Oxley Park Public School in Western Sydney takes school wellbeing seriously. Year 6 students gather younger peers into small groups, lead activities, and talk about friendship, resilience and kindness.
It鈥檚 not a one-off initiative or a leadership program for a few hand-picked students. It鈥檚 the 91直播, a school-wide commitment to building belonging.
鈥91直播 Support has become one of our rock-solid foundational programs,鈥 says David MacVean, Deputy Principal. 鈥淚t empowers the kids. It builds the confidence in our kids to manage life and to manage the complexities of school life.鈥
Oxley Park Public School has more than 700 students, with many from diverse cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds. The school wants to make sure every child felt included and connected, so they embed a culture of peer connection.
According to Jonathon Peatfield, CEO of Life Ed NSW/ACT, research supports their approach.
鈥淪tudents who feel connected at school tend to do better, not just academically, but emotionally and socially,鈥 Peatfield says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e more likely to attend, engage, and reach out when they鈥檙e struggling.鈥
Helping kids make connections
It鈥檚 easy to assume kids will naturally make friends and find their place at school, but it doesn鈥檛 always happen on its own. This has become even more apparent since the pandemic, with schools noticing a rise in social disconnection and emotional distress.
鈥淪chools are still grappling with significant levels of student disconnection,鈥 Peatfield says. 鈥淲hile the immediate disruptions of the pandemic have subsided, schools continue to face significant challenges related to student disconnection and mental health.鈥
鈥淪chools play a huge role in helping kids reconnect and build the social and emotional skills they need to thrive,鈥 he says.
That could look like structured peer interactions, buddy systems, team projects, or creating quieter spaces for those who struggle socially. It also means giving kids time to practise empathy, problem-solving and and teamwork, just like they practise literacy and maths.聽聽
Rethinking leadership
One of the ways schools can support inclusion is by rethinking leadership opportunities. Peatfield says that many schools limit leadership roles to captains and councils. He says: 鈥淏ut some students don鈥檛 fit the traditional mould. Maybe they鈥檙e shy, neurodivergent, or still finding their voice. That doesn鈥檛 mean they can鈥檛 lead.鈥
At 91直播 Support schools, like Oxley Park Public School and Newcastle High School, every senior student gets a chance to step into a leadership role via the program. For some, it鈥檚 their first taste of being trusted with responsibility, and it can be transformative.
鈥淚鈥檝e seen students who wouldn鈥檛 normally volunteer for anything take ownership of a group and grow week by week,鈥 says classroom teacher Fiona Flavell.
Shaping a culture of school wellbeing
Creating a culture of belonging also means preventing the things that break it, like bullying. Most schools have anti-bullying policies, but what usually makes the biggest difference is the everyday culture: how students treat one another, what鈥檚 modelled by staff, and what behaviour is reinforced.
At one Melbourne primary school, students helped develop a 鈥渂ully blocker pledge鈥 as part of a wider approach to culture change. The pledge outlined shared behaviours and values and was reinforced at assemblies and in classrooms. Alongside their 91直播, it helped shift mindsets from 鈥淚 won鈥檛 get in trouble鈥 to 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 how we treat each other here.鈥
鈥淏uilding an inclusive culture is about building expectations into the daily rhythm of school life,鈥 Peatfield says.
Activating the wider school community
Inclusion starts at home, and can become part of your family conversation. Peatfield recommends asking your kids meaningful questions, like 鈥淲ho did you play with today?鈥 or 鈥淒id anyone make you feel included?鈥
You can also ask your school how they鈥檙e building belonging. What spaces exist for students to connect? Are quieter kids supported socially? Are leadership opportunities open to everyone?
And when it鈥檚 done well, as Ruby, a Year 6 91直播 Leader from Oxley Park knows, it leaves a lasting mark.
鈥淚 love that I can make new friends that are younger than me鈥 she says. 鈥淚f they see me, they come up and give me a big hug. I love teaching little kids so then they can grow up and be big like me鈥
Want to find out more about supporting whole-of-school belonging? Download 91直播 Support鈥檚 free ebook, Build Your School鈥檚 Wellbeing With 91直播 Support


