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Everyday strategies to build belonging and well-being

By Laura.Duckett, 25 November, 2025
With a focus on emotional safety, connection and clear communication, these actions build belonging and support well-being across any discipline
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Today’s students face complex pressures from financial to mental health challenges. As educators, we can’t control everything outside the classroom, but what happens within our learning spaces can make a profound difference.

Small, intentional actions, from how we greet students to how we respond to disengagement, influence whether learners feel safe, valued and capable of success. Strong, supportive teacher-student relationships boost engagement, retention and well-being.

Here are practical, evidence-informed strategies drawn from the GRACE Framework I’ve developed – growth mindset, regulation, attunement, communication, and emotional intelligence – to help you make your classroom more inclusive, relational and human-centred, whatever your discipline.

The principles underpinning inclusive support

Students learn best when they feel seen, heard and supported. A relational approach to teaching recognises that belonging and emotional safety come before cognitive engagement.

In other words: “Am I safe here?” comes long before “What can I learn here?”
Trauma-informed and inclusive pedagogy rests on three simple principles:  

• Model predictability to reduce anxiety and show students what to expect
• Build connection to strengthen trust and motivation  
• Encourage participation so every voice counts.  

The GRACE Framework turns these principles into a practical, strengths-based process. It helps educators reflect on their practice and nurture meaningful relationships that promote inclusion and success.

Put GRACE into practice

To translate these principles into daily teaching, apply the five components of the GRACE Framework:

1. Growth mindset: start with predictability and clarity

When educators model curiosity and persistence, students follow. Set clear expectations, outline learning outcomes, explain assessment criteria, and share rubrics early to demystify success. Preview upcoming sessions to reduce cognitive load.
Model a growth mindset by celebrating progress, not perfection, and normalise mistakes as part of learning and share your own reflections aloud. 

2. Regulation: foster psychological safety and connection 

When students feel emotionally safe, they engage more deeply and self-regulate more effectively. Build belonging through consistent, relational actions. Learn and use students’ names. Invite questions and normalise help-seeking: “We’re all learning together.”
Use brief rituals such as one-word check-ins or anonymous whiteboard reflections to create space for honest conversation. 

3. Attune to your learners and respond to distress with care

A caring conversation can help restore confidence and build belonging. Notice what’s happening in the room. Silence, withdrawal or irritability can signal anxiety or disengagement. Respond with empathy and curiosity.

Reach out privately: “I’ve noticed you seem quieter – how are you finding things?” And know where to signpost students for well-being or academic support. 

4. Communicate effectively by using inclusive teaching methods 

Flexibility widens access without lowering standards. Create multiple pathways for participation, whether via chat, polls, pair share, or written reflections. This flexibility supports students who process or communicate differently.

Design learning materials with access in mind, for example, add captions and choose legible fonts. Comic Sans, for example, aids readers with dyslexia and ADHD. Consider releasing digital content on learning platforms a week ahead of teaching delivery. Build rapport by making eye contact, keeping your posture open, and responding promptly to student messages. These simple acts signal approachability and respect.

5. Flex your emotional intelligence

By modelling emotional literacy, educators help students regulate their own responses. Recognise how your and your students’ emotions shape the learning environment. Prepare thoughtfully for sensitive topics, offering content warnings when appropriate.
You can cultivate a culture where learners express emotion without fear of judgement by responding calmly and compassionately: “That’s a fair reaction; this topic can feel heavy.” These moments of grace transform classrooms into communities of care.

Keep inclusion alive through reflection

Incremental, human-centred adjustments create lasting change. Sustain inclusive teaching through reflection by asking “How do my classroom norms affect students differently?” or “Who might feel excluded from this activity?” and gather and act on student feedback. 

Review a short clip of your teaching to notice tone, pacing and interaction. The GRACE Framework prompts can help you identify strengths and foster growth. 

Relational, inclusive teaching benefits every learner, not just those in crisis. Every interaction offers a chance to affirm a student’s worth. 

Five-minute exercises to try this week:

• Begin class with a one-word emotions check-in  
• Send one encouraging message to a struggling student  
• End each session with “What’s one question you’re still unsure about?”  
• Watch five minutes of your teaching and note what encourages engagement
• Ask students: “What helps you feel most comfortable contributing in class?”

When students feel safe, seen, and supported, they take risks, think critically, and persist through challenges. Supporting them doesn’t mean doing more – it means teaching with empathy, awareness and intention. Belonging begins with us.

Lauren Flannery is an associate professor at the University of East Anglia. 

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With a focus on emotional safety, connection and clear communication, these actions build belonging and support well-being across any discipline

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