Welcome to Burgh’s Health Promoting Schools Web Page.
The health promoting school concept has been embedded in good practice for several years and is already in place in many schools across Scotland, including Burgh.
Scotland has been part of the European Network of Health Promoting Schools since 1993 and has made a significant contribution to the thinking within Europe and the World Health Organization.
In 1995, the World Health Organization set out a broad definition of health promoting schools, which is still relevant today:
A health promoting school is one in which all members of the school community work together to provide pupils with integrated and positive experiences and structures, which promote and protect their health. This includes both the formal and the informal curriculum in health, the creation of a safe and healthy school environment, the provision of appropriate health services and the involvement of the family and wider community in efforts to promote health.
The values that underlie health promoting schools are in keeping with the fundamental values expressed by the Scottish Parliament and support a vision that incorporates;
In the context of Burgh, these values establish the importance of creating an ethos of care, respect, participation, responsibility and fairness for all.
These values underlie the main aims of health promoting schools, which are:
Health promotion in schools is not just about encouraging children and young people to eat well and to exercise; it encompasses a much broader holistic approach. This approach is called the 'whole school approach', which includes promoting the physical, social, spiritual, mental and emotional wellbeing of all pupils and staff.
Schools in Scotland are working hard to have health promotion as an important aspect of their business.
The Schools (Health Promotion and Nutrition) (Scotland) Act 2007 commenced in January this year and places a duty on local authorities to ensure that all of their schools are health promoting environments.
One of the most important challenges for health promoting schools is to create an integrated approach while taking into account good local practice, national guidance and health promotion is also vital that the development of health promoting schools appears in local health improvement plans produced by community planners to deliver integrated services and many local authorities already have support structures and policy statements in place to help this process.
Another challenge is to recognise the good practice already going on in many schools across Scotland and to build on that progress and success. Some schools have been accredited as health promoting by their local authority or NHS board but it is important that good practice continues to be extended and improved.
Burgh have 6 HPS Action Plans that we will be working towards over the next 3 years and already we have achieved Phase 1 of the Health Promotion Accreditation Scheme!!
| Burgh Primary School is working on an action plan with six priorities. Please see below the six priorities. | |
| Priority 1 |