This is your very first post. Click the Edit link to modify or delete it, or start a new post. If you like, use this post to tell readers why you started this blog and what you plan to do with it.

This is your very first post. Click the Edit link to modify or delete it, or start a new post. If you like, use this post to tell readers why you started this blog and what you plan to do with it.


Before I write my ideas here on how to help lift a few stresses off the chest of the teachers who are feeling the pinch, let me just say this;
RIGHT UP FRONT WHERE IT BELONGS….
SEEK PROFESSIONAL HELP ….IF YOU OR SOMEONE YOU LOVE NEEDS SUPPORT – AS EARLY AS YOU CAN! THAT SAID.
There are many ways for you devoted teachers and educators to protect your emotional currency and avoid emotional overload. Avoid the repercussions of unchecked stress because unchecked stress can cause devastating damage to the ongoing wellbeing of anyone experiencing it. There are many experts to “Google” or research that have far more knowledge on this topic than I do, but I have a few favourite ideas that may help the average Jo to avoid burnout. These include getting adequate rest, some form of meditation, engaging in hobbies, prioritisation of commitments and keeping a good routine, keeping a positive mindset, walking or engaging in adequate physical activity and giving in to a little humour. I feel that if we are trying to teach tools that encourage resilience, we better be prepared to use them. I’m a fan of “putting something in the pot” to balance the emotional dollars being taken out. Overload and burnout are common problems that teachers (and many other people who work with a lot of personalities each day) have to handle. I wonder often if some more mentoring could help this, especially for new or struggling employees. It seems a terrible shame for those who have chosen an amazing profession to be leaving because it just hasn’t met their expectations or because they have not had the mentoring or support they need. There is no doubt that change is on the horizon to help us all cope better but in the meantime – perhaps there are ways we can help ourselves in this – yes – challenging – but highly rewarding career – educating our young.
So are we practising what we teach?
I have made myself work on resilience skills since I began teaching. In my second year, I enrolled in a community-run workshop on managing stress as a young teacher. There are plenty around, from your local yoga or meditation instructor to a counselling instructor, or relaxation advisor. I like a little bit of solo meditation in the garden or in a quiet reading room. I like to keep it simple.
Hobbies are under-rated. I’ve had several over the years, and I admit it is challenging to find the time to work on them when there are competing needs other than your own – like family and a career, but it’s worth the effort. It certainly adds some fullness to ‘the pot’, and if attending hobby related workshops, it can help to socialise with like-minded friends that aren’t teachers or educators, we all need a break from time to time.
At the moment – I draw for relief from the everyday hassles of life – I’m no Frida Kahlo – but the repetition and mindless strokes take me somewhere else.
I think we all need that.
I think if we can compartmentalise, prioritise and develop sound routines in our lives it helps when managing stress and overload. Lists and Checklists can help keep our lives in balance and order. I keep sensible routines, put things into categories and prioritise;
A bit like this;
Things that are important that I need to do right now,
Things that are important that can wait a day or two,
Things I need to do – that can wait – timeframe recorded,
Things I want to do – that will keep me sane (sometimes this one needs to be moved higher up the list),
Things I should or could do.
You get the picture.
When dealing with people (colleagues, professionals, parents, and students) I find challenging – I have a mindset that helps me. I try and think of all people as family and then I never feel angry, disappointed or bothered for long. I try and remember we all come from differing perspectives, lifestyles and circumstances and as such should be considered with compassion and respect. These ideas help me to leave more in the pot, to begin with, nothing is ever “really” personal, it’s more about considering everyone else’s feelings too.
Who doesn’t like a good comedy to lift the spirits?
I love a good movie, am a sucker for a romantic comedy and just love to laugh. You can ‘literally’ feel the stress lift off the chest when laughter kicks in. I highly recommend finding ways to laugh – a lot.
When all else fails – (or preferably before then), it’s helpful to talk to some someone trusted; to a mentor, a colleague, a friend or family member, a doctor or another professional. Sometimes life does seem to come ‘at us’ all at once, and occasionally, there are issues that are ‘difficult to get past’ and when this happens – help should be sought. I certainly don’t have all the answers for this, and there are organisations that are there to help when it is clear that things are getting you way down.
(If you or anyone you know is suffering and you feel may need urgent help – call 000) or see the emergency list below from The Black Dog Institute.
A List from Black Dog of Emergency Help Optionshttps://www.blackdoginstitute.org.au/getting-help/emergency
This is a beautiful prayer. When said 9 times in a row with the Memorare – imagine how powerful it would be !
Memorare:
Remember, O Most Loving Virgin, that never was it known that anyone who fled to your protection, implored your help or sort your intercession,
was left unaided.
Inspired by this confidence,
I fly to you, O Virgin of virgins, My Mother.
To you do I come, before you I stand, sinful
and sorrowful.
O Mother of the Word Incarnate,
despise not my petitions,
but in your mercy,
graciously hear and answer me.
AmenOur Lord dictated the following prayer to St Gertrude the Great to release many souls from Purgatory each time it is said.
Prayer of St. Gertrude the Great.
Eternal Father, I offer Thee the most Precious Blood of Thy Divine Son, Jesus, in union with the Masses said throughout the world today, for all the holy souls in Purgatory, for sinners everywhere, for sinners in the universal Church, those in my own home and within my family. Amen.
Our Lord dictated the following prayer to St Gertrude the Great to release many souls from Purgatory each time it is said.
Prayer of St. Gertrude the Great.
Eternal Father, I offer Thee the most Precious Blood of Thy Divine Son, Jesus, in union with the Masses said throughout the world today, for all the holy souls in Purgatory, for sinners everywhere, for sinners in the universal Church, those in my own home and within my family. Amen.
Special Note
The above prayer was given approval in 1936 by the Bishop of Liera, Portugal. This prayer is widely publicised with the claim that 1000 souls are released from Purgatory each time that it is said, however the words “1000 souls” were replaced from the original word “many” and the words “those in my own home and within my family” were added after 1936.
Being witty …. that’s a talent !
Being sarcastic…. that’s a cheap shot.
I’m all for clever anecdotes and thought provoking comments that tempt the
mind to wander and consider new perspectives, but I can’t tolerate sarcasm that denigrates the value of another human and the two are often confused.
A clever wit can be used to sharply and aptly analyse an idea and add value to that idea, where as sarcasm deflects negative energy and belittles another
human – not adding value to either person !
Sarcasm is a low blow – diminishing its user. On the other hand, wit encapsulates a circumstance and creates a new opportunity for growth. Wit is useful – sarcasm an attempt at being more intelligent 🤓 but is more about puffing out fancy feathers than it is about showing genuine knowledge. I would never encourage sarcasm – I rarely see real wit !
The way I see it !

There are big questions dominating the education forums at present. Some of these questions have global, system, philosophical, local or individual origins. Collaboration touches all of these domains and more. In a world where communication has reached new and lofty heights – it should be easier to collaborate. While I have not discussed the technological possibilities for collaboration (if that’s your specialty jump on board), I just wanted to acknowledge it plays a high strake in collaborative possibilities in our now global educational context.
🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸🌸
To ask how we collaborate within the education system, perhaps first we should ask what it is to collaborate and why we should use this evidence-based practice in order to support the learning of the students we teach and use it as a global and systemic tool towards creating a worldwide dialogue which continues to challenge current educational thinking and practices as seen in professional teaching standards by The Australian Institite for Teaching and School Leadership (2017) – see standard 7.3.
See the link below with John Hattie and Ashley McLellan, (2016) who discuss collaboration as an overused buzz word.
Keeping Hattie’s opinions in mind I am led to consider collaboration in the 21st Century and wonder whether or not we are using it in its highest form. In a world where technological and digital means should allow us to collaborate with ease, have we lost sight of the best practices and personal element to collaboration – the why and how ?
While I will not discuss technology in this article – I will note that it provides a wealth of opportunities for collaboration in a global, national, local and individual context.
So what is REAL collaboration, the kind that Hattie and McLellan talk about as benefiting students and teachers in the educational processes and how do we do it ?
I am writing this note from an apartment in Hanoi, Vietnam, next door to a school, where the days are long for the students and the bells are replaced by the beating of large drums and never has it been more apparent to me that dealing with learning within a particular context is EVERYTHING.
Within each student’s context there are conditions that either enhance or disable a student’s chances of learning in a more ideal way for them. We know this. Collaboration provides an opportunity to provide A1 conditions and the highest possible outcome for students. With out it – there’s a lot of guess work and fumble – and that causes student’s stress and teachers too, for that matter. See the Wellbeing framework from the NSW Department of Education and read about Positive Partnerships.
In my experience, collaboration is present in the conversations held between teachers and leaders, parents, therapists, other relevant community members and students that improve the outcomes of the students, thus taking out the guess work in the planning and implementation of world class pedagogy that supports all individual learners. Data sharing may be part of that, so I’m not going to get into a debate about data, that’s another conversation, but what I will say is that – collaboration should – no MUST – include conversation about the student as whole person – including family circumstances, health (both mental and physical), likes, dislikes, quirks and special interests. Deep inside THAT KEY conversation lies the real knowing and the genuine portal into individual student’s motivations for learning. We think we know, even when we have known students for a long time – we don’t know it all and collaboration provides essential dialogue and often new – shared information – we are well aware of the benefits to students – we just need to embrace its benefits more readily, with more fluidity and in a highly organised fashion.
Shared goals, shared information, shared understanding and shared details that bring truth to the student’s learning. By truth, I mean genuine knowledge encapsulating the student’s skills and challenges, thus allowing educators and their partners to collaborate to bring greater success to the student – to the student – not the other way around. If a student is not making tangible progress measured primarily against their own abilities and skills , it is unlikely that they will be motivated to achieve this on their own. Motivation aside – it is also unlikely that such students will possess the skills to access the curriculum along with their peers, assuming the peers are learning at peak levels. It is highly unlikely that any students are learning at optimal levels all the time and there are a diverse set of reasons for this being the case. That said, students with learning challenges and particular needs are the most likely to need our support.
Collaboration should have one primary responsibility to take a student from where they are…. just think about that for a moment …. from where they ARE – not the one size fits all version of education (or assessment) but allows a group within a shared space and context to all care – to all work – for the good of the students taught in our schools. Every one of them.
Sharing the specific and sometimes very personal details of a student’s narrative, (health, learning needs, family story, financial needs) and sharing the tools, ideas and common goals that colleagues share, can make all the difference to a student’s life.
Their purpose. Their motivation for being and or achieving their best self.
It’s changes the way students feel about learning because when they feel that they are REALLY cared for in a personal way in an environment – a community – ‘they know they matter’.
This ‘community support’ brings amazing results to individual students. I have seen it turn troubled children into happy children. I have seen children excited to work on personalised projects, who had previously battled everyone – including themselves. That’s real collaboration. It values the voice of all persons involved but has the child’s needs at the heart or all planning and decisions. Data and other evidence based practices may be used to inform pedagogy and practices but the needs of the student will always be in the forefront of any decisions in a well functioning collaborative environment.
Collaboration is a dynamic process, because students lives change, sometimes daily. Collaboration is dictated by the needs of the student and the value that all professions can bring to their lives.
Collaboration can be as small as a passing chat that lets a teacher know that a child has had a bad morning, a team meeting at school that’s shares all common knowledge on a student’s needs or an all stakeholders meeting that draws on knowledge from parents and experts like psychologists, speech therapists, occupational therapists and medical practitioners ( to name a few). The main thing to consider is to keep the student’s strengths in the forefront of all decision making, because we all learn best when we use our strengths to power us through the challenges.
Of course collaboration is a far greater alliance beyond the needs of individual students, it encompasses school, system and global leadership and is wrapped in political, economic and social agenda – in its many and varied forms. I have intentionally started this conversation at the individual student centred level – they should always remain at the pinnacle of all educational decision making, no matter where the context takes one. No matter what the political, economic, social and environmental factors that combine to create a surface on which to build, rebuild or reshape our pedagogy, curriculum and teacher training or ongoing development (CPD). Collaboration infiltrates all professional learning communities (PLC’s) and provides the key to synergy within the system at its many and varied levels.
Teacher training, both pre-service and continual progressive teacher development remains another key part of the educative collaborative narrative and is another topic for discussion. Teacher preparation and training will remain significant because as Hattie discusses, teachers remain; “the major source of controllable variance in our system” (Hattie,2012).
There are several parts to the story of collaboration within the education domain, each element of which cannot be separated. For maximum benefit for all individual students within the world in their many and varied contexts, many factors come into play within the principles of collaboration; global political, economic social and environmental, factors all create agendas and initiatives for systems, leadership, and school based decisions and practices that in the end will either enhance or hamper learning outcomes for the students.
I am reminded of a quote by Aristotle that will no doubt be familiar to all, that; “The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” How apt this is in considering the many elements that are present in a perfectly aligned view of collaboration within education in the 21st Century.
What are your thoughts ?
Karen Cleary
References.
Hattie, J,. 2012. Visible Learning for Teachers; Maximizing Impact on Learning. Routledge, New York.
The links I refer to:
https://www.aitsl.edu.au/teach/standards
Click to access 16531_Wellbeing-Framework-for-schools_Acessible.pdf