Resilient Futures

Coaching and Mentoring for Young People

We recognise the growing importance of improving mental health for young people and developing their resilience and wellbeing through coaching, mentoring, and therapeutic interventions.

Our services were born out of the need to support young people struggling with their mental health.

What is it

We deliver professional mentoring and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) to young people. Our mentor’s support:

  • Primary, secondary and post-16 students.

  • Care leavers.

  • Young people who are not in education, employment, or training (NEET), or at risk of becoming NEET.

Our services are available across England, and we currently provide this service in 16 London boroughs, Gloucestershire and Norfolk. Support can be face-to-face or online, through one-to-one sessions or group activities. We tailor our support to each young person’s needs.

Our wellbeing and resilience mentoring has two tiers:

  • Tier one – Mentoring with qualified mentors.
  • Tier two – Cognitive Behavioural Mentoring (CBM).

Starting with mentoring, we offer CBM if a young person needs more support. We adapt how we deliver our services to suit young people.

A proven path to stronger mental health and brighter futures

An independent external evaluation conducted by University of Northampton Institute for Social Innovation and Impact January 2024 found that:

Support through CBM has a substantial positive impact on the mental health of people. The ability to have discussions about mental health with mentors and other staff played a crucial role in the impact for people on the programme.

The results showed an improvement in people’s mental health and wellbeing over the course of the programme.

It is examples like these that force us to act in support of young people, to build their resilience to improve their futures.

How Resilient Futures has helped young people succeed

Did you know?

1 in 3 mental health problems in adulthood are directly connected to an adverse childhood experience (ACE) Kessler, R. (2010) 'Childhood adversities and adult psychopathology in the WHO World Mental Health Surveys' British Journal of Psychiatry 197(5): 378-385
1 in 6 Children aged 5 to 16 were identified as having a probable mental health problem in July 2020 NHS digital survey 2021: 'Mental Health of Children and Young People in England 2021.

What the people we have supported say about us

Contact us today

For more information on how we can provide programmes to support the young people in your area complete the contact form below.

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Explore Our Additional Services

Digital Targeted Information, Advice and Guidance​

Supporting NEET young people through targeted interventions to safeguard the most at risk from slipping through the cracks.