“…Among the key strategies recommended by the World Bank for the inclusive education sector planning, we can mention -the use of the twin-track approach‖ (Mcclain-Nhlapo, 2020, p.15), whose first step refers to -ensuring that mainstream education programmes are designed for all learners‖ (p.16) -a point of view relevant not only during and after the pandemic, but on a permanent basis; Beyond age particularities, teenagers coming from economically disadvantaged groups present some needs and specific psycho-social characteristics, which manifest themselves more subtle and powerfully than in their peers and which have been intensified during the pandemic period, coming to the surface in the post- supporting students and parents in overcoming their prejudices about seeking and using counselling services; -forming/encouraging help-seeking behavior‖ (Brown et al, 2020, p. 23); guiding students towards acquiring/consolidating a so-called -sense of hope‖ (Brown et al, 2020) to give them energy and direction for their future actions; improving communication with and counselling of the students' families (Baten et al, 2022;Brown et al, 2020;Vockel & Ștefănescu, 2020); combining pre-pandemic approaches with newer, online approaches (lectures with parents, studies to analyze the needs of parents, online counsellors/meetings for parents and home visits); diversifying techniques by attracting -artistic media as an additional resource‖ (Loscalzo, 2022, 8) and making greater use of art therapies (drawing, sand therapy, theatre, music therapy -STAMP, 2018 -a very interesting and creative guide to achieving social inclusion for disadvantaged students using art techniques); combining face-to-face and digital techniques (Let & Brown, 2020): (individual counselling (online/face-to-face), form filling (online), interview (online, face-toface, phone), group counseling (online/face-to-face), peer counselling, vocational guidance, preventive counselling, and social assistance. Hence, the approaches will be ones which could lead in the medium and long term to the maintenance/recovery/initiation of well-being (Loscalzo, 2022;Bell et al, 2021) of the students from disadvantaged backgrounds. The onset of the pandemic required counselling programmes to support the continuation of social life and educational activity in a completely new context, which put humanity on high alert, with severe measures, in a format that neither educational institutions nor educational services were prepared to address -the hybrid/online format.…”