With an influx of over 15 million dollars in grants in the last 18 months and a new
                  research center designation, the School Mental Health Collaborative (SMHC) Center
                  at the USF College of Education is rapidly growing and changing the model of school
                  mental health support for students in Florida. 
The center located on the Tampa campus, utilizes a prevention approach with a resilience
                  and well-being focus to address the student mental health crisis. 鈥淕etting out in
                  front and employing prevention practices to reduce mental health problems of students
                  is a radically different model,鈥 said Nate von der Embse, co-director of the SMHC Center.
Responding to a mental health crisis

According to the National Comorbidity Survey: Adolescent Supplement (NCS-A), almost
                  20% of youth have a diagnosable mental health disorder; however, only 20% of students
                  exhibiting symptoms are identified and subsequently receive intervention services.
The 2019 Youth Risk Behavior Survey revealed that 15.6% of Florida high school students
                  reported that they seriously considered attempting suicide, while 7.9% reported having
                  attempted suicide in the previous 12 months. Since nearly 80% of all mental health
                  services for children are delivered within the school setting, it is critical to develop
                  effective school-based strategies to help our youth in need.
A new model for student mental health care

鈥淭here will never be enough school psychologists, counselors and social workers for
                  one-to-one care of students,鈥 said von der Embse. 鈥淲e have to rethink, reconceptualize
                  how mental health services are provided in schools. The old model was to wait for
                  a student to exhibit significant psychological distress, provide intensive supports
                  and then put them back in the same environment. Now, we are providing professional
                  development to educators and school mental health practitioners at the district level
                  to put systems in place to improve the whole school environment.鈥
鈥淭he center works closely with districts to install a dual factor model of mental
                  health, leading with building wellness and resiliency in students and secondarily,
                  reducing mental health symptoms,鈥 said David Wheeler, new director of the SMHC Center.
鈥淭he SMHC Center at the USF College of Education is emerging as the singular source
                  for prevention for student mental health services in Florida, with a burgeoning national
                  network with partners across the U.S.,鈥 said von der Embse.
Growth of the SMHC Center

The SMHC was first established in 2019 by a group of researchers at the University of South Florida and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The goal of the collaborative is to partner with research centers across the U.S. with a shared mission and vision that will improve access to school mental health services.
SMHC co-directors von der Embse, Shannon Suldo and Evan Dart submitted a proposal to establish the center, and it was approved by University of South Florida President Rhea Law on Nov. 29, 2022. The Board of Governors was notified, and a letter from the State University System of Florida was sent detailing that the SMHC was now a new research center on Dec. 8, 2022.
Currently, SMHC staff are providing technical assistance in four of the largest school
                  districts in the U.S.鈥擬iami-Dade, Hillsborough, Pinellas and Pasco counties鈥攊mpacting
                  the mental health care of over a half million students.
The SMHC Center facilitates research to practice partnerships between USF researchers
                  and schools in the Tampa Bay area and beyond, while shaping policy and promoting best
                  practices in student mental health services at the district, state and national levels.
The center has hired a full-time director, doctoral level staff and multiple graduate
                  research assistants, and will be hiring more full-time staff and support personnel
                  in the coming months. The SMHC is committed to recruiting and retaining trainees from
                  underrepresented and marginalized groups and to intentionally partnering with urban
                  and under-resourced public schools. 
Learn more about the School Mental Health Collaborative . 
