpose than religious institutions,” he said. “In a Christian context we are trying to transmit information, but we aren’t leading [students] in the process of self-discovery to discern what God wants for them. That’s not the central focus. We sort of assumed it would happen along the way, but it hasn’t been a focus.”

Brand said many of his clients from SNU were surprised that therapy and their faith could work together to help them. Talking to a counselor often helped students embrace their faith as their own.

“Therapy,” he said, “was a space for people to question or wrestle with what they believe and a chance to choose what they believe rather than just what was passed down.”

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