- Know your rights
- It’s not always easy to talk
- Help to make your voice heard
- Understanding changes to your exams in 2022
- Helping children get the support they need in school
- Support for learning: Improving planning
- Could technology support your learning?
- Being excluded from school: what you need to know
- Pupil Voice: The difference support can make to a Young Carer
- Accessible digital tools and technology to help support your learning
- Advice if you’re being bullied online
- 5 reasons why the Inclusion Ambassadors have enjoyed being back at school this term.
- Let’s be clear about what bullying is…..
- Vaccination information for 12-15 year olds
- The Inclusion Ambassadors Vision Statement
- Pupil voice: talking about bullying
- The Inclusion Ambassadors talk about returning to school
- The Inclusion Ambassadors talk about support
- *Updated for 2022: Returning to school during coronavirus – what to expect
- Pupil Voice: Inclusion Ambassadors animation – ‘Accept me for who I am’
- Pupil voice: life at school with autism
- Need extra support at school?
- Pupil voice: Molly shares her thoughts about her dyslexia
- You are more than a condition
- Racism and racist bullying
- Pupil Voice: Scottish Youth Parliament’s Education Convener on learning in lockdown and the best way forward
- *Updated for 2022: Feeling anxious about returning to school
- Awaiting the outcome of an appeal decision and feeling anxious?
- Extra support with education: what’s important to pupils in Scotland? The ASL Review
- Pupil Voice: The Cost of Learning in Lockdown
- Getting support after lockdown
- Pupil voice: moving school after coronavirus
- Pupil Voice: an autistic teenager’s diary of life in lockdown
- #AccessibleHomeLearning
- Pupil Voice: coronavirus school closures – coping when I miss my pals
- Pupil voice: How I feel about coronavirus home learning…
- Pupil Voice: My experience of living with ADHD
- Pupil Voice: I am visually impaired and this is what helps me feel supported at school
- #ASLDebunked
- #ASLDebunked
- Pupil Voice: What schools can do to support me as a young carer
- Pupil voice: young carers
- Your right to Mediation: get help to find a solution that works for everyone
- Young Carers’ learning and wellbeing
- What young people think about rights
- If you’re being bullied, it can be difficult to know what to do or where to turn
- Pupil voice: leaving primary school
- Pupil voice: 4 things that help all children to feel included at school
- Pupil voice: I’m at risk of exclusion. This is how the Inclusion Unit helped me.
- Pupil Voice: the importance of having a safe space at school
- Pupil Voice: Support at school for pupils who have been made homeless
- Pupil voice: drugs, alcohol and school – what are the biggest issues facing young people?
- Pupil voice: “Don’t fight your stammer, embrace it”
- Does it feel like how much money your family has affects your friendships?
- Living with autism – Five things that help
- Want to hear more from young people about pupil participation?
- Learning disability? Make friends and campaign for change
- Tips on starting conversations at school when you feel awkward and shy
- Reaching out: young people’s advice on relationships
- Sorting out disagreements with the school
- Being bullied?
- Pupil voice: dyslexia and changing high school in Scotland
- Your human rights: the UN Convention on the rights of the child
- Pupil voice: How poverty affects young people
- Pupil voice: what your teacher can do to support you if you have dyslexia
- Dyslexia – a different way of learning
- I’m finding it hard to concentrate at school
- Pupil voice: why it’s important to listen to care-experienced young people
- Supporting LGBT young people at school
- Autism and friendship – advice from a young person
- Pupil Voice: how to spot fake news – Young Media Voices project
- Childline give the lowdown on options for life after school
- Pupil Voice: pupil participation at my school means “every single pupil has a voice”
- Pupil Voice: young refugees talk about their education in Scotland
- Pupil participation at school matters – here are 3 reasons why
- #ASLDebunked
- Film of the month
- My Rights
- Pupil voice: my advice for dealing with school problems
- Does worrying about how you look hold you back at school? Let’s get real…
- Pupil voice: my advice if you’re feeling down about school
- Pupil Voice: respecting Children’s Rights at our School
- If you get support at school, you can have a say in planning what’s right for you
- Pupil voice: LGBT+ young person speaks about bullying and mental health
- Young Ambassadors for Inclusion – Ask us, hear us, include us
- Pupils have more rights than ever before….
- Pupil Voice: what school advice would you like?
- Is 2018 the year you’ll leave school?
- BSL – pupils at St Rochs hearing impairment unit share their advice
- Speaking up about mental health issues
- Sorting out issues – how I used my right to ask for an assessment
- How I got the chance to use my voice at school
- Speaking up at the pupil council about what matters to us
- Pupil from the Royal Blind School shares his top tip
- Pupil Voice: “My dyslexia enables me to be creative”
- Get Help
- Domestic abuse – why talking helps
- Who Cares? Scotland can help you get your views heard
- One pupil’s advice if you’re being bullied
- Pupil Voice: What helps young people feel included in school?
- Pupil Voice: Young Ambassadors for Inclusion
- What do YOU think of Reach….?
- Pupil Voice: Young people from Scotland call for more say in how schools are run
- “I’m Jenny…. and this is MY autism”
- Pupil Voice: – Lyla “If I wasn’t dyslexic I wouldn’t be me, I am what you see”
- BSL: Pupil participation helps you do well at school
- If you need help at school for any reason….
- Let’s keep talking about mental health
- Pupil voice: Young carers feeling ok
- Pupil voice: how my teacher supported me the day I went into care
- A film about being in foster care
- Young people in foster care have their say “Give me a chance”
- Just found out you’ve got dyslexia? Get advice from young people who know how you’re feeling….
- Pupil Voice: ‘Planning our learning: a guide to including us’
- Getting it right for all pupils – What GIRFEC means in Scottish Schools
- An important time for young people’s rights
- Making friends as a disabled young adult
- Advice and support if you’re homeschooled
- Pupils with learning disabilities have a say about being included at school
- Care-experienced? You have the right to extra support in school if you need it
- It’s okay not to be okay. But it’s also okay to ask for help.
- Resources for gifted pupils
- My Say
- Take care
- 5 tips if you’re feeling down, by someone whose been through it
- Tips for surviving exams
- “It’s like I am carrying a giant invisible secret”
- Feel rubbish about school? You’re not alone
- If you’re being bullied, it can be difficult to know what to do or where to turn
- Reaching out: Advice from young people about changing schools
- Reaching out: Advice from young people
- Reaching out: Advice from care experienced young people
- Reaching out: Advice from a young person who’s been bullied
- Reaching out: Advice from young people about having your say
- Reaching out – Advice from young people out of school for different reasons
- Reaching out: Advice from a young person who’s been through it
- Reaching out: advice from young people who know how you feel
- This is for you if you’re care experienced
- Your Say: How young people feel about moving schools
- If you’ve missed school because of feeling low or anxious
- Get advice if you’ve got dyslexia
- Feeling judged for having dyslexia
- Your Say: Young people’s feelings about moving school
- Who can I talk to?
- Being bullied? Childline can help
- Finding the right person to talk to isn't always easy
- Reaching out: Advice from school leavers
- Your say: How young people feel about leaving school
- Getting extra support at your new school
- Tips from Childline to help you with going to school
- Care experienced pupils talk about school
- Who can help me to have my say? Advocacy workers….
- Childline films on coping with bullying
- Pupil voice: What school’s like when you’ve got housing issues
- Advice if you’ve got a disability
- My voice: living with sight loss
- What young people say about bullying
- A film about being bullied for having problems reading
- Pupil voice: befriending pupils with autism
- How anxiety affects you at school
- Returning to school – who can support me?
- Your right to ask the school to find out if you need extra support
- What do I do if I want to use my rights?
- Your right to have a say in plans made about your support at school
- Teenagers in foster care are being moved too many times
- Ten top tips for exams
- I want to be listened to
- Pupil Voice: Starting at high school is a big change, especially when your primary school only has 23 pupils
- Advocacy: help to use your rights and have your say at school
- Children and Young People living with arthritis
- Why it’s good to go to meetings
- Looking for a counsellor?
- Pupil voice: eczema really affects me at school because I find myself distracted
- Advice we wish we’d known when we left school
- Film by young people about domestic abuse
- Pupil voice: Chantelle, a young Gypsy Traveller
- How My Rights, My Say can help you use your rights at school
- Pupil voice: support for young people with epilepsy
- When people at home are getting you down…..
- How it feels to have a long term health condition
- Struggling with eating issues?
- Feeling low or hopeless?
- When someone dies
- Advice on self harm
- How to get through your exams
- Chatting to deaf friends at school? Just talk normally…
- What’s it like to be a young refugee in the UK?
- What’s it like for pupils if someone in their family is in prison?
- Childline is there for you. Online, on the phone, anytime
- Not in school because you’re ill?
- Website for young Travellers
- Leaving school, leaving care
- How autism freed me to be myself
- Feeling included at school when you have a learning disability: a campaign against bullying
- Making new friends can be hard – here’s a tip
- Worried about making friends
- A rap about the stigma of being in care
- Why are young people in care?
- “It’s not our fault we’re in care”
- Homophobia at school – being bullied about your sexual orientation
- When English isn’t your first language, ESOL classes can help
- Deaf vlogger shares life lessons
- My life as a young carer
- A film about getting ready to leave school
- Moving schools? Some advice from young people
- Little comments hurt too
- Being bullied? Not sure what to do?
- Coronavirus changes: I still don’t know which school I’m going to
- Stressed about exams?
- Surviving exam day
- Making friends at my new school
- For a giggle: Mexican Wave in an Exam Hall
- Our accessibility tools
- #BitesizeAdvice
- Back at school: feeling safe and supported
- Reasons why you might not be in school
- Children’s Parliament
- The Scottish Youth Parliament – using your voice to make Scotland even better to grow up in
- Raise your voice, know your rights
- Being there for your friends
- I’m thinking about running away
- Can’t sleep? 4 things that could help
- Money worries? Three things that might help your family with the cost of the school day
- Using your screentime positively: Mind Yer Time
- Coping with your parents splitting up
- Your right to additional support for learning
- 5 ways your secondary school might be different from primary school
- Finding it hard to cope with returning to school after lockdown?
- Do I need to wear a face mask at school in Scotland?
- I’m still at home after coronavirus school closures
- Your right to be heard: Three ways to get help fixing disagreements with the school
- When somebody has died…..
- 7 tips from teachers for pupils still home learning during coronavirus
- Back at school: Understand what this means for you, your learning and support.
- Organisations in Scotland that can help if you’re leaving school this year.
- Why it’s a good idea to let your college or uni know you’re disabled
- Info relating to coronavirus
- Feeling anxious about coronavirus?
- My Rights, My Say – help for 12-15 year olds to speak up about support for learning
- I’m still learning at home during coronavirus
- Protecting children’s rights during and after coronavirus
- We’re sharing ideas for accessible home learning on twitter
- Why tell someone?
- My world of work
- **Updated for 2022: Education and support during coronavirus
- Worried about your SQA grades?
- Young Minds – tips on looking after yourself
- Alcohol issues affecting you at school?
- 5 ways schools support pupils with housing problems
- Disabled and leaving school?
- Information your school might pass on when you leave