After years
of spending excessive numbers of hours preparing lessons, grading papers,
taking classes, pursuing additional licenses, facilitating professional
development, the toll was visible through high levels of stress and excessive
weight gain. I was exhausted.
Reflecting
on the past year, several key changes/events made the greatest impact.
Finally, I
looked carefully at the causes of my unhealthy stress. While I can’t eliminate
every element, I have been able to significantly reduce it. I feel better and have
a new balance in my life. In return, I have gained more time. A few changes I
made as an educator include:
- Quit grading everything – Now students check much of their work providing them instant feedback. (At Edcamp this weekend, another educator suggested grading essays for one or two rubric indicators instead of everything. I look forward to trying this tip.)
- Cooperative work groups – Letting students work with partners and small groups on the majority of assignments. They complete the last few questions independently which I use for assessing their conceptual understanding and growth.
- Using technology for assessment – This has simplified my grading and updating my grade book.
- Letting go – For things I have no control over or cannot impact, I refocus. My time and energy is spent supporting my colleagues which is much more fun.
I learned,
to feel better, I needed to make changes which would have a long-term impact. If
your stress levels are up or your motivation is dropping, what can you change
which possesses a long-term impact?