Emotional Safety - IHE

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Emotional Safety
Higher Education

College students who feel emotionally safe on campus have the confidence to express themselves, take risks, work collaboratively, and create meaningful connections with their peers, faculty, and staff.

The safer students feel emotionally, the more likely they are to learn and thrive. Conversely, students who feel emotionally unsafe or stressed face barriers to learning as they may grapple with embarrassment, boredom, and frustration when faced with difficulties or challenges.

IHEs can cultivate campus environments where students can feel emotionally safe. In the classroom, faculty can foster a trusting environment for students to learn, make mistakes, and challenge their own and others’ beliefs. This may require faculty reflecting on their own biases and reflections and showing vulnerability with their students so they can teach with empathy and understanding. Faculty can also encourage students to learn by making mistakes, recognizing their efforts, and providing constructive criticism to help students feel emotionally safe.

Featured Resources

Better Discourse

Explores how campuses can engage in inclusive, constructive dialogue—better discourse—ahead of what many expect to be an uncertain and potentially tumultuous 2024–2025 academic year. This guide includes invitations for self-reflection (with a corresponding guide for mapping your campus) and directs you to tools, policies, and evidence-based practices for better discourse.

2024 Lumina-Gallup State of Higher Education Study

In the fall of 2023, Gallup surveyed 6,015 currently enrolled students, 5,012 U.S. adults who were previously enrolled in an education program after high school but had not completed a degree, and 3,005 adults who had never enrolled in higher education on behalf of Lumina Foundation. The surveys were conducted via a web-based survey using an opt-in panel. Results from the 2024 Lumina-Gallup State of Higher Education Study indicate:

Front page of The Invisible Faces of Runaway and Homeless Youth resource

Highlights efforts by the Office of Juvenile and Delinquency Prevention and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children to respond to and provide services for runaway youth.

SAMHSA Warning Signs and Risk Factors for Emotional Distress front page

Outlines the common warning signs and risk factors for emotional distress that children, adults, and first responders often experience. Also, highlights a disaster distress helpline for further contact.

Related Resources

Other Podcast

American Institutes for Research

U.S. Department of Education

The contents of the National Center on Safe Supportive Learning Environments Web site were assembled under contracts from the U.S. Department of Education, Office of Safe and Supportive Schools to the American Institutes for Research (AIR), Contract Number  91990021A0020.

This Web site is operated and maintained by AIR. The contents of this Web site do not necessarily represent the policy or views of the U.S. Department of Education nor do they imply endorsement by the U.S. Department of Education.

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