How To Survive Teacher Stress Burnout

A lot of dance teachers get burnt out and frustrated at certain times of the year. Here is a guide on how to survive teacher stress burnout.

The trick of course is to stay focused and positive, but it, as you know, is easier said than done.

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What Causes Teacher Stress Burnout?

Many factors can cause teacher stress burnout. In a dance studio it could be caused by any of the following:

  • Exam or competition stress
  • Feeling frustrated that your students are not performing to their full potential
  • Feeling frustrated at your pupils’ lack of enthusiasm
  • Using up all your energy to try and energize your pupils
  • Long working hours and not looking after yourself properly
  • Working when you are sick
  • To much stress on creativity and finding new ideas for your classes
  • Perfectionist tendencies which many teachers have – nothing is ever good enough
  • Pessimistic view of yourself and the world
  • The need to be in control and a reluctance to delegate to others
  • High-achieving, type A personality

Sometimes you get the feeling that you are putting everything into your students and your studio, and you are getting nothing in return, and all this energy expenditure leaves you little energy and time to spend with your family. You need to find a balanced work and home environment, as this will also affect your long-term health.

How Do I Know If I am Stressed and Burnt Out?

Here are some of the danger signs:

  • You feel unappreciated or not good enough
  • Every day seems to be a bad day
  • Caring about your work or home life seems like a waste of energy to you
  • You’re exhausted and tired all the time.
  • The majority of your day is spent on tasks you find either boring or overwhelming
  • You are battling to sleep and feel tired most of the time
  • Lowered immunity
  • Increase in minor aches and pains
  • Feeling a detachment from others
  • Using food, alcohol, or drugs to cope
  • Procrastinating more often
  • Taking your frustration out on others

You may need to seek some professional help.

teacher stress burnout

What is the Difference Between Stress and Burnout?

There is actually a difference between the two.

Stress:

Stress comes before burnout. You feel over-engaged and your emotions are overactive. Everything feels urgent and you feel hyperactive but lose energy just as quickly.

The End of Stress: Four Steps to Rewire Your Brain

Burnout:

This usually follows being overstressed. Your emotions are blunted. You feel a loss of motivation and hope. You feel disengaged and sometimes depressed. You may feel life is not worth living. If you reach this stage, you will need to seek out support before things get more out of hand.

Curing Burnout: Recover From Job Burnout and Start Living A Healthy Work-Life Balance Today (Fatigue, Burnout, Burnout Recovery, Recovering From Burnout, Burnout Stress, Burnout Cure Book 1)

Help With Teacher Stress Burnout

Getting a great book on the subject may help you to sort through some of your issues. Seeing a professional in extreme cases is also a good idea.

How about adopting some of these habits:

  • Start your day by doing something relaxing. Rather than jumping out of bed as soon as you wake up, spend at least fifteen minutes meditating, writing in your journal, doing gentle stretches, or reading something that inspires you. This one works well for me when I manage to wake up early enough.
  • Make sure to look after yourself. You need to get enough sleep, eat properly, and engage in regular physical activity.
  • Try not to overextend yourself. Learn the art of saying “no” to requests on your time. If you find this difficult, remind yourself that saying “no” allows you to say “yes” to the things that you truly want to do.
  • Set a time each day when you completely disconnect from technology. Put away your laptop and turn off your phone.
  • Creativity is a powerful antidote to burnout. Try something new, start a fun project, or resume a favorite hobby. Choose activities that have nothing to do with the work that you do.

More Tips for Dance Teachers

Sometimes you just need a few days off and a change of scenery to rectify the situation. Remember your student’s negative moods and feelings also transfer onto you, and you need to keep yourself positive and upbeat, or your job could seem more like a nightmare.

Remember to take sufficient time out for yourself, eat healthily, and get adequate sleep and this will go a long way to keeping your physical and emotional side in sync.

Remember that you as the dance teacher are meant to be a positive source of inspiration for your students and parents, so looking after yourself first will go a long way to keep you from getting the dreaded teacher stress burnout.

7 thoughts on “How To Survive Teacher Stress Burnout”

  1. Great article with informative information plus great tips and explaining about stress and being burned out. This could apply for most people even if you’re not a teacher, I have experienced these symptoms and signs myself many times. Teachers do care very much about their students, this I think is why they become so stressed at times.

    Great Job

    Reply
  2. I face this problem of teacher stress mostly when I have to do all preparation for the end of semester exams, on this time are full of coursework to be created before deadline. This is when I get so fully stressed with Teacher stress that makes me feel getting old in a week. Stomach problems because of stress, as well as loss of weight and sleeplessness.

    It’s nice what you have written on your page, as it is so helpful. I have printed some ways to avoid teacher stress problems as they may help me and others like me. Keep it up.

    Reply
  3. Great Articles you write there, I believe this applies to even my lecturer during my Degree where all of them face this problem when we didn’t do our best.

    You are right about how this may help the burnout effect and it can apply to anybody working in the industry. 🙂

    awesome articles, i gonna read your other articles as well 🙂

    Reply
  4. Thank you so much for this article!
    There is also something I recently learned of: compassion fatigue. I was recently diagnosed with this. As a dance teacher, I often found that because I was so connected to emotions and utilized this in creative ways the empathic part of my personality that I dedicated so much time to lesson planning and production. After 3 years of feeling like I was burning the candle and both ends and that was my “norm.” I was forced to take a break. While I was doing what I loved, I was sleeping less, worked many additional hours expecting that this is what I “should” do. Self care, structure, realistic expectations of myself and self care are what I am doing right now to recharge. I learned the hard way that balance between work and home are key to healthy life. This for me was much easier said than done for too long. Take good care of you!

    Reply
    • Thank you for your comment Puanani. It is definitely easier said than done, and we need to learn to take better care of ourselves, especially as you are giving so much of yourself to others on a daily basis.

      Best of luck and keep dancing alive.

      Reply

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