Grief at school: a guide for school personnel

Grief is the standard and natural response to loss, which is a universal human experience. Every year, millions of people are affected by death, many of whom are children and adolescents. Young people also grieve over other significant losses as they experience the breakup of families, the loss of friends and relationships or the sudden absence of security and control in their lives.

School is where we equip children for life, and loss is a part of life. School plays a vital role for all children in understanding what is common, establishing boundaries and experiencing community. For a growing number, school fills a void, and many assume the importance of family. Educators know that children derive much of their sense of wellbeing from school.

Every school is a melting pot of complex emotional issues. Students not only react to their own life events but also reflect the crises in the world around them. Their emotions are contagious. Their young peers want to do the right thing but need help figuring out how.

Teachers, administrators, school nurses and counselors feel an enormous burden of responsibility. All the while, life goes on and learning must happen. It's a big job, but help is available.

When adults grieve

Understanding your grief reactions is the first step towards helping students cope. For children and adults, grief is experienced on every level of our being. Grief can be responsible for physical symptoms, such as trouble sleeping, changes in appetite, fatigue or physical illness. Grief affects how our minds work and becomes the filter through which we see the world and ourselves.

The most apparent effects of grief are on our feelings. Almost all emotions can be part of a grief reaction and may be experienced with dizzying speed and intensity. These may also be part of grief:

  • Fear

  • Anger

  • Relief

  • Despair

  • Peace

  • Guilt

  • Numbness

  • Agitation

If faith is a part of your life, you may also question how this loss fits with your understanding of your faith.

There is no order or scale by which to measure these emotions. There is no time limit on grief.

While you wade through these feelings, you must also cope with the world outside. You may feel angry that the world doesn't seem to take notice of this enormously significant event in your life. It may even bother you when you see others enjoying life. It hurts when others don't mention the loss, and sometimes it hurts when they do. You may need some time alone to get your bearings, or you may wish to regain your identity by resuming your routine. You may plunge into activities that keep you too busy to feel.

Our understanding of grief is limited, and each child or adult is very different. There is no right way to grieve and no shortcut to grieving.

When children grieve

Past assumptions about children's grief may have failed to recognize its intensity.

We now know that children's grief is no less acute than the grief of adults, although its manifestations can be strikingly different. Students may exhibit many of the reactions already mentioned. Other responses are specific to their developmental stages and personal and family loss histories.

In addition to profound sadness, many children exhibit loneliness and isolation. They may feel abandoned. All children need help in identifying significant people in their lives whom they can talk to or lean on. They will need ongoing support in remembering they have no control over illness and death - it's not their fault. Adults have difficulty learning this as well.

In the "me"-centered world of preschool and early primary students, children may feel responsible for the illness or death of a loved one. They may think that by misbehaving or having a "bad thought," they caused the crisis. Because magical thinking has not yet been replaced with reality, unpleasant events such as death are considered avoidable or reversible. Children may believe there is something they can do to make that magic happen - to make the person come back.

From mid-primary years to adolescence, children begin to understand that death is real. They can represent death in pictures and play and may be full of questions to help fill in this mental image. They hear about abstract concepts like heaven, but death still seems remote. It certainly happens with regularity in the media, but children don't usually consider their mortality or the death of a family member until they are shocked by that reality. Regression to earlier behaviors or misbehavior may reflect their grief. Hyperactivity can signal their wish to escape feelings they cannot yet grasp.

Teens in grief

During the teen years, mature reactions to death and skills for surviving loss begin to develop. Abstract concepts and feelings about an afterlife take shape. Adolescent tendencies to idealize or romanticize make feelings of grief even more intense. Teens and younger children may exhibit physical symptoms; these complaints often reflect a need for nurturing.

In this highly social development stage, the grieving teen is particularly vulnerable to peer reactions. Social interaction increases opportunities for support but also places the student at risk when emotions are volatile.

Developmental issues often complicate adolescent grief, particularly over the loss of a parent. Teenage individuation may have stretched the parent-child relationship, creating significant unfinished business when a parent dies. Anger, guilt and depression are often significantly magnified in adolescent grief.

At any age, grieving is not a weakness; it's a necessity. It is how we heal from our loss and move on. For children, it is a part of growing up. Grief may never go away, but it will change. It is experienced and integrated again as children pass from one developmental stage to another, and the loss and its meaning become a part of life. Parents’ and educators' job is to ensure this new life is healthy and happy.

Your role as a teacher or counselor

Because you are a role model and influence your students, you have the privilege and burden of helping them through a difficult time. When a child is grieving or is seriously ill, and certainly when a child dies, the needs of affected students can be overwhelming. The suggestions below will help, but seek additional help if needed.

  • Acknowledge your feelings about loss so you can be emotionally available to help your students.

  • By displaying your emotions, you validate theirs. Don't hide tears.

  • Provide a safe space, literally and figuratively, for the hard work of grief.

    • Under the stress of a loss, home may not seem stable enough for children to express their fears and pain. Parents frequently put their mourning aside to "hold on for the kids," so children may feel they have to hold on too.

  • Children have no language and no model for grieving until adults provide them. The words you use and the feelings you express will shape your students' concept of loss and recovery for the rest of their lives. Honest words better serve them than confusing euphemisms, such as "passed away."

  • Because you are uniquely positioned to be an objective observer, you can be alert for extreme responses that may require professional intervention. These types of responses are discussed later.

  • Use this opportunity to teach the concept of community. Your students will observe and remember how adults care for each other during difficult times. Children want to be taught what they can do.

  • Use other resources in your area; raising children is everybody's business. The hospice in your region is a good place to start. It can provide the information and help you need.

  • Make sure that you take care of yourself. Talk with other professionals about how they deal with children in crisis, and develop your self-care plan.

Helping the grieving child

  • At the first opportunity, talk to the parents and the child to ask how you can help. Provide parents with regular feedback.

  • Tell the child early and often that you are available to listen and talk.

  • Acknowledge the child's loss and grief. The worst thing you can say is nothing.

  • Listen carefully. Children may become confused by too much information and by answers to questions they haven't asked.

  • Don't impose your philosophy of death on the child, no matter how comforting you think it may be. Values, traditions and religious beliefs surrounding death are as diverse as your students. Give them safety and acceptance, not answers.

  • Be prepared to set limits. Children of all ages may become agitated and disoriented when boundaries disappear in times of crisis. Keep up daily routines. A firm hand may be comforting, and your consistency can be a sign of normalcy in their off-balance life.

  • Touch can communicate more than words to children who feel confused or isolated. If it's appropriate, ask permission to hug the child.

  • For students of all ages, plan nonverbal activities to allow expressions of grief. Listening to music, creating a dance, drawing pictures, acting out stories and even collecting stones or leaves are opportunities to talk and remember. Plan physical activities; give opportunities for leadership roles.

  • Attachment anxieties - fear of letting go of the teacher's hand, being left on the playground, and not being picked up after school - call for frequently repeated assurances.

  • Peer activities are essential for older children. Help students brainstorm what they can do to help their grieving friend. They might collect assignments, run errands or tutor. Teach them the gift of listening.

  • Holidays and anniversaries are challenging. Seek additional ways to acknowledge the loss at these times.

  • Observe your other students as vivid feelings may surface. Open, informal discussion groups can allow unspoken grief from their past to bubble up. Let them know you are concerned with their feelings as well.

When a child is seriously ill

  • Keep in contact. With parents' permission, regular phone calls to the home or hospital say, "You're still part of the group." Check-in with parents regularly rather than asking them to keep in touch.

  • Make a class plan with your students to continue calls, notes and other age-appropriate gestures of support. These activities lessen the isolation of the child who is ill and reassure the rest of the class. Each child needs to feel connected.

  • Unless the nature of the illness is confidential, get more information from health departments or private associations, or arrange for an expert to talk to the class. Your students feel vulnerable, and they need accurate and honest answers.

When a child dies

The death of a child is devastating. Your students will grieve in many different ways, depending on their closeness to the one who died. You need to help them grieve even while you struggle with this loss. Consider these additional steps:

  • Send letters to all parents, informing them of the death. Let them know what the school will be doing and whom they can call for additional help.

  • Call a class meeting. Invite the children to talk about their feelings and make a point of responding respectfully to each one. Schedule additional time to talk if the child's death is sudden, accidental or violent.

  • Be prepared to supply facts and details. What children imagine is frequently more troubling than reality. Expect curiosity; respond to it with honesty.

  • Bring in help if you need it. Your community hospice program can send a trained grief counselor to meet with you, or you can suggest other resources.

  • Ensure that the children know of funeral and memorial arrangements and that they can attend with their parent's permission.

  • Ask your students how they want to commemorate their friend in a concrete way. They may create a memorial book or bulletin board, collect money for a charitable donation, write notes or draw pictures for the bereaved family.

  • Invite students to plan a class or school-wide memorial, such as a tree planting or a memory garden. These events reinforce the reality of death while allowing each child to vent feelings and participate.

  • Revisit these visible reminders throughout the year. It may take some time for children to talk about their feelings.

There's more help available

Whether you're helping grieving children or coping with your grief, the advice and reassurance of other experienced professionals may help. There is no wrong time, and there doesn't need to be a crisis. It may be beneficial just to hear that what's happening is typical.

Perhaps you notice that a student's isolation seems to be deepening, acting out is becoming more pronounced, or you're aware of physical changes. If the grief emotions seem more extreme than those discussed here - if they are unmanageable - additional counseling is recommended.

Certainly, if a child's feelings of profound sadness lead you to worry about that child's safety, you should seek help immediately.

Pay particular attention to:

  • Apathy and withdrawal from family and friends

  • Indication of alcohol or drug abuse

  • A significant drop in school performance

  • Preoccupation with or idealizing violence or death

  • Unusually good behavior and a relentless need to please

  • Any verbalization of suicidal thoughts.

Learn the support procedures your school system already has in place and how to access them. There are several additional grief resources for your students and their families:

  • The hospice in your area has counselors who are trained in grief. Many hospices have grief programs specifically for children and provide art therapy. Hospices can help you help the children.

  • Community mental health agencies often have counseling available by appointment or may have walk-in clinics. Religious congregations, hospitals, grief centers and other nonprofit organizations in your area may offer these services.

  • Many private children's therapists - counselors, social workers, art or play therapists, psychologists and psychiatrists - understand the issues of grief. Ask about their experience in this field before making an appointment. Insurance sometimes covers part of the cost.

Teach loss as a part of life

Many children in your school deal with grief of one kind or another, often without the knowledge of the faculty. It is unfortunate that others will experience a significant loss before they leave childhood. Seize every opportunity to teach children about life and death. Consider integrating loss and grief concepts into existing curricula:

  • For the youngest children, seasonal changes are an opportunity to introduce the finite nature of life and the reassurance that our world goes on.

  • Allowing children to talk about the deaths of pets or relatives teaches acceptance of death as a part of life.

  • Comment on death and loss as it occurs in the literature you use. Reinforce the understanding that loss is universal, that it hurts, and that life goes on - though it is changed.

  • Choose a time when none of your students are grieving to visit a funeral home; invite a funeral director to talk to your class.

  • Encourage discussion of the violent deaths that are so much a part of local and national news. Teach children safe ways to express their anger, verbally and non-verbally.

  • Don't forget to joyfully celebrate the arrival of a student's baby brother or sister; life and death are sides of the same coin.

  • Make sure that your school library has books that teach about life and death. Your area hospice can provide a bibliography of books for each age group.

Source: American Hospice Foundation