Teacher Self-Care Update: A Webinar!

If you knew me in person, you’d likely know I’m a planner. 

(Actually, you might have figured that out anyways based on the number of posts on goals and the different planning guides/planners in my shop )

I like to know what’s coming and make a color coded list of steps to prepare, and I don’t particularly like changes. And, like everyone, I had lots of plans for this spring…  but I did not plan for a pandemic and all that follows.  One of the things I did plan for was presenting at MCAE’s NETWORK Conference, which was (like many things) cancelled for public health reasons.

Check out my original post for my (occasionally cranky, overachiever) take on self care

But, like it or not, we’re all working on plan B’s (or C, or D…)  now. And the good folks at MCAE have a new plan: a webinar series.

This is a change I can get behind.

I’m super excited (and kind of humbled) that they asked me to present. The topic of self-care for teachers felt important in January when I first drafted it. It feels even more so now. 

The Struggle is Real: Teacher Self-Care and Balance

Teaching is meaningful, important, rewarding…and hard. If we are to do our best work and sustain our efforts, we must find ways to manage the challenges, amplify the positives and maintain our energy. We’ll explore practical steps busy teachers can take. 

May 11, 1-2:00 PM

Registration link

Click here to check out the full (super relevant and timely!) series. And Massachusetts folks, please register! 

If you can’t make it on the 11th, MCAE will be recording the webinar, and posting it to their website.

Or, for the DIYers, I put the self care action planning sheet we’ll be using in my TPT shop. (Free for now, not forever)

The struggle is real: teacher self care and balance. Webinar mat 11, 1-2 pm. Hosted by Massachusetts coalition for Adult Education

The Struggle Is Real: Balance and Self Care

Note: I wrote this when we were advised to wash our hands, not to shut down major institutions and practice social distancing. Much has changed in recent days … but in the midst of it we need self-care more than ever. Be well, friends.

So….I might have mentioned that I’m prep’ing a few workshops this spring (once, or twice). The one I might need to take myself is on balance and self care (see, adding multiple workshops to multiple jobs; see also an email from the conference coordinator, when I sent in my third proposal: “That IS ambitious”)

I’m not so great at not taking on all the things. (#overachiever) But, I am so much better about boundaries and making good use of my time and strategically recharging than I was when I was younger.

And yet, there are those people who radiate zen, that seem perfectly suited to a self care workshop. I’m not them.

I am a much more tightly wound and occasionally cranky self-care facilitator.

I like to think this helps me know where the tightly wound and occasionally cranky people who sign up for a self care workshop are coming from.

But also, I think we/the world need a wider and maybe more tightly wound and cranky definition of self care.

I am of the ‘self care is a life you don’t want to escape from’ school of self-care thought. And, in a field that asks so much of people, for so little, ‘a job you don’t want to escape from’ . It’s radical, but I believe we ought to be able to do meaningful, mission-driven work, at a high level, without burning out by 2pm every Thursday.

And, as much as I admire the glowing zen folks, I need some of my overachiever energy for this version of self care.


I want to propose a three-pronged approach to self care for educators (is it to over achiever-y to have a 3 pronged approach to self care? Probably, but, I’m going with it. Sometimes self care is embracing your over achiever self, right?)

Anyways, prongs:

  • Boosting the positives
  • Managing the challenges
  • Managing and maintaining energy

Boosting the positives:

Fighting back against negativity bias. Tapping into the parts of this work we love. Negotiating and job crafting and creative brainstorming our way into spending more of our time on the things that fill us. Schedule sending myself student notes.

Managing the challenges:

Acknowledging that some of this is structural. And it’s unjust and bigger than us. Taking action if it helps. Having a ‘lets talk about priorities’ conversation, saying no, and also, fixing the things we can so there’s a little less stress and struggle in our days. Repeating the serenity prayer (whatever your religious and/or substance use background).

Managing and maintaining energy:

Taking care of ourselves: good meals, breaks, not spending too many hours in a row hunched over a computer screen. (Because Maslow is not wrong) Keeping some space between work and life. Doing the things that refuel us.


Three prongs, all the questions. Self care takes some doing.

If you need more guidance, download my free reflection and planner.

Or, MA adult ed folks …

… This post was inspired by a workshop I planned for the Massachusetts Coalition for Adult Education Network Conference in April.

NETWORK has been cancelled for public health reasons. I respect the decision, wish everyone good health… and am going to be offering a digital version.

Sign up to receive information about a digital workshop from mathacognitive: “The Struggle is Real: Self Care and Balance

Here’s the workshop description: “Teaching is meaningful, important, rewarding… and hard. If we are to do our best work and sustain our efforts, we must find ways to manage the hard parts, amplify the positives and maintain our energy. ”

(Real) Goals for the New Year

It’s almost the new year, and all around, people are making resolutions. So, goals are on my mind.

I love goals.

I love having a clear plan, and I REALLY love checking them off.

So, I make a lot of goals. I might have sent my supervisors an email ‘Here’s the 3 goals you asked for and 8 or 9 more just for me.’

(I’ve mentioned a few … interleaving, and practice questions, and a few others)

There are big, important goals to be set in teaching. And they matter. And you might be making them right now.

But, at this point in the year, I’m thinking about the little goals that keep us sane.

Because as much as I believe in all the goals, I also believe in taking little steps (and sanity

And, I want to encourage all of us to set little, sanity preserving goals for the start of 2020, and the second half of the school year.

So, the goals at the top of my personal list:

  • Make my copies at least a day in advance (this is quite possibly the best thing ever for not arriving at class a frazzled mess)
  • Clear my desk before I leave (I am defining ‘clear’ to include ‘stuff piled in the right basket’- but mostly I’m trying to have less paper)
  • Send emails with praise and compliments (because people deserve it way more than they get it)

And …. as we start 2020, wishing you all the success in all the goals (big and small)