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Resources

Schools, colleges, universities, services and workplaces can all support On My Mind by:

  1. sharing www.onmymind.info across your social media using the hashtag #onmymind

  2. downloading  the free posters and leaflets below to share in your reception or work areas

  3. sign-posting to On My Mind from website and newsletters.

Should you have any questions regarding the site or any of our resources, please contact youthwellbeing@annafreud.org.  

To keep informed of new resources, please join the free Anna Freud Learning Network.  

Posters and leaflets

The following posters and leaflets have been designed to help services sign-post to On My Mind. Please print and display in areas where young people may notice such as school notice boards, waiting rooms and staff rooms.

We All Have Mental Health 

An animation designed to give young people aged 11–14 a common language and understanding of what we mean by mental health and how we can look after it. It has been created for young people in Key stage 3 and can be used with accompanying teaching resources.

Please click on the relevant link below to access the animation on YouTube:

There is a Teacher Toolkit that accompanies the animation which includes lesson plans, assembly plans and cross-curricular activities.

Talking Mental Health 

An animation designed to help begin conversations about mental health in the classroom and beyond. The animation and accompanying resources have been created by a team of animators, children, teachers and clinicians, and is being taught to Year 5 and 6 children around the UK. Please click on the relevant link below to access the animation on YouTube:

There is a Teacher Toolkit that accompanies the animation which includes lesson plans, assembly plans and cross-curricular activities.

Facing Shadows

In April 2015, seven young people who had been to a Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) for help with their depression came together, with the aim of making a short, animated film about what it is like to suffer from depression as a teenager. WARNING: This video may potentially trigger seizures for people with photosensitive epilepsy. Viewer discretion is advised.