We Can Prevent Good Teachers From Leaving the Classroom and It Starts With Respect

1. Respect our time.

Many of us have kids of our own; we’d like to spend our evenings with them instead of grading the papers we couldn’t grade during our “planning” periods because we had to watch someone else’s class last minute. Then, are we paid for those hours? Of course not. It hurts to see employees in other jobs being paid for working overtime when it’s expected teachers should often work for free.

2. Respect our qualifications.

A Bachelor’s degree is no easy (or cheap) feat. Many of us have a Master’s degree. We shouldn’t have to work a second (or third!) job to make ends meet and give up our holidays and vacations that we so desperately need in this line of work. Respect the value we bring to our students and all the preparation that went into it.

3. Respect our health.

When we do more than what our job description entails (which we do, every day), don’t keep pushing us to do more. At some point, we are forced to place boundaries around our physical and mental health—and then we’re often seen as the bad guy for implementing them.

4. Respect our methods.

We understand that we have programs that need to be followed and there is a certain way to do things—but the micromanaging is a bit ridiculous. We spend so much time detailing lesson plans, we don’t have as much to actually use them. We spend so much time “documenting” every move that we forget the point behind all of it. I know in my heart that you’d be completely amazed at what teachers could do with more freedom and more trust in THEIR methods.

What if we shifted how we viewed these things?! What if we listened to the ones really struggling—the teachers? Only then will you understand what changes need to be made. Most of the changes aren’t very groundbreaking—imagine a world where there are enough substitute teachers and school supplies. Imagine a world where teachers have the time to pour into each of their students because many tedious (often useless) tasks have been taken off their plates. Imagine an environment where everything that benefited the teacher then positively affected the students—who should be our number one concern in all of this. When you listen to the teachers, you are listening to the students. When you respect a teacher, it has this amazing snowball effect; if you would just listen to even SOME of our pleas, then we could meet MORE of these children’s needs. Imagine an environment where most teachers weren’t experiencing burnout; a world where teachers didn’t have a reason to go on strike or fight for their rights that are constantly taken away. Just imagine.

Reference: https://www.boredteachers.com/post/prevent-good-teachers-from-leaving-classroom-respect?fbclid=IwAR00VIJHTwLS4j0-6mdoOQqYimDr12O31Nt-BMLftdxbtAyz6ckuezrn03c

Stop Taking Grading Home: 8 Tips to Take Your Life Back

Every teacher knows the routine: stacks and stacks of papers go into the bag. The bag goes home, gets slung on the counter. It taunts you all afternoon and into the evening until you’re grading papers while falling asleep to the sounds of the Jeopardy music. The truth is, that after engaging with students all day and very little downtime for grading and planning, taking work home often seems like a necessary evil. However, there are some things you can do to, literally, lighten your load as you head home.

1. Not All Assignments Need Grading.

Stick with me, here. I am not suggesting busy work or work for the sake of work. However, there is such thing as good old fashioned practice. Some activities lend themselves to evaluation through class discussion or are simply a step in the larger learning process. Be okay with letting those things slip past the grade book.

2. Active Monitoring Saves Lives

This may be a touch dramatic but it will save your sanity! As your students are working, you can roam the room to assess their learning. You can input a grade for participation or effort. If you are monitoring their progress in the classroom in real-time, you do not have to grade as much later.

3. Be A Good Steward of Your Planning Period

This is definitely the hardest one. Once the kids are gone for that precious planning time, it’s tempting to want to socialize with your peers, eat in silence or ya know, pee. And while these things are all necessary and important, be sure to carve out some time for actual work between decompressing and other obligations (#meetings). Set a timer for 15 minutes and see how much grading you can do before hitting the break room.

4. Use Your Resources

By now, most school systems pay for platforms that will host and grade your assignments. Things like SchoolNet or Canvas can be intimidating but once you get the hang of the system, you can input your assignments. This is great because it gives students instant feedback, saves paper and often gives you a breakdown of performance by standard and/or question.

5. Work Smarter, Not Harder

Being an innovative teacher is admirable but when the work is piling up, it’s okay to take a reprieve and revert to what you know works. There’s no need to spend hours planning to reinvent the wheel when there is a free or cheap resource available to you online (TpT here I come!). Beg, borrow and steal. Then when you’ve got some free time and some great ideas, return the favor–ya know, like in July.

6. Set Boundaries

Ultimately, there will simply be times when you can’t get it all done within the school day/week. If you have to take work home, be reasonable. Treat yourself to a Sunday afternoon at a coffee shop while you grade papers but also know that you are a whole person with a real life and almost everything can wait until Monday. You will be a better teacher with rest and time to relax.

7. Touch Everything Once

Whether it’s a field trip form that needs to be submitted, worksheets that need grading or something that needs to be recycled–handle it the first time you pick it up. The endless shuffling of papers leads to lost items and forgotten tasks. That leads to overwhelm which ultimately puts you behind. The temptation is to get sidetracked or avoid less than savory tasks but “eat the frog”, as they say, and deal with things right away so they do not pile up on your desk–or in your take-home bag.

8. Use the Summer

There is something to be said for using a few hours of your summer break here and there to organize your classroom or plan well in advance to help streamline the school year. Even an hour or two a week can make a huge impact on how the school year goes and ultimately pay dividends by freeing up your evenings.

Reference:https://www.boredteachers.com/post/tips-for-taking-less-work-home?fbclid=IwAR3vPybXjtfT85rD0hkG4Ua-gISTETlY1uEHtP9e4Z2N4QjtOcEj2Yh15gM

Teacher Moves That Cultivate Learner Agency

Helping students become independent, questioning thinkers begins with stepping back and guiding them to take the lead in their learning.

EMBRACE THE QUIET MOMENTS

In an era of learning acceleration and learning loss, it can be hard to grant ourselves permission to slow down. But if we’re looking to cultivate learner agency, we must consider the negative effects of accelerating learning—of always asking our students to be “on” in our classrooms. We must ask ourselves: Where does the urgency come from, and how might it be disenfranchising some of my students?

That sense of urgency can actually cause us to diminish learner agency. I’ve certainly been there. When I’m feeling that sense of urgency, I can’t help but intervene prematurely, act on behalf of my students, and bear the majority of the cognitive load. But when I extend my wait time and embrace quiet moments that allow students to have opportunities to think on their own, my time investment pays off in large dividends, providing me with independent learners who find they have lots of tools to overcome obstacles on their own.

When we embrace these quiet moments, we bear witness to student process, which is perhaps the most personalized part of learning in our classrooms.

PRAISE STUDENTS’ JOURNEYS

By stepping back and supporting our students while they productively struggle, we can learn a great deal about their learning habits, praising and coaching their efforts along the way.

Praising students’ journeys is a great place to start. But we must be specific in our positive feedback. We must name what our students are doing well in order to help them identify it for themselves. Otherwise, our classrooms become places full of empty compliments.

  • “I can tell you’re seeking patterns,” I said to a student recently. “That is something good mathematicians do. You may not always find the patterns, but looking for them is a great idea.”
  • “I know research can be frustrating and confusing,” I say to validate my students’ feelings when they engage in the research process. “Let’s talk about some ways to work through those feelings.”

CULTIVATE A SENSE OF MASTERY

Daniel Pink, author of Drive, describes mastery not as unlocked achievements or boxes checked on a report card, but instead as a “desire to get better at something that matters.” In schools, this means cultivating awareness of how effort is connected to tangible progress.

After all, it makes intuitive sense: If we can see that the effort we’re putting into a task is helping us grow, we’re more likely to replicate those behaviors and persist through challenges. But it’s easier said than done.

ALLOW FOR LEARNER-DRIVEN EVALUATION

In order for students to evaluate their own work, they need to have the language to do so. Otherwise, students may nondescriptively refer to their work as “good” or “bad.” This means that educators must create structures, such as learner-friendly rubrics, that can provide them the language necessary to self-evaluate.

These learner-friendly rubrics should contain standards-based, student-friendly learning objectives, such as I can calculate the area and perimeter of rectangles. After evaluating their work on the rubrics, I recommend following up with a structured reflection, in which students state strengths, challenges, and action steps in their own words, as I detail in Reclaiming Personalized Learning: A Pedagogy for Restoring Equity and Humanity in Our Classrooms.

When first starting learner-driven evaluation, learners will need a lot of support. You may want to model how to reflect, even letting them borrow some of your language until they’re ready to do it on their own.

ASK QUESTIONS MORE OFTEN THAN YOU PROVIDE CORRECTIVE FEEDBACK

While providing specific and actionable feedback is helpful for productive learning, asking thoughtful questions can help students give themselves feedback, allowing them to tap into their own agency and initiate improvements to their work on their own.

Good questions will have multiple answers; they won’t lead students, either. Consider asking questions like “Why did you choose to…?” or “Is there a more efficient way to…?” This will force students to think about their thinking, adding a layer of agentive criticality to conversations.

When students are stuck, you may feel inclined to intervene directly in order to get them over their obstacles. But we must remember that if we, the teachers, are acting on behalf of students to help them overcome challenges, we may be doing more to diminish agency than we are cultivating it. In this instance, I like to ask students, “What tools do you have to help you get unstuck?”

TELL STUDENTS YOU TRUST THEM

This sounds simple, but it’s really powerful. By telling students that you trust them, you hand over responsibility to them, and you let them know that no matter what happens—even if they make a mistake—it’s all going to be OK.

But you have to walk the talk. It’s not enough to only tell students that you trust them. You have to show them, too, by embracing the aforementioned teacher moves that cultivate learner agency.

Reference: https://www.edutopia.org/article/teacher-moves-cultivate-learner-agency?fbclid=IwAR0ole9Un-nq68da-fmyYr7T3UPgtptnwBOs8y6sHj4knVwBOC7eDxl2ByE

Dear Teacher, Don’t Set Yourself on Fire to Keep Others Warm

We can’t be held to normal standards right now because life is not normal.

Somehow, people seem to forget that we are still in a global crisis. Sure, we’ve adapted, we’ve persevered, we’ve come to accept that constant uncertainty is our new “normal.” But we’re in a state of dysregulation. We are not at our best, and our students are not at their best. We have to accept and expect imperfection instead of holding ourselves to (and being held to) impossibly high standards, especially when the world is on fire.

You do not need to give up your mental health to support the mental health of the people around you.

Teachers are empathetic, compassionate listeners and advice-givers, and as natural caretakers, we’re taking on a lot of other people’s emotions right now. Our students, of course, come to us when they need help, as do our friends, coworkers, and family members. But so many of us are starting to ask ourselves: How much can I give? How much warmth can I spread if I’m not being fueled?

You deserve a break.

Rest is not something that needs to be earned. You don’t need to finish grading those tests or planning your weekly lessons in order to “qualify” for a break. You deserve rest. Because everyone deserves rest. If you need a physical and mental break, TAKE IT. Take the personal day, don’t grade that assignment, be okay with a lesson plan from Google. Giving yourself the space and time to breathe will not prevent your students from learning and growing.

Your stress affects your students.

Are we good at hiding A LOT of the negative, overwhelming, anxiety-inducing emotions we feel on a daily basis? Of course. We all know that many aspects of teaching are a complete facade. But if you’re not at your mental and emotional best, your kids will feel it and be impacted by it. Students–no matter how old they are–are experiencing childhood in a way that we cannot fully comprehend, and we’re not doing them any favors by pushing ourselves to our breaking points.

Administrators cannot keep asking teachers for MORE.

We. Can’t. Do. It. I mean, we can, but for how long? How long can we keep this fire blazing to spread warmth to everyone and everything around us? And once we’re completely burned out, how many people will follow in our path?

We’ve been told to be the Giving Tree, to sacrifice everything we have to make others happy, to push through our own exhaustion to provide energy for other people, to ignore our own needs so that others’ needs can be met.

We all know that everything we do, we do it for the kids. And by all means, keep doing it for the kids. Because in some ways, that act is what fuels us to keep going – it ignites our passion as educators. So sure, maybe we’re all on fire right now, in one way or another. But we absolutely cannot continue to stoke our flames for the sole benefit of the people around us.

Because when you set yourself on fire for other people, there’s only so long you can keep them warm before you fizzle out, and everyone – including you – is cold.

Reference: https://www.boredteachers.com/post/dont-set-yourself-on-fire?fbclid=IwAR1Kq8f3wFf5lpf9FpfGJ_q3uCnxuCloI9WyHP3EP45W0_zj6pQIB1t8p2U

10 Things Every Teacher Needs to Hear Right Now

1. There would be no other professions without you.

If there’s one thing I want you to remember every day, it’s this. Every profession is made possible by teachers paving the way. Any time your job feels “worthless,” remember that it’s literally THE JOB that creates all other jobs…and that’s what makes it special.

2. The compliments your students give you (though rare) are 100% true…

And there are even more kids who will never admit that they just love you! The student that told you they looked forward to your class? They weren’t just saying it to get the passing grade; they really meant it. When someone compliments you, take it and use it to drown out all the negative.

3. Everyone has bad days, even teachers.

It can feel like you’re not “allowed” to have bad days because it bubbles over onto your students and causes them to get down, too. It can feel like you’re a failure when you have an “off” day simply because you have so many little eyes watching you. You’re only human, though, and no one is “great” all the time. Pandemic teaching is exhausting and it’s okay to have hard days.

4. You truly shouldn’t be asked to do all that you’re doing this year (or any year for that matter).

During this crazy time of distance/virtual/online/in-person/hybrid learning, you’re literally completing 564332 tasks under 2784472 job titles every. single. day. You’re doing the near-impossible and you’re just EXPECTED to know how to do ALL OF IT. Let that sink in for a moment. And then let go of the guilt for not being able to do it all. No one could.

5. “You’re not a bad teacher, those kids are just bad.”

Okay, they’re not really bad kids; we all know that. But the popular meme has truth to it. December just brings out the worst in kids. They want to see Santa more than they want to see another vocabulary word or math problem. It’s just plain science. By December, kids need a break as much as the teachers. We all just need a break from each other. It’s not you.

6. At the end of the day, it’s a job.

Teaching is a calling. You mean more to your students than you know. Teaching becomes a part of who you are as a person after years of being a teacher. However, you have a life outside of teaching; it’s okay to ENJOY that life. Teaching is WORK. While it changes you, it shouldn’t become ALL of you. You’re doing yourself a favor by separating your job and your LIFE.

7. Take care of yourself.

Go to the bathroom. Take a lunch break. Take a sick day. Don’t let anyone BULLY you into denying yourself basic human rights just because it seems to inconvenience someone else.

If someone has to take your class because you’re out sick, that isn’t your fault. Schools should not be so understaffed that you can’t take a sick day (or mental health day) when needed. You should be able to eat lunch, and take your time. You shouldn’t have to TRAIN YOUR BLADDER to wait HOURS. Just no. Providing more teacher support starts with normalizing basic care.

8. No one is prepared right now.

Even the Pinterest teachers weren’t pinning ideas like “How to Thrive in a Pandemic” or “Covid-Safe Chic Classrooms” in 2019. NO ONE IS PREPARED for 2020 teaching. If they act prepared, they’re lying; it’s just not possible. We’re all taking it day-by-day and pretending like we have any clue what we’re doing in the 2020-2021 school year in hopes that the kids don’t realize just how LOST we really are. I’m starting to think that this school year should count as TWO of my twenty-five years until retirement.

9. They are learning.

The students are learning. Maybe they’re failing some things and missing some assignments, but they’re learning how to be resilient in the face of uncertainty. They’re learning more about technology than ever, and they’re learning how to be extremely self-sufficient. They’re LEARNING, which should always, always be the end goal, anyway.

10. Thank you.

I know you don’t hear it enough, so I’ll tell you again: thank you.

Thank you for all that you do. Thank you for showing up every day, in the middle of chaos, in the middle of a pandemic, in the midst of economic crisis and emotional struggle and your own personal issues. Thank you for providing kids with one constant this school year, even when you may have none. Not only would there be no professions without teachers, but there’d also be a lot less wisdom and fulfillment in the world without education—so thank you.

Every teacher needs to feel supported, appreciated and seen. If you aren’t a teacher, pass this on to the teachers in your life. It just might make their day a little brighter to know someone cares.

Reference: https://www.boredteachers.com/post/teacher-needs-to-hear