HomepageISTEEdSurge
Skip to content
ascd logo

Log in to Witsby: ASCD’s Next-Generation Professional Learning and Credentialing Platform
Join ASCD
March 1, 2024
Vol. 81
No. 6
Classroom Conversations

Self-Care Is More Than a Buzzword

author avatar
We must take care of ourselves—and each other—even when it’s hard.

premium resources logo

Premium Resource

Social-emotional learningSchool Culture
Self-Care Is More Than a Buzzword Header Image
Credit: iStock
If you’re an educator and you spend any time on social media, you’ve probably seen the quote about how “a ­dysregulated adult cannot ­regulate a dysregulated child.” If I’m honest, the first time I saw it, I felt attacked. I could too easily see myself as the dysregulated adult, attempting to help various students over the years. However, it’s become one of those quotes that’s stuck with me. It pops into my head in those moments when I struggle to be the calm and controlled adult who can help regulate a child. I might still feel mildly attacked by it, but it helps me notice that I need to make a change, that I need to take care of myself emotionally. 
My career in elementary education began not long after the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and ­Emotional Learning (CASEL) was formed. I taught for a few years before I became familiar with CASEL, but an important piece of my professional journey is closely tied to that organization. In understanding the CASEL competencies—the areas of social and emotional learning that I knew my students needed support in developing—I also started to see my own needs reflected in them. I couldn’t look at my elementary learners and notice the ways in which they needed help growing their self-management skills without noticing that I needed to do the same. The more deeply I’ve dug into social and emotional learning as an educator, the more work I’ve had to do as a person. 

The more deeply I’ve dug into social and emotional learning as an educator, the more work I’ve had to do as a person.

Author Image

Just like our students, we educators have skills we need to grow. Just like our students, we have good days and bad days. Unlike our students, we are the adults in the room, we are the ones who are trained as the ­professionals. That means that regardless of our strengths or lack thereof, regardless of the kind of day we’re having, we have to show up for our students and we have to show up regulated.

Taking Care of Ourselves

This year, again and again, I’ve said that the job is harder than it’s ever been. Our students, at all ages, are struggling academically and emotionally. We’re exhausted after years of adapting our work as educators to meet our students’ needs through a global pandemic. Whether you’re a teacher, coach, administrator, or in some other educational role, the expectations are high, maybe too high. These expectations come from our bosses, the families we serve, and our society at large. It feels as though everyone has ideas about what teachers should be doing. Across the United States, educators are retiring and resigning, many mid-year. Asking educators to do anything more than they’re doing is too much. It isn’t sustainable. And yet, there is so much to do. For educators to show up for their students in ways that are physically and mentally healthy for everyone, we have to take care of our own emotional health. 

For educators to show up for their students in ways that are physically and mentally healthy for everyone, we have to take care of our own emotional health.

Author Image

I’ve learned some things in my quarter of a century in the classroom, and I’ve spoken with other educators who’ve been around for a while. We’ve got some tips for those who are newer (as well as for more ­experienced educators who can, like all of us, still use some support):
  • Take a day off. This is really hard for educators to do. There’s always work—in fact, taking a day off can add work in some ways. But taking a day can give your brain and body time to rest and then reenergize. If you just can’t make yourself take a full day off, then support yourself by scheduling your next doctor or dentist appointment in the middle of the day, rather than early in the morning or at the end of the afternoon. Then take the whole day. Sleep in. Check off some things on your to-do list at home. Binge a show. Read a book. Take a walk. When you return the next day, you will be in a far better place ­mentally and emotionally to show up for your students.
  • Figure out your boundaries. Do you need to leave school right after the students to have some downtime, or do you need to stay to make sure things are set for tomorrow? Do you need to delete your school email from your phone so that you aren’t constantly checking it? Do you need to mute your team’s group chat? There’s not a single right answer to questions about boundaries. You have to reflect on what you need and what works for you. Try to notice where you’re feeling pulled out of shape, when you find yourself snapping at people, or feeling unusually exhausted and unable to tackle basic tasks. (For me, a strong sign is when I feel like I just can’t manage to do the dishes.) Then pause to identify what you can let go of.
  • Let go of some expectations for yourself. One of my fatal flaws is noticing another teacher doing something fabulously (working with small groups, communicating with families, organizing a great math workshop, etc.) and immediately feeling inadequate. Suddenly I am working harder to try to match this teacher and their strength. While I am a firm believer in always working to become a better educator, I also need to recognize that I can’t do everything well all the time. Some years I do a phenomenal job of helping my students find joy and growth in math and less of a fabulous job doing the same in reading. Yet my students are still finding joy and growing. It is crucial that we show ourselves some grace by accepting that we can’t be rockstars every second. 
I recognize that none of these suggestions are easy. I struggle with them. I need reminders to be kind to myself because I get caught up in the nonstop whirlwind that is education. We can help each other out in this way: Tell your colleagues what you see them doing well, especially if you suspect they can’t see that for themselves. When a colleague seems worn down, encourage them to take a day off. Show them grace. We all need to be supporting each other—and taking care of ourselves. Our students will be the ones who ultimately benefit.

Jennifer Orr is an elementary school teacher in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. She has taught for more than two decades in almost every elementary grade at schools serving highly diverse populations. She has experience with students who are learning English; in special education and advanced academic programs; and from military families.

Throughout her career, she achieved and renewed National Board Certification; wrote articles about technology in education, literacy, math, questioning, and more; and presented at state and national conferences on the same topics. Orr is a member of ASCD’s Emerging Leader class of 2013. In 2012, she won the Kay L. Bitter Award from ISTE.

Learn More

ASCD is a community dedicated to educators' professional growth and well-being.

Let us help you put your vision into action.
Related Articles
View all
undefined
Social-emotional learning
The Courage to Converse
Jennifer Orr
6 days ago

undefined
Tell Us About
Educational Leadership Staff
8 months ago

undefined
The Power of Educator EQ
Brooke Stafford-Brizard
8 months ago

undefined
EI: A Bedrock of Thriving Schools
Sarah McKibben
8 months ago

undefined
The Value of “Expressive Flexibility”
Kate Stoltzfus
8 months ago
Related Articles
The Courage to Converse
Jennifer Orr
6 days ago

Tell Us About
Educational Leadership Staff
8 months ago

The Power of Educator EQ
Brooke Stafford-Brizard
8 months ago

EI: A Bedrock of Thriving Schools
Sarah McKibben
8 months ago

The Value of “Expressive Flexibility”
Kate Stoltzfus
8 months ago
From our issue
March 2024 Header Image
The Emotionally Intelligent Educator
Go To Publication