Addressing Teacher Burnout: Causes, Symptoms, and Strategies (2024)

American teachers have markedly less time to prepare lessons, collaborate with colleagues, and assess student work than educators in other countries. Instead of a balance between time spent with students and preparatory activities, American educators have relatively limited time to engage in work key to successful teaching. Teaching loads can require educators to spend 39 percent more time with students than teachers spend outside of the United States, according to the Teaching and Learning International Survey (TALIS).This lopsided distribution of time places extraordinary pressure on American teachers. Insufficient time to complete tasks integral to successful teaching and a host of other stressful conditions often lead to exhaustion. Today, 50 percent of teachers consider quitting, naming stress as one of the primary reasons. To address this crisis, leaders in education must find strategies to combat teacher burnout and build supportive teaching environments.

What Is Teacher Burnout?

Teachers confront significant challenges. They must adapt curricula to a wide range of learning styles, manage shifting education policies, attend to students with special needs, and juggle administrative work. In addition, many of our greatest social ills show up in their classrooms. So, what happens when teachers who already contend with so much also experience unsupportive work environments?

Many experience teacher burnout, hitting their limit in dealing with their work’s daily challenges. It occurs after prolonged exposure to poorly managed emotional and interpersonal job stress.

Consequences of Teacher Burnout

Over time, teacher burnout can lead to a variety of responses. The World Health Organization describes burnout as an occupational phenomenon characterized by three main attributes:

  • Exhaustion. When teachers experience burnout, they can feel depleted of energy and too exhausted to continue with their work.
  • Cynicism. Teachers who have reached a state of burnout can begin to feel mentally detached from their jobs. Their feelings about the profession can turn negative and cynical.
  • Inefficacy. Teacher burnout also leads to feelings of incompetence or ineffectiveness.

Causes of Teacher Burnout

Teachers confront disheartening experiences that can lead to fatigue, anxiety, and depression. Left unmanaged, these symptoms can result in teacher burnout. Some of the causes of teacher burnout include:

Poor Funding

Many districts and schools lack sufficient funding for updated materials, technology, and staff. This places a huge burden on teachers, who must make do with insufficient books and supplies while managing high teacher-to-student ratios. Over time, this burden can leave teachers feeling hopeless and ill-equipped to address achievement gaps and meet students’ needs.

Education leaders must advocate for better school funding and, in the meantime, find ways to cut waste and manage their budgets so schools are as well-stocked and staffed as possible.

High Emotional Demands

In addition to educating students, teachers must care for students’ emotional needs, which can be emotionally demanding. Teachers often feel the very future of a generation rests on their shoulders. If a work environment lacks the support needed to fulfill this responsibility, teachers can understandably feel overwhelmed.

Additionally, teachers frequently find themselves supporting students who have experienced trauma. For example, teachers are likely to be among the first to notice signs of child abuse in a student. As mandated reporters, the law requires teachers to inform authorities.

Such experiences and others in which teachers have no control over the tragic events in their students’ home lives can prove harrowing. Ultimately, teachers can experience secondary trauma when they help students going through difficult times.

Education leaders need to provide teachers with the tools to endure the weight of the emotional demands of their role. For example, they can offer training sessions that give formal instruction on developing emotional skills such as:

  • Accurate emotional recognition
  • Understanding of the causes and consequences of one’s emotions
  • Comfortable expression of emotions
  • Effective regulation of emotions

Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence research has shown that teachers with developed emotional skills experience less burnout.

Inadequate Preparation

All too often, schools put teachers in situations they are adequately prepared to handle. For example, administrators may require educators to teach outside of their subject area, or they may assign students with learning and behavioral challenges to teachers who lack the necessary training to meet their needs. Such scenarios not only prevent students from learning but also prevent teachers from feeling accomplished, which can cause burnout.

Education leaders must ensure teachers get meaningful professional development that prepares them to deal with behavior issues, new education policies, educational technology, and other obstacles. Additionally, administrators must mindfully assign responsibilities that align with a teacher’s preparation and experience.

Challenging Teaching Situations

Educators face increasingly difficult teaching situations that can lead to burnout. These challenges range from policies that tie teacher evaluations to standardized exams that don’t accurately reflect student learning to transitions to distance learning during the pandemic.

For example, with virtual learning, many teachers are bombarded with parent emails while also trying to direct students who can’t navigate online learning platforms. As a result, teachers often feel obligated to work all hours of the day and night, struggling to find a healthy work-life balance.Additionally, challenging student behavior has become more severe and frequent, leaving teachers to manage difficult situations.

Education leaders need to consider how policies regarding teacher evaluations and standardized exams affect teachers and also mindfully advocate for programs that boost teacher morale. They can support teachers by setting boundaries on their behalf, such as by communicating clearly to parents what teacher work hours are and putting limits on teachers’ obligations.

Finally, leaders can continue to deliver specific training that prepares teachers to respond to individual challenges as they arise.

Teacher Burnout Statistics

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reports that more than 270,000 teachers have left the profession each year since 2016 and projects this rate of departure to continue through 2026.

While the BLS attributes some of the departures to retirement, it classifies more than half of them—in every category of teacher, from kindergarten to special education—as “occupational transfers.” That percentage equates to hundreds of thousands of teachers leaving their careers in education for work in another field each year. One must wonder why, considering all the preparation required to become a teacher in the first place.

With 90 percent of the demand for teachers coming from teachers exiting the profession for reasons unrelated to retirement, leaders must look more closely at teacher burnout and how to keep teachers in the classroom.

Teacher Burnout’s Disproportionate Impact on High-Poverty Schools

The National Center for Education Statistics projects school enrollment will grow 2 percent by 2028. The combination of growing student populations and significant numbers of departing teachers has set off alarm bells for education leaders, who are now searching for ways to curb the attrition. Even more distressing, this attrition disproportionately affects disadvantaged or marginalized students.

Research has consistently shown that the highest teacher attrition rates occur in high-poverty schools and schools made up largely of students of color. For example, as of 2016, Title I schools (schools where at least 35 percent of students are low-income) had turnover rates 50 percent higher than non-Title I schools. The churn and instability that teacher burnout causes intensifies the challenges marginalized students experience and can contribute to a widening achievement gap.

Signs of Teacher Burnout

Teachers often don’t recognize they’re on the road to burning out before they hit a threshold of no return. However, early identification of the following symptoms, which teachers may experience to varying degrees, can help education leaders implement intervention strategies at a point when they will be most effective.

Constant Fatigue

Excessive workloads and emotional strain can lead to fatigue. However, in a manageable situation, this fatigue should ebb and flow. Three-day weekends and seasonal vacations can go a long way in renewing energy. Unfortunately, for overburdened teachers, fatigue can remain a constant. It can interrupt sleep, cause irritability, and even affect eating habits.

Self-Doubt

Teachers may wonder about the effectiveness of a lesson or self-critique their work. This is part of the growing process and key to development. However, teachers heading for burnout may begin to question whether they are cut out for teaching altogether. They may not only doubt the strength of an individual lesson or unit but also wonder if anything they do has value.

Withdrawal

When teachers feel overwhelmed by their work, they may withdraw in several ways. For example, they may pass on social gatherings with colleagues or stop joining other teachers for lunch. They may also take mental health days more often. They may participate less in faculty and department meetings and cut back on attending optional school events after hours, such as athletic competitions and school plays.

Burnout can lead teachers to stop collaborating with their peers. Burned-out teachers often feel little inspiration to share lessons, visit their peers’ classrooms, or engage in email correspondence. When they do communicate with their peers, the purpose is usually to complain about students, parents, school policies, and administration. They often struggle to see anything positive about their surroundings.

A Loss of Inspiration

Most teachers start their careers full of inspiration. Driven to make a difference, they believe in their ability to effect change and feel motivated to dive in. Teacher burnout quashes this inspiration and drive. Rather than feeling excited to meet new students at the beginning of the year, burned-out teachers feel dread about the things that might go wrong. Instead of feeling confident in their ability to make a difference in students’ lives, they may feel like they are fighting a hopeless battle.

How to Prevent Teacher Burnout

Solving teacher burnout cannot be reduced to calls for teacher resilience or encouraging self-care. Such responses seem to suggest teachers experiencing burnout lack the grit to persevere. In reality, nothing could be further from the truth for the vast majority of teachers.

Stripping teachers of their autonomy, as well as imposing standardization and high-stakes exams, can eat away at the rewards and gratification of teaching. Education leaders must examine such trends and find ways to fortify the rewards of teaching if they hope to prevent teacher burnout.

Instead of looking at teacher burnout as an individual problem, leaders in education must shift their focus to assess the problem as a systemic, institutional, or policy-based issue.

Though teachers from high-poverty schools disproportionately make up burned-out teachers, educators from high-performing schools can also feel demoralized. They report serious frustration and confusion dealing with administrative work that often gobbles up unreasonable amounts of time that could be better spent.

For example, many teachers find themselves forced to use proprietary software bought by a district when creating lesson plans or keeping records. While sometimes helpful, such district decisions often prove burdensome, creating excessive data entry tasks and diverting teachers’ attention away from more meaningful and pressing work. Such a frustration, piled on top of others, can contribute to teachers’ sense of defeat.

Increase Teacher Autonomy

Giving teachers more autonomy can improve job satisfaction and retention. The United Kingdom’s National Foundation for Educational Research recently identified strong links between teacher autonomy and retention. Its findings suggest that involving teachers in activities that honor their independence and bolster their sense of feeling respected can significantly affect their morale and motivate them to stay.

For example, rather than imposing goals on teachers, school leaders can involve teachers in goal setting. Additionally, education leaders can consider how to give teachers more control over the curricula they select and the content they teach.

Engage Teachers in the Right Conversations

While policy shifts can improve the climate teachers work in, schools can make important moves to address and prevent teacher burnout. Author of Demoralized: Why Teachers Leave the Profession They Love and How They Can Stay, Doris Santoro explains the value of certain types of conversations between school leaders and teachers. Santoro recommends school leaders initiate conversations about good work, including:

  • What good work looks like
  • Obstacles to achieving good work
  • What’s needed for good work
  • Immediate shifts to removing obstacles to good work

Santoro recommends school leaders get past simply following policy. Rather, she encourages district and school administrators to respond with flexibility and commit to deep engagement with teachers about the issues preventing them from achieving their teaching goals and feeling rewarded.

Build Teachers’ Coping Skills

Education leaders can help teachers manage their stress. With the right support and guidance, teachers can avoid the hopelessness and emotional drain that often leads to teacher burnout.

School leaders can guide teachers to modify their responses to the challenges they confront. Often, teachers enter the field full of anticipation and hope. When confronted by some of the harsh realities of teaching, they can easily fall into despair. However, with the right coping mechanisms, teachers can adjust the responses that fuel negative feelings.

Workshops, counseling, and training sessions can direct teachers to adopt strategies that allow them to reframe issues and compartmentalize difficulties. This approach can make a big difference in avoiding teacher burnout.

Address Symptoms of Teacher Burnout

Teacher burnout does not appear overnight. This means education leaders can institute programs that address the symptoms that lead to it and hopefully prevent teachers from reaching a breaking point.

First, teachers need to trust that school administration will take steps to address their symptoms. However, if teachers see no evidence that they can expect help—or even worse, if they suspect reporting their symptoms will result in less autonomy or diminished faith in their abilities—they will have no reason to share their struggles.

Ways to successfully address symptoms that lead to burnout include:

Implementing Responsive Policies to Teacher Burnout

Schools can offer clear policies and procedures about reporting teacher burnout. They should also provide information about the care available to teachers who are struggling with it.

Keeping Open Lines of Communication

Teachers experiencing symptoms that lead to burnout should receive attention from administrators or people in a position to take direct action in response.

Giving Teachers Choices About Teacher Burnout Care

Teachers know their circ*mstances best. School leaders should give them choices with regard to the care they receive.

Staying Vigilant

School leaders should be on the lookout for symptoms that lead to burnout among their faculty. This awareness can allow them to intervene while there is still time to make a difference.

The Effect of teacher Burnout on Students

When teachers lose their sense of purpose, feel burdened by fatigue, and withdraw from their work, students will likely feel the effect. Not surprisingly, research indicates teacher burnout negatively impacts students.

First, teacher burnout and attrition go hand in hand. According to the National Education Association, the loss of a teacher during the school year is like losing up to 72 instructional days—almost half the school year. This experience causes students to fall behind and significantly disrupts learning.

Several studies have found that teacher turnover does not solely impact the individual students who lose their teachers. Research has repeatedly shown that high turnover affects the achievement of all students in a school.

Even when teachers experiencing burnout stay on, students pay a price. Teachers overwhelmed by stress use less effective teacher strategies. This affects the clarity of their instruction and classroom management. It also results in less stimulating classroom environments.

A study in the Journal of Educational Psychology found that teachers experiencing burnout at the beginning of the school year had notably worse classroom management by the spring than other teachers. Their classrooms also suffered from significant student disruptions.

A study from the University of British Columbia also found that the students of teachers reporting burnout had elevated levels of stress hormones, suggesting that teachers inadvertently pass their stress on to students.

Learn How to Become an Education Leader and Tackle Teacher Burnout

Addressing teacher burnout means more than responding to it after the fact. Education leaders must prioritize eliminating the causes of teacher burnout and implement solutions that help teachers cope with stress and build supportive work environments that boost morale.

Explore how American University’s Online Master of Education in Education Policy and Leadership and Online Doctor of Education in Education Policy and Leadership programs equip educators with the skills needed to tackle teacher burnout.

Data Literacy for Teachers: Bridging the Gap Between Education Policy Makers and Educators

Teacher Retention: How Education Leaders Prevent Turnover

Why Do Teachers Strike? Understanding How Policy Makers Can Help

Applied Education Systems, “The 7 Best Ways to Avoid Teacher Burnout in 2020”

The Atlantic, “The Ticking Clock of Teacher Burnout”

Classcraft, “4 Signs of Teacher Burnout and Ways to Deal With Them”

CNBC, “50% of Teachers Surveyed Say They’ve Considered Quitting, Blaming Pay, Stress and Lack of Respect”

Education Finance and Policy, “The Consequences of Leaving School Early: The Effects of Within-Year and End-of-Year Teacher Turnover”

Education Policy Analysis Archives, “Understanding Teacher Shortages: An Analysis of Teacher Supply and Demand in the United States”

Education Week Teacher, “How Teachers’ Stress Affects Students: A Research Roundup”

Edutopia, “Curbing Teacher Burnout During the Pandemic”

The Graide Network, “The Impact of Teacher Turnover on Student Learning”

The Graide Network, “Teacher Burnout Solutions & Prevention—How to Retain Talented Educators”

Greater Good Magazine, “How to Support Teachers’ Emotional Needs Right Now”

Insider, “Teachers Are Seeing Their Colleagues Leave the Profession at an Alarming Rate, and This Might Be Why”

Journal of Educational Psychology, “Teacher-Child Relationships, Classroom Climate, and Children’s Social-Emotional and Academic Development”

National Center for Education Statistics, Enrollment Trends

NEA News, “Teacher Burnout or Demoralization? What’s the Difference and Why It Matters”

SecEd, “Retention: The Vital Role of Teacher Autonomy”

US Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Projections for Teachers: How Many Are Leaving the Occupation?”

Waterford.org, “Teacher Burnout: What It Is, Why It Happens, and How You Can Prevent End-of-Year Burnout”

World Health Organization, “Burn-Out an ‘Occupational Phenomenon’: International Classification of Diseases”

Addressing Teacher Burnout: Causes, Symptoms, and Strategies (2024)

FAQs

What are the causes of teacher burnout? ›

Daniela Falecki
  • Workload. Overwork is the main cause of burnout. ...
  • Perceived lack of control. Studies show that autonomy at work is important for well-being, and being micromanaged is particularly de-motivating to employees. ...
  • Lack of reward or recognition. ...
  • Poor relationships. ...
  • Lack of fairness. ...
  • Values mismatch.
27 Mar 2022

What are the symptoms of teacher burnout? ›

Signs of Burnout

However, those experiencing burnout often struggle with insomnia, which can turn into a vicious cycle. Repeated periods of forgetfulness and intense trouble concentrating: Burned-out teachers may find it hard to complete normal tasks and have trouble concentrating on their work.

How do you prevent and deal with burnout? ›

Preventing Burnout
  1. Early recognition of burnout and related risks. ...
  2. Cultivate ability to self-reflect. ...
  3. Complete a periodic assessment and realignment of goals, skills, and work passions.
  4. Exercise regularly.
  5. Eat a well-balanced, healthy diet.
  6. Get enough sleep.

What are the reasons of teacher burnout and how can we avoid it? ›

Tips for avoiding burnout
  • Be aware of your emotions, stress levels and health. Ensure you make time to 'check in' with yourself. ...
  • Take charge of your wellbeing. ...
  • Question the impact before taking on new work. ...
  • Accept that sometimes you just have to say no. ...
  • Take mental health days. ...
  • Get support when you need it.

What is the meaning of teacher burnout? ›

Teacher burnout is a psychological condition that leads to exhaustion, depersonalization, and decreased teacher achievement and self-worth (Raines, 2011). Burnout is a reaction to chronic stress.

How does teacher burnout affect students? ›

Reduced motivation and achievement: Teacher burnout and depersonalization (i.e. feelings of disinterest towards one's job) negatively impacts teaching quality and student motivation (e.g. disruptive behaviour, low sense of belonging, weak belief in ability to succeed, lower grades).

Why is teacher burnout so high? ›

More than half of teachers in 2022 said their time for planning was significantly impacted due to staff shortages and a host of other reasons. If teachers don't have planning time at school, they have to make up for it at home, encroaching on their work-life balance, which can contribute to burnout.

How common is teacher burnout? ›

More than 44% of K-12 employees feel “always” or “very often” burned out. Teachers are suffering the most in this cohort, with more than half (52%) reporting burnout.

How do you address a burnout? ›

Handling job burnout
  1. Evaluate your options. Discuss specific concerns with your supervisor. ...
  2. Seek support. Whether you reach out to co-workers, friends or loved ones, support and collaboration might help you cope. ...
  3. Try a relaxing activity. ...
  4. Get some exercise. ...
  5. Get some sleep. ...
  6. Mindfulness.

What is the first strategy for burnout prevention? ›

Improved self-care strategies:

Minimize or eliminate alcohol and caffeine. Develop and follow a healthy eating plan. Take time away from work if the burnout impairs your ability to function or requires treatment. Ensure the recovery process includes developing a healthy approach to work.

How do you address burnout at work? ›

Business leaders play a crucial role in helping workers avoid and overcome burnout, creating a positive work atmosphere and igniting engagement:
  1. Recognize great work. ...
  2. Offer support. ...
  3. Promote a healthy work/life balance. ...
  4. Set realistic expectations.
12 Jun 2022

What can schools do to prevent teacher burnout? ›

End of newsletter promotion.
  1. Communicate Unified Expectations. In times of constant interruption to our routines and plans, we may forget how important clear communication is to supporting a safe, healthy school culture. ...
  2. Support Teachers in Conflicts With Guardians. ...
  3. Protect Teacher Time.
28 Jul 2022

How do you help a struggling teacher? ›

Another way to provide help for teachers is to give them professional development opportunities that are unique to their own individual needs. For example, if you have a teacher that struggles with classroom management, find an outstanding workshop which deals with classroom management and send them to it.

How can teacher attrition be prevented? ›

Proven Strategies for Increasing Teacher Retention Rates
  1. Cultivate Collaboration. Even in a classroom full of students, teachers can still feel very much alone. ...
  2. Empower Teachers to Succeed. ...
  3. Provide Them with Support. ...
  4. Create Better Work Conditions.

How teachers can take care of themselves? ›

Make time to talk with loved ones regularly, whether in person or virtually. Try going to dinner with friends once a month or simply spending quality time with your significant other. Set healthy boundaries. Oftentimes, teachers find themselves working past the school bell and well into the night and weekend.

How do you help students with burnout? ›

During school breaks, try to take vacations or staycations, where you truly give your mind time to rest.
  1. Make Time for Enjoyable Activities: ...
  2. Get Plenty of Physical Exercise: ...
  3. Get Outside: ...
  4. Make Time for Social Activities: ...
  5. Develop Good Relationships with Professors: ...
  6. Set Reasonable Goals: ...
  7. Avoid Procrastination:

How do teachers deal with stress? ›

Try these out, and be sure to let us know what works best for you in the comments!
  1. Breathe (properly) The classroom can cause sensory overload. ...
  2. Embrace the stress. ...
  3. Be imperfect. ...
  4. Practice emotional first aid. ...
  5. Be grateful. ...
  6. Limit “grass is greener” thinking. ...
  7. Work smarter, not harder. ...
  8. Ask for help.

When do teachers burn out? ›

Leiter, teacher burnout is defined as “psychological syndrome emerging as a prolonged response to chronic interpersonal stressors on the job.” Maslach and Leiter further explain that there are three main components that contribute to burnout: overwhelming (often emotional) exhaustion, feeling ineffective and lacking ...

How does teacher burnout affect teachers? ›

Burned-out teachers are usually less sympathetic toward the problems of students, and are less committed to their jobs. They develop lower tolerance for classroom disruptions, are less prepared for class, and are generally less productive.

How does teacher stress affect students? ›

Teacher stress is linked to poor teacher performance and poor student outcomes. Teacher turnover leads to instability and lower effectiveness in U.S. schools. Elementary school teachers who have greater stress and show more symptoms of depression create classroom environments that are less conducive to learning.

Why are teachers stressed? ›

The Causes Of Teacher Stress

Teachers work longer hours than many other positions, which often leads to burnout and stress. Some of the many contributing factors are lack of resources, work-life balance and political issues.

What is the most stressful part of being a teacher? ›

At any given time, teachers experience most, if not all, of the following stressors:
  • Receiving poor preparation for educating in training institutions.
  • Dealing with difficult school administrators.
  • Feeling unsafe in the school environment.
  • Long hours.
  • Low pay.
  • Lack of resources.
  • Class size —teacher to student ratio.
4 May 2021

What do teachers struggle with the most? ›

10 Challenges Of Teaching & How To Overcome Them
  1. Understanding the different learning challenges amongst students. ...
  2. Student family problems & bullying. ...
  3. Lack of funding. ...
  4. Lack of effective communication. ...
  5. Being encouraging and motivating under challenging times. ...
  6. Disciplining students. ...
  7. Endless paperwork & extended working hours.

How would you cope with the pressures of teaching? ›

How to Handle Stress As a Teacher
  1. Assess Your Stress Level. ...
  2. Schedule Time to Respond to Your Stress. ...
  3. Establish Realistic Goals. ...
  4. Focus on What You Can Control. ...
  5. Contact Your Colleagues for Advice. ...
  6. Participate in Stress-Relieving Activities. ...
  7. Prioritize Your Health, Family Time, and Quality Sleep. ...
  8. Relax.
28 Sept 2020

When teachers leave the profession what do they do? ›

36. Activities Director. Leadership roles in community service are often a good fit for people who've left the teaching profession. Many youth organizations and retirement communities have positions for people skilled at planning, coordinating, and leading fun recreational or educational activities.

How do teachers deal with anxiety? ›

Here are some strategies to help you manage teacher anxiety and feel more grounded and relaxed.
  1. Practice Mindfulness. ...
  2. Seek Companionship and Inspiration. ...
  3. Care for Yourself. ...
  4. Prepare and Plan Ahead. ...
  5. Change Your Mind-Set.

Why do teachers resist change in schools? ›

Loss of Control. Feeling that changes are being done to, rather than done by, those affected. Loss of Routine. Concerns that change will require administrators and teachers to question familiar (and comfortable) routines and habits.

Why is it important to address burnout? ›

It's important to address burnout because it has serious consequences for individuals' mental health — it's a risk factor for depression, substance abuse and even suicide. Burnout can also be contagious and often affects entire workplaces.

How do you address a burnout in healthcare? ›

3 Strategies for Reducing Burnout in Your Staff
  1. Lead with care. Meeting the demands associated with a constant state of emergency has been extremely hard on front-line workers. ...
  2. Invest in psychological support. ...
  3. Look at the schedule.

What would most reduce your feelings of burnout? ›

Being exposed to continual stress can cause us to burnout. Feelings of exhaustion, anxiety, and isolating from friends and family members can be some of the signs. However, eating a balanced diet, regular exercise, and getting a good night's sleep may prevent this stressed state.

What are the stages of burnout recovery? ›

You can think of the recovery process as building up a temporary wall between you and your job. Doing so entails the four simple steps of psychological detachment, relaxation, mastery, and control (Sonnentag, Mojza, Demerouti, & Bakker, 2012; Fritz, & Sonnentag, 2005).

How do you push through burnout? ›

How to Overcome Burnout and Stay Motivated
  1. What the Experts Say. ...
  2. Take breaks during the workday. ...
  3. Put away your digital devices. ...
  4. Do something interesting. ...
  5. Take long weekends. ...
  6. Focus on meaning. ...
  7. Make sure it's really burnout. ...
  8. Principles to Remember.
2 Apr 2015

Which of the following actions is most likely to reduce job burnout? ›

Which of the following actions is most likely to reduce job burnout? Burnout occurs when work is no longer meaningful to a person. Giving employees more say about how the work is done reduces burnout and makes employees more committed and engaged in their work.

How do you respond to an employee burnout? ›

In this article, we will explore six tips you can follow to help burned out employees and reduce costly turnover.
  1. Offer Rewards for No Reason At All. ...
  2. Remember Off-Duty Obligations. ...
  3. Avoid Excessive Communication. ...
  4. Give Employees a Voice. ...
  5. Encourage Stress Relievers. ...
  6. Make Mental Health a Priority.

When does teacher burnout happen? ›

Leiter, teacher burnout is defined as “psychological syndrome emerging as a prolonged response to chronic interpersonal stressors on the job.” Maslach and Leiter further explain that there are three main components that contribute to burnout: overwhelming (often emotional) exhaustion, feeling ineffective and lacking ...

How common is teacher burnout? ›

More than 44% of K-12 employees feel “always” or “very often” burned out. Teachers are suffering the most in this cohort, with more than half (52%) reporting burnout.

How does teacher burnout affect students? ›

Reduced motivation and achievement: Teacher burnout and depersonalization (i.e. feelings of disinterest towards one's job) negatively impacts teaching quality and student motivation (e.g. disruptive behaviour, low sense of belonging, weak belief in ability to succeed, lower grades).

Why teachers are stressed? ›

The Causes Of Teacher Stress

Teachers work longer hours than many other positions, which often leads to burnout and stress. Some of the many contributing factors are lack of resources, work-life balance and political issues.

How do you help a struggling teacher? ›

Another way to provide help for teachers is to give them professional development opportunities that are unique to their own individual needs. For example, if you have a teacher that struggles with classroom management, find an outstanding workshop which deals with classroom management and send them to it.

How do teachers deal with stress? ›

Try these out, and be sure to let us know what works best for you in the comments!
  1. Breathe (properly) The classroom can cause sensory overload. ...
  2. Embrace the stress. ...
  3. Be imperfect. ...
  4. Practice emotional first aid. ...
  5. Be grateful. ...
  6. Limit “grass is greener” thinking. ...
  7. Work smarter, not harder. ...
  8. Ask for help.

How teachers can take care of themselves? ›

Make time to talk with loved ones regularly, whether in person or virtually. Try going to dinner with friends once a month or simply spending quality time with your significant other. Set healthy boundaries. Oftentimes, teachers find themselves working past the school bell and well into the night and weekend.

How would you cope with the pressures of teaching? ›

How to Handle Stress As a Teacher
  1. Assess Your Stress Level. ...
  2. Schedule Time to Respond to Your Stress. ...
  3. Establish Realistic Goals. ...
  4. Focus on What You Can Control. ...
  5. Contact Your Colleagues for Advice. ...
  6. Participate in Stress-Relieving Activities. ...
  7. Prioritize Your Health, Family Time, and Quality Sleep. ...
  8. Relax.
28 Sept 2020

How does stress affect students and teachers? ›

Teacher stress is linked to poor teacher performance and poor student outcomes. Teacher turnover leads to instability and lower effectiveness in U.S. schools. Elementary school teachers who have greater stress and show more symptoms of depression create classroom environments that are less conducive to learning.

When teachers leave the profession what do they do? ›

36. Activities Director. Leadership roles in community service are often a good fit for people who've left the teaching profession. Many youth organizations and retirement communities have positions for people skilled at planning, coordinating, and leading fun recreational or educational activities.

How does teacher burnout affect teachers? ›

Burned-out teachers are usually less sympathetic toward the problems of students, and are less committed to their jobs. They develop lower tolerance for classroom disruptions, are less prepared for class, and are generally less productive.

Why is teacher burnout so high? ›

More than half of teachers in 2022 said their time for planning was significantly impacted due to staff shortages and a host of other reasons. If teachers don't have planning time at school, they have to make up for it at home, encroaching on their work-life balance, which can contribute to burnout.

What does a burnout mean? ›

Burnout is a state of emotional, physical, and mental exhaustion caused by excessive and prolonged stress. It occurs when you feel overwhelmed, emotionally drained, and unable to meet constant demands.

What is the most stressful part of being a teacher? ›

At any given time, teachers experience most, if not all, of the following stressors:
  • Receiving poor preparation for educating in training institutions.
  • Dealing with difficult school administrators.
  • Feeling unsafe in the school environment.
  • Long hours.
  • Low pay.
  • Lack of resources.
  • Class size —teacher to student ratio.
4 May 2021

What do teachers struggle with the most? ›

10 Challenges Of Teaching & How To Overcome Them
  1. Understanding the different learning challenges amongst students. ...
  2. Student family problems & bullying. ...
  3. Lack of funding. ...
  4. Lack of effective communication. ...
  5. Being encouraging and motivating under challenging times. ...
  6. Disciplining students. ...
  7. Endless paperwork & extended working hours.

How much do teachers struggle with stress and burnout? ›

A study from a coalition of mental health organizations of New Orleans found educators working during the pandemic reported rates of emotional distress similar to health care workers — 36% screened positive for anxiety, 35% for depression and 19% for post-traumatic stress syndrome.

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