Westfield Middle School Principal Jesse McMillan and representatives of Bridge for Resilient Youth in Transition an in-school intervention program for students facing mental health or medical disruptions, gave a five-month overview of its implementation at WMS to Mayor Michael McCabe, Sen. John Velis, Rep. Mike Finn, Superintendent Stefan Czaporowski, members of the School Committee and other area officials on Oct. 1.
Also speaking was Paul Hyry-Dermith, BRYT national director and Zemora Tevah, district/school support specialist, both of whom worked closely with WMS in setting up BRYT at WMS, funded by a grant from the Department of Mental Health.
In introducing the program, WMS Principal Jesse McMillan said there is a significant increase in mental health needs among students. He said for the WMS population of 700 seventh- and eighth-grade students, there are tier invention programs for the student population at large and programs such as RISE for students with special needs. He said before BRYT, there was not a lot of support for students with mental health challenges.
BRYT, a program of the Brookline Center for Community Mental Health, transforms how schools support students and families who have experienced a mental health disruption.
The BRYT model provides support for staffing, student selection, a support plan and a separate space. McMillan said WMS was fortunate to have a room available that could be dedicated to the program that has a separate entrance, bathroom, academic and counseling space.
McMillan said in the five short months of its implementation, there have been success stories in which students who had access to the BRYT supports have now transitioned back into academic teams. “I am proud of my staff,” he said.