Like health practitioners of all stripes, 2020 and 2021 are years that many teachers in COVID-19 affected areas would probably rather forget. Undoubtedly acquiring new skills – and a greater sense of agility and resilience – benefitted many teachers, but ...
More »How reflective practice can prevent burnout for teachers and students: opinion
Reflective practice has been adopted by teachers for many years to ensure that they are meeting the needs of students. It helps teachers understand their personal areas of development and addresses underlying beliefs and assumptions about learning and teaching in ...
More »Leading teacher wellbeing: the next school improvement frontier – opinion
Walk into any school and you will find teachers who are smiling, chatting happily with students and who seem to be enjoying each day. Scratch below the surface though and what you may notice is that these teachers, who on ...
More »How ‘structural conditions’ are affecting teachers’ work and emotions in Australia
An education expert is concerned that the increasing pressures and demands facing Australian teachers is limiting the spaces available for them to speak frankly about their emotions and learn from colleagues and mentors. Dr Saul Karnovsky spoke to Education Review ...
More »Why teachers can no longer ‘hide’ their emotions
A new article highlights how teachers believe they have to hide their emotions in the profession, which is correlating with both mental health problems and high rates of burnout in the sector. In a piece published in The Conversation, Curtin ...
More »Three practical steps for school leaders and teams to help process 2020
This year has been nothing short of extraordinary for all Australian school leaders, teams and school communities. It has required an extraordinary level of resilience and energy. It probably comes as no surprise that staff wellbeing is one of the ...
More »How nurturing relationships can assist student and teacher wellbeing during COVID-19
While strong and positive student-teacher relationships are always important, they take on a new level of significance during a pandemic, a UNSW educational psychology lecturer says. In a climate of fear, change and disruption, Dr Rebecca Collie argues that developing ...
More »Study finds beginning teachers perform ‘as well or better’ than more experienced colleagues
New research has found that no concrete evidence exists to suggest that new teachers are less competent than their experienced counterparts, despite reforms and recommendations in recent years to improve the quality of teaching graduates. Led by Professor Linda Graham ...
More »Schools and teachers are ‘hope machines’ for students – Podcast
EducationReview · 'They're hope machines': How schools and teachers can support distressed students - Podcast The hellish summer bushfires and the current COVID-19 pandemic has made 2020 a year most of us would rather forget. But one group, in particular, ...
More »Bushfires then COVID-19: supporting student and teacher wellbeing after a crisis
Students and teachers need more support from schools and policymakers to cope with traumatic events. The call, from University of Melbourne researchers, is contained within a new report which held the twin economic and health crisis – the catastrophic bushfires ...
More »