
Disengagement rarely happens overnight.
A pupil does not suddenly stop caring. More often, disengagement builds slowly through repeated experiences of failure, frustration, conflict or feeling misunderstood.
By the time a pupil begins refusing work, avoiding lessons or disrupting learning, the deeper issue may have been developing for months or even years.
This is where mentoring becomes powerful.
Mentoring helps pupils reconnect with education by first reconnecting them with themselves. It creates space for young people to reflect on their choices, understand their emotions and identify what is holding them back.
For some pupils, the barrier may be low confidence. For others, it may be negative peer influence, home pressures, poor routines, anxiety, trauma, anger or a belief that school is no longer for them.
A mentor helps the pupil break these barriers down into manageable steps.
Instead of simply saying, “You need to behave better,” mentoring asks: What is making school difficult for you? What do you want your future to look like? What choices are helping or harming that future? What support do you need to move forward?
This approach gives pupils ownership. They are not being spoken at. They are being worked with.
Effective mentoring can support pupils to rebuild trust with adults, develop emotional regulation strategies, set personal and academic goals, improve communication, make better decisions and recognise their own potential.
The key word is re-engagement.
Mentoring does not force pupils back into learning through pressure. It helps them understand why learning matters and how it connects to their future.
When pupils feel seen, supported and challenged, they are more likely to take responsibility for their progress.
Education becomes less of a punishment and more of a pathway.
Bouncing Statistics works with schools to help pupils re-engage, rebuild and refocus through structured mentoring support.