KS3 Wellbeing Workshops: Support for Year 8, Year 9 and Year 10 is a practical guide for heads of KS3, Year 8 to Year 10 teams, pastoral leads and wellbeing coordinators. It focuses on help schools choose KS3 wellbeing workshops that match the developmental needs of pupils in Years 8, 9 and 10.

The target keyword is part of the KS3 wellbeing commercial long-tail. Commercial long-tail page aligned with HIP's active KS3 offer and the wider Ahrefs `mental health workshops for schools` opportunity.

Why this matters for schools

KS3 is often where confidence, belonging, friendship pressure, anxiety and decision-making become visible. Workshops work best when they are matched to the year group.

The useful test is not whether a session sounds positive on a planner. The useful test is whether pupils and staff know what to do next when the issue appears in real school life.

Common signs this needs attention

Every school context is different, but repeated patterns should be noticed before pupils feel unsupported or staff become stretched.

  • Year 8 pupils need settling-in and confidence support
  • Year 9 pupils are dealing with friendship and anxiety themes
  • Year 10 pupils need help with choices, pressure and next steps
  • Staff want consistent language across the key stage

What schools should decide first

Before booking a workshop or assembly, leaders should agree the purpose, the audience, the support route and the follow-up. That keeps the work practical, safe and easier for staff to reinforce.

  • Choose a theme for each year group rather than one generic session
  • Link workshops to LLW, pastoral care and tutor follow-up
  • Brief staff on key phrases and support routes
  • Review themes termly as pupil needs change

How this links to pastoral care

Workshop content should sit alongside pastoral care, safeguarding procedures, Learning for Life and Work themes and the everyday relationships pupils have with trusted adults in school.

That matters because many wellbeing topics involve confidence, friendship, pressure, worry or disclosure. Pupils should not be invited into a conversation unless adults are ready to respond clearly and calmly.

What good delivery should include

HIP Psychology offers KS3 workshops including transition, Ready For Action, tackling anxiety, anti-bullying, taking the next step and Truth About Vaping.

Good delivery should be age-appropriate, psychologically informed and realistic. It should avoid shame, shock-only messaging or vague advice that pupils cannot apply when pressure appears.

Useful guidance to align with

Schools can connect this work with existing guidance and resources, including Department of Education pastoral care and wellbeing context and CCEA Learning for Life and Work resources.

How HIP Psychology can support your school

HIP Psychology works with schools across Northern Ireland and Ireland through pupil workshops, staff training, assemblies and whole-school wellbeing support. Sessions are designed to be practical, psychologically informed and usable in busy school settings.

Useful related HIP resources include vaping in schools Northern Ireland, transition workshops for schools, Year 8 transition support, student wellbeing workshops, pupil wellbeing strategy, pastoral support in schools.

Need help planning the next step? Contact HIP Psychology to discuss workshops, staff training or whole-school wellbeing support.

FAQs

What should a school decide before booking ks3 wellbeing workshops?

Agree the target year group, the pastoral or safeguarding route, the staff who need briefing, and what pupils should be able to do differently afterwards.

How can schools keep this kind of session safe?

Avoid asking pupils to share personal experiences in public settings. Use realistic scenarios, clear boundaries, safeguarding procedures and a named support route.

Is one workshop enough?

A single workshop can start the conversation, but the strongest impact comes when staff follow up through tutor time, pastoral care, pupil voice and consistent language.

How can HIP Psychology help?

HIP Psychology can support schools with pupil workshops, assemblies, staff training and practical wellbeing planning tailored to the year group and school context.


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