Workload is not experienced as a spreadsheet. It is experienced as broken attention, shortened patience, and late-night planning. When leaders understate this, staff feel unseen.
UNESCO estimates the world will need 44 million additional primary and secondary teachers by 2030. That includes replacing many who leave the profession. This is a sustainability issue, not only a recruitment one.
Lens one: name the pressure clearly
Teaching has always required care and judgement. Now it also sits inside constant change and rising complexity. Teachers juggle curriculum, assessment, inclusion, wellbeing, family expectations, compliance, and digital systems.
Pressure shows up in small ways that matter:
- thinking time disappears
- planning becomes rushed
- feedback becomes thinner
- emotional residue follows teachers home
Naming this reality is not pessimism. It is respect.
What leaders can remove, not add
If you want to protect teacher wellbeing and agency, start by cutting low-value tasks. Look for work that is duplicated, unclear, or done only for appearance.
Common examples include:
- meetings without decisions
- data tasks that no one uses
- reporting that repeats other reporting
- initiatives that compete for the same time
The risk of staying only in survival mode
If every conversation centres on burnout, teachers can become defined by depletion. The story becomes, “We are coping,” not “We are improving.” That framing shrinks professional identity.
It can also lead to shallow responses. A morning tea does not reduce cognitive overload. A wellbeing poster does not create planning time or coaching. Support matters. Design matters more.
Lens two: design conditions for strength
The second lens asks what helps teachers do strong work. Teachers thrive when priorities are few, expectations are clear, and feedback improves practice. They also thrive when they can learn with others, not in isolation.
OECD TALIS 2024 links higher teacher well-being with outcomes such as self-efficacy, job satisfaction, and commitment. It also examines the role of growth mindset and professional confidence. These signals point to a leadership task: build cultures where improvement feels safe.
The conditions teachers need most
Teacher wellbeing and agency grow when teachers have:
- time to think before they are asked to act
- fewer competing priorities in the week
- useful feedback tied to classroom practice
- professional learning that solves real problems
- teams where evidence and reflection are normal
Agency does not mean everyone chooses everything. It means teachers have voice and influence within a shared direction.
Leading with both lenses at once
School leaders need to hold care and improvement together. Too little leadership creates drift. Too much control creates compliance without commitment.
Try using this simple split in your leadership routines:
- Pressure lens: remove load, clarify priorities, protect recovery
- Possibility lens: coach growth, build trust, create shared ownership
Education Support’s Teacher Wellbeing Index reports that 76% of education staff are stressed. Signals like this are a warning. Workforce wellbeing and student experience are linked.
Try this in your school this week
Choose one small redesign that improves the system, not only the mood.
- Remove one task that adds noise but not value.
- Replace one meeting item with a coaching question.
- Tighten priorities to the few that matter this term.
- Ask staff what would free time for better teaching.
- Close the loop by acting on one piece of feedback.
Teacher wellbeing and agency are not an add-on. They are part of school improvement. When teachers are clear, supported, and connected, students feel it.
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