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You Can Be An Outstanding Teacher Without Working Crazy Hours

Updated: Jun 25, 2022

School has been crazy. You’ve stayed up way too late way too many times. You’re exhausted, you’re overwhelmed, you’re stressed. And you constantly feel guilty that you don’t have more to give to your family.


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Teaching is totally taking over your life. But that’s just how it is. If you want to be a good teacher, this is what it looks like. Par for the course, right?

Maybe not.

There’s a common line of thinking in teaching that says If I want to be a good teacher, I have to put in the time. But is that really true?

Now there’s certainly an element of truth in the statement. Teaching is hard work. It requires prep and grading and creative thinking. And you can’t simply expect to show up with no planning and no preparation and teach with excellence.

Maybe you know a teacher who tries to do that – show up with no prep and just wing it. They aren’t prepared, they don’t put in the time, and their teaching (and their students) suffer for it.

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So what do we do? We double down. We become even more convinced that we HAVE to keep putting in the time because we certainly don’t want to be like that.

But what should “putting in the time” look like?

Should it look like staying up till midnight every night to finish our amazing lesson plans? Habitually spending half our Saturday correcting papers because “our students need the feedback”?

Should we always be short-changing our families because we HAVE to [fill-in-the-blank]? Must we constantly be working on school, yet never feeling done?

No. This simply can’t be right.


HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH?


We must work hard to serve our students, but we get in trouble when we don’t have a healthy understanding of what “putting in the time” should actually look like - when we let “put in the time” turn into “take over my life” or “drown me in guilt & stress because I CAN’T put in the time.”

Because here’s the truth bomb. (Are you ready for it?)

More time does NOT necessarily make you a better teacher. In fact, it could be HARMING your teaching.

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Wait, what!? Are you crazy!?

I promise I’m not.

Let me ask you this – When you work insane hours, are you energized or exhausted? Do you walk in to your classroom rested, excited, and composed – emotionally equipped to teach with passion and calmly resolve any classroom or interpersonal issues that come up? Or are you frazzled and on-edge, wondering how on earth you’re going to survive the day before it’s even begun?


See where I’m going with this?

Let’s add another layer. What happens when all the time you’re devoting to teaching starts to take a toll on your other roles and relationships?


The laundry is piling up, the sink hasn’t been cleared of dishes in weeks, and you feel like a horrible wife/mother, husband/father.



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You don’t have time to help your own kids with their homework or ask more than cursory questions about their day.

You’re too exhausted to enjoy an evening with your spouse – and you can’t imagine that changing anytime soon.

How does that make you feel about teaching?


Soon the job you dreamed about and loved starts to becomes something you resent. Oh, you still say you love it – because you really do WANT to love it – but it’s just too much. You’re not sure you can keep doing this.

You’re headed straight for burn out. And if something doesn’t change, you may not even be a teacher in five years.


Wait a second. Let that soak in. Left unchecked, your desire to be a good teacher – to put in the time for your students – could lead you AWAY from teaching altogether.

And where does THAT leave your students?

I submit to you again – spending too much time on teaching can actually HARM your teaching.

HAVE YOU CONSIDERED THE COST?


But wait – there’s more! Let’s circle back so as not to gloss over something extremely important. Aside from the damage to your demeanor and the very real danger of burnout, spending too much time on teaching can have devastating effects on your health, your relationships, your family, and your other God-given roles.


Please hear me – your role as a teacher is vital. You have been called to an important task, a crucial mission. But teaching is NOT the only role in your life that matters. Other roles (like parenting) matter just as much – if not more – than teaching. So we cannot focus solely on “putting in the time for our students” and leave no room to put in the time for anything else.

We just can’t.



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I could park here awhile, but for sake of time (see what I did there – wink wink), let’s move on. I hope you’re starting to see that “put in the time” CANNOT mean “let teaching take over your whole life.” But by now you’re probably getting frustrated.


HOW TO FIND BALANCE AS A TEACHER


Okay, Tasha. I get that I SHOULDN’T let teaching take over my life, but I have no choice. It really DOES take a ton of time to do _____, and there’s no way I can be effective without it.

I totally hear you, but is there really no other way?

Chance are there IS another option, another way to be just as effective in much less time. But in order to find it, you must do two things.

First, you must make balance a priority. As long as you tell yourself you’re doing what you have to do, nothing will change. But as soon as you decide that you cannot keep going at this pace, that you have to stop working such crazy hours, and that you must somehow make time for your other roles, you unleash your creativity.

And then….

Second, stop saying “I can’t” or “I have to” and start asking “How can I?”

Instead of saying, “I can’t leave work by 4. That’s nuts.” Ask, “How could I leave work by 4? What would have to happen to make that a possibility?”

Instead of saying, “I have to write time-consuming notes on all of my students’ essays,” ask, “How could I give valuable feedback without taking tons of time?” (You may come up with an amazing solution for grading writing quickly. (Like the ones I talk about in my Patreon community 5 minutes podcast).

Amazing things happen when you decide you CANNOT take forever on something and then ask yourself, “How can I do a great job on this in a reasonable amount of time?”

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I honestly believe this was how I was able to teach effectively without taking much work home. I constantly asked myself these questions and came up with tons of time-saving ideas as a result. That left me with time available to invest in the aspects of teaching that were important to me and that I wanted to devote time to.

And that’s the great thing about this process. When you determine to make balance a priority and start seeking creative solutions to make it possible, you soon find yourself more in control of where you spend your time – and you’re able to choose to invest it in the things that matter to you – both personally and professionally.

FINDING CREATIVE SOLUTIONS


As you can probably tell, I get a bit fired up about this topic. It’s just too important, and I see too many teachers weighed down and overwhelmed when they just don’t have to be (or at least, not nearly to the extent that they are). For years I wanted to help but wasn’t sure how. Then recently I figured out that I could use my own experience of being burnt out and overcoming it and share my knowledge with other teachers especially first time teachers so they don't make the same mistakes that I did and want to leave the profession early.

That's why inside my patreon community I am helping teachers find workable solutions to all those “How can I….?” questions. I have started building the framework of the 30 hour teacher work week to put teachers on the path to balance. This course is going to give teachers actionable steps that they can begin taking right away to free up time for the things that matter most.

Needless to say, I am very excited about this new course which will be available soon in Tier 5 (The smart Investor Teacher) along with my other courses and guides inside my Patreon community. Inside this course you will be hearing teachers sharing their stories – of how simple tweaks to their routines are making their lives so much easier, of how they no longer lug home their overflowing teacher bags, and of how much time they’re saving (I’m talking 3, 5, even 10+ hours off their workweek). All while being MORE effective than ever. Crazy amazing stuff!


This course is called 30 Hour Work Week. But before you tell me “I could never work only 30 hours,” (and I tell you to stop saying, “I can’t”), please realise that the course is NOT about the number 30 at all. The number 30 is designed to take you aback and get you thinking: Wait, 30? Is that even possible? How many hours do I actually work? SHOULD I be working that many hours?


So if you’re ready to finally make balance a priority – and you’re thinking you could use some help answering all those “How can I….?” questions, I hope you’ll join us in The Early Years Create Patreon Community HERE and find out more about all the support, mentoring, coaching and guides I can help you with.

And since my plan is for this course to be open for enrollment a couple times a year, join us in the meantime in our Cake Pop Tier Community, where you will get updates and insights and be one of the first to know about when it launches.

Remember, Don’t be bound by the guilt that says “I have to.” Don’t be chained by limiting beliefs that say, “I can’t.” Remember the stakes, determine to fight for balance, and start searching for the creative solutions that come from “How can I?”

Be excellent. Put in the time. Just not too much.


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Hello everyone, I'm Tasha Fletcher.

Tasha is an established, early years specialist, mentor, podcaster, DSL and experienced head teacher specialising in child development, play based learning and the education of children in the early years for over 18 years both locally and internationally. At early years create you can find out about the online training, podcasts, courses that Tasha offers as well as get brilliant ideas and practical approaches to use in early years education through her resources, blogs, guides, mentorship and consulting to help you improve your practice in a play based classroom.

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