Is personal emotional wellbeing a priority concern for you and the teachers at your school? Identifying and controlling negative stress is an important part of continuous professional development (CPD), as Elizabeth Holmes explains
The mark of a successful man is one that has spent an entire day on the bank of a river without feeling guilty about it.
Anonymous
Every now and then a shocking case of negligence hits the news which causes us all to focus on our practice. Most recently this has been the case of ex-headteacher Erica Connor, who has been awarded more than £400,000 for psychiatric injury suffered at work, and her subsequent loss of earnings. This issue, we take a look at some of the ways that a school can embed learning about wellbeing and the identification of negative stress throughout its focus on professional learning.
Being well at work
Erica Connor’s case was clearly an extreme one, and her suffering has evidently led to reflections within the teaching profession on the degree to which staff are pushed beyond reasonable limits. What happened to Erica remains utterly inexcusable but her intolerable experience can be a trigger for an examination of the way in which learning about negative stress is embedded within your school’s approach to professional learning.
Nurturing an environment in which negative stress is recognised, acknowledged and dealt with has multiple advantages. Children and young people are adept at recognising when institutions are too tolerant of the demands of negative stress, just as they can spot when an institution is tolerant of bullying. The inherent underlying tensions are impossible to hide and it’s likely that these will be passed on to pupils. Naturally, when the source of the stress (or bullying) is dealt with, the overall atmosphere of a school improves and pupil attainment is more likely to rise.
There are many ways to focus on understanding stress through professional learning. Here are some good places to start.
Crucial to all of this is balance. Without balance, school staff won’t be able to perform their duties to the best of their abilities; it’s as simple as that. But the context in which they work, and the professional learning framework that they use, has to meet them half way. It’s impossible to create balance if the structures in which you operate conspire against it. So you need to involve all tiers of your school’s work in supporting the quest for balance; governors, local authority, senior leadership team, support staff – everyone!
Find out more…
Download our information sheet on spotting the signs of negative stress.
This e-bulletin issue was first published in April 2009
About the author: Elizabeth Holmes qualified as a teacher at the Institute of Education, London and is the author of several books specialising in the areas of professional development and teacher well-being.
Comments
Negative Stress - An Individual Choice
We are all subjected to stress and we do need certain levels of stress in our lives to enable us to develop and grow as individuals and interact with others - it actually keeps us truly alive.
Stress is how we personally perceive the situation to be and how we react to it is what causes 'negative' or 'positive' stress.
Becoming aware of how one personally perceives and reacts to situations can come about through training, support and guidance, not only from trained professionals but also through a strong team of like minded people. The crucial elements is to find the right 'group' those who look for solutions rather than bemoan and dwell on the situation.
It is also true that those who have a truly balanced lifestyle including healthy eating*, sufficient water, regular physical activity (not gym work!) and a great attitude brought about through good reading and watching / learning materials and a great set of friends are actually are able to move what could be perceived by one to be a negative and mentally harmful situation to a positive and uplifting one.
*Healthy eating is about the right balance of nutrients, at least three times a day in sufficient quantities to ensure that 'sugar' levels are maintained at a regular level throughout the day and there is not a 'pull' on strength and emotion needing a quick fix from addictive substances like refined sugars, caffeine, etc. where the upshot is rapidly followed by a slump which is not good for the body nor the mental state.
Most of my clients, in trying to achieve this balance have two main 'excuses' - 'Time' and 'Life gets in the way'.
TIME: everyone has 24 hours in the day, it is how we chose to spend those hours that causes us to HAVE or HAVE NOT the time.
LIFE: everyone has life, it is how we chose to live life that cause it to be IN the way or NOT IN the way .
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