The Office of Coordinated School Health
(OCSH) was established by the Tennessee Department of
Education in February, 2001. The primary mission of the
office is to improve student health outcomes as well as
support the connection between good health practices,
academic achievement, and lifetime wellness. OCSH partners
with the Tennessee Department of Health - Office of School
Health. With the passage of TCA 49-1-1002 in 2000,
authorization and funding for CSH was established.
Additional funding has been provided by a grant from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Education reforms have not succeeded in
improving the performance of all students, particularly
those who do not arrive at school ready to learn.
Coordinated School Health encourages healthy lifestyles,
provides needed supports to at-risk students, and helps to
reduce the prevalence of health problems that impair
academic success.
Coordinated School Health
(CSH) is an effective system
designed to connect health (physical, emotional and social)
with education. This coordinated approach improves students'
health and their capacity to learn through the support of
families, communities and schools working together. The CSH
approach consists of eight major components. By definition,
all Coordinated School Health components work together to
improve the lives of students and their families. Although
these components are listed separately, it is their
composite that allows CSH to have significant impact. The
eight components include: health education, physical
education/physical activity, health services, nutrition
services, health promotion for staff, counseling and
psychological services, healthy school environment and
student/parent/community involvement.