In today’s fast-paced educational landscape, the importance of pupil wellbeing has never been clearer. Schools understand that helping children develop social-emotional skills, resilience, and a positive mindset is just as vital as academic learning. But one of the biggest barriers to doing this well? Teacher workload. Many schools worry that introducing wellbeing into the curriculum means yet another “add-on” for already overstretched teachers.
Fortunately, embedding wellbeing doesn’t have to be a burden. With the right approach, it can become a natural part of teaching — integrated, sustainable, and effective.
Here’s how primary schools can weave wellbeing into their curriculum without significantly increasing teacher workload.
Leverage PSHE / RSE Time
Cross-Curricular Integration
Rather than reinventing the wheel, schools can draw on existing, high-quality programmes such as Verbal Wellbeing designed to embed wellbeing effortlessly.
Using established resources reduces planning burden for teachers and ensures the content is evidence-based.
Leadership Buy-IN
Leadership must champion wellbeing as part of the school’s ethos. The Department for Education’s guidance emphasises that “an ethos and environment that promotes respect” is one of the key principles of a whole-school mental health approach.
Teacher Wellbeing as a Priority
To support a culture of wellbeing, schools must also care for their staff. Model practices such as scheduled reflection time, “mindful minutes” in staff meetings, or simple rituals that encourage connection.
Student Voice
Give pupils a say in how wellbeing is practiced — through student councils, feedback sessions, or class discussions. This helps ensure the wellbeing offer is relevant and meaningful to them.
Check-ins and Check-outs
Start or end lessons with 1–2 minute check-ins: how are you feeling today? What did you enjoy? What worried you? These quick routines don’t take long but give teachers valuable insight into students’ emotional states.
Reflective Questions
Build simple reflective questions into lessons (“What made this tricky? How did you manage?”). This encourages metacognition, emotional awareness, and self-regulation — all pillars of wellbeing.
Strength-Based Feedback
Offer praise not just for “getting the right answer,” but for persistence, effort, kindness, and collaboration. This frames the classroom around growth and character, not just content mastery.
Rather than separate interventions, incorporate wellbeing into routines and systems schools already use.
Instead of dedicating extra slots for mental health check-ins, piggyback on pastoral monitoring. For example, during parent–teacher meetings or safeguarding reviews, include wellbeing conversation prompts.
At Verbal Wellbeing, we understand the challenge schools face: wanting to build strong wellbeing provision without overloading teachers. That’s why our programme is:
Integrated
Designed to fit seamlessly into daily class routines and existing curricular structures.
Evidence-informed
Based on what works in whole-school approaches, SEL, and wellbeing frameworks.
Low burden
We provide ready-to-use resources, vocabulary tools, and conversation structures — so you don’t have to create everything from scratch.
Scalable and sustainable
Modular and flexible, so schools can start small and grow.
Want to see how Verbal Wellbeing could work in your school without adding to teachers’ workloads? We’d love to offer you a free trial of our programme.
Join other primary schools who are embedding robust wellbeing practices — in a way that feels natural, meaningful, and sustainable.
Embedding wellbeing into a primary school’s curriculum doesn’t have to mean more work for teachers. By being strategic — using existing curriculum structures, adopting ready-made resources, and building a culture of wellbeing — schools can make wellbeing part of how learning happens, not something extra.
For VerbalWellbeing, this approach aligns perfectly with our mission: empowering schools to create environments where both children and adults can thrive. With thoughtful integration, wellbeing becomes woven into the fabric of daily school life — enriching learning and nurturing emotional resilience — all without adding unnecessary burden.
If you still need more information we’re here to help.
Contact us by phone or email. Alternatively you can use our customer enquiry form and one of our friendly staff will be in touch.