๐Ÿค— Mental Health 2025: AI scales, wellbeing bundles grow, and career prep takes priority.

Mental health support is evolving through AI, integrated wellbeing services, and career-focused programs, reflecting changing priorities in education and workforce readiness.


Hello ๐Ÿ‘‹

As education systems evolve, mental health support is shifting from standalone interventions to AI-driven solutions, integrated wellbeing packages, and career-focused frameworks. These developments signal a future where mental health is increasingly tied to financial and workforce readiness.

๐Ÿค– AI steps in to scale mental health support. AI-driven mental health tools like Sonar Mental Healthโ€™s chatbot are filling gaps in understaffed schools. Automation is making support more accessible, but questions remain about effectiveness and human oversight.

โš–๏ธ Wellbeing emerging as a bundled service. Institutions are integrating mental, financial, and physical health support, as seen in UniHomesโ€™ new offering and The Open Universityโ€™s partnership with AWARE NI. The shift points to a future where mental health is addressed as part of broader student wellbeing.

๐Ÿ’ฐ Mental health blends with career prep. Programs like APโ€™s student initiative and TDโ€™s financial literacy game position mental health alongside financial and career resilience. As skills and workforce readiness dominate education, mental wellbeing is increasingly viewed as a pillar of lifelong stability.

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Percentage of 15-24 year-olds who believe childhood mental health has improved or worsened over the past generation, country income group medians, 2021

A survey of 21,000 people across 21 countries found that 67% of young adults (15-24) in low and lower-middle-income countries see childhood mental health improving, while 60% in high-income nations believe it has worsened. Stronger community ties, economic movement, and expanding mental health support may drive optimism in lower-income groups, while the research suggests greater social isolation and economic or political instability could contribute to declines in higher-income segments.



๐Ÿ’ช This Week's Power Moves

๐Ÿ’ป Amazon partners with Saudi Arabia and Accenture to provide training opportunities for cloud computing skills.

๐Ÿ’ก South Koreaโ€™s Ministry of Education launched an AI learning platform to provide recommended courses for K-12 students after assessments. 

๐Ÿ’ธ Canada invests $67M to support green skill development programs.


๐Ÿ’ฐ Funding

๐ŸŽ“ Campus, a US two-year college designed for Gen Z learners, raised $46M to deliver online instruction, on-demand tutoring, and personal success coaching.

๐Ÿ“ RevisionDojo, a K-12 tutoring and exam prep platform, has raised $3.4M to develop more personalized learning and teaching tools. 

๐Ÿ“– Recess, a US-based marketplace for booking children's enrichment classes and activities, raised $1.75M to expand the team and offerings across the US.

โ™ซ  ArtMaster, a Czech startup specializing in music education, secured $869K to enhance its app which provides personalized piano lessons. 

๐ŸŒ Studyportals, a Dutch platform for international education, has acquired Uni-Life, a peer-to-peer student engagement platform, to foster connections among students.


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