黑料传送门

Skip to content Skip to Chat

9 Stress Management Strategies Every Teacher Needs to Know

Dec 1, 2017

by聽Chris Mumford, M.A. Science Education

As a teacher, you know that stress is inevitable. Papers will stack up, students will act out, and lessons will need to be planned.聽

But while stress is inevitable, how you respond to it聽can spell the difference between a long, rewarding career, and one cut short by burn-out.聽

New research into stress has given rise聽to聽some surprising (and even counter-intuitive) strategies to better deal with it. Try these out, and be sure to let us know what works best for you in the comments!

1. Breathe (properly)聽

The classroom can cause sensory overload. Before you know it, your heart rate starts to climb, you break out into a sweat, and your mind races. In these situations, the most effective first step you can take is to breathe deeply. Ok, so it鈥檚 not exactly the newest technique, and it sounds like it might be too simple, right? The聽, and they know a thing or two about stress. SEALs are trained in the 鈥4 x 4 breathing鈥 technique, which helps them lower their physical stress response and regain control. When you鈥檙e experiencing intense levels of stress, breathe in deeply (put your hands on your stomach and feel it expand out), for four seconds, then exhale evenly for four seconds. Keep this up for 2-3 minutes for maximum effect.聽

2. Embrace the stress

To modify Henry Ford鈥檚 famous phrase: whether you think stress is positive, or you think it鈥檚 negative, you鈥檙e right. According to health psychologist Kelly McGonigal,聽will actually cause your body to respond to it differently and prevent long-lasting physical damage. By contrast, those who express negative attitudes toward stress face a range of negative health outcomes similar to those caused by smoking. So how do you change your outlook on stress? McGonigal suggests reframing changes in heart rate, and other stress-induced physical symptoms, with phrases like, 鈥淭his is my body helping me rise to this challenge.鈥

3. Be imperfect

Over the course of a decades-long career in which she has interviewed thousands of people as an academic researcher, Bren茅 Brown聽that those who are overly stressed and unhappy often share the same trait: they believe that they need to be someone better than who they currently are. As a result, the current cohort of working adults is the most overweight, addicted, and indebted in history. Teachers are often prone to perfectionism and its ill effects: they often feel that they aren鈥檛 doing enough, or that their mistakes are magnified because of the importance of their job. If you find yourself feeling this way, fight back. The fact is, you鈥檙e already 鈥渆nough鈥 and you deserve love and credit. Don鈥檛 forget that.聽聽

4. Practice emotional first aid

Do you beat yourself up when you experience failure or make a mistake? Psychologist聽it would be like getting a cut and finding ways to make the wound worse. We don鈥檛 do that when we experience physical pain, so why do we ruminate on mistakes and deepen the wound when the pain is emotional? If you find yourself taking your classroom work home with you, Winch advises finding ways to break the negative patterns of thought. A two-minute distraction is sometimes all that is needed to avoid digging yourself into an emotional rut.聽聽

5. Be grateful

This isn鈥檛 about delusion, or forcing yourself to be grateful for things that are clearly negative, but rather a determination to see the opportunity present in each moment to move in a new direction. Benedictine monk David Steindl-Rast, in his聽offers a simple formula: 鈥淪top, look, go.鈥 We have to stop, quiet our minds, and create 鈥渟top signs鈥濃攍ittle reminders of things that we should be grateful for every day. By 鈥渓ook,鈥 he means open all of your senses and enjoy life simply. 鈥淕o鈥 means moving forward and taking advantage of what life offers you moment by moment.

6. Limit 鈥済rass is greener鈥 thinking聽

In the words of Robert Fulghum, author of 鈥,鈥 鈥淭he grass is greenest where it is watered.鈥 It鈥檚 not always what you want to hear when you鈥檙e having a tough day, but the reality is that you will have challenges anywhere you go.

7. Work smarter, not harder

It's easy to confuse feelings of exhaustion and burn-out with hard work. Working hard, and doing good work, does NOT have to leave you聽. Find ways to delegate some of your work, or invest in tools or technologies that will make your life easier.聽

8. Ask for help

Yes, it鈥檚聽. No matter how long you鈥檝e been teaching, or how brilliant you are, there will be times when you need help, plain and simple. Asking for help doesn鈥檛 make you weaker, it makes you better at your job.聽

9. Make a connection聽

According to Kelly McGonigal鈥檚聽, when you connect with another person, your body produces oxytocin, which is a chemical that helps repair the heart. And you don鈥檛 even have to be on the receiving end: reaching out to help someone else聽produces the same effect. Teachers already devote much of their time to this, but it鈥檚 important to cultivate relationships with colleagues, neighbors, and friends as well. McGonigal's research shows that聽major stressful life events are generally strongly linked with negative health outcomes, except for聽those who reported聽caring for others, who聽experienced聽NO such effects. If you help your neighbors, family, etc., you鈥檙e much less likely to experience the negative effects of stress.

Recommended Articles

Take a look at other articles from 黑料传送门. Our articles feature information on a wide variety of subjects, written with the help of subject matter experts and researchers who are well-versed in their industries. This allows us to provide articles with interesting, relevant, and accurate information.聽