Self-care, balance and the IB learner profile

Anecdotal evidence suggests that educators tend to expend themselves for their students with little thought for themselves, often leading to excessive stress, work-related illness, burnout, and attrition. The following discussion adapted from Self-Care for Teachers (Allen, 2013) reviews the internat...

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Main Author: Matthew Allen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad San Ignacio de Loyola 2013-12-01
Series:Propósitos y Representaciones
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.usil.edu.pe/index.php/pyr/article/view/37
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spelling doaj-6b387f60ba474e72a357f85dee933fcb2020-11-24T21:11:42ZengUniversidad San Ignacio de LoyolaPropósitos y Representaciones2307-79992310-46352013-12-011213115910.20511/pyr2013.v1n2.3736Self-care, balance and the IB learner profileMatthew Allen0Universidad San Ignacio de Loyola, Lima, PerúAnecdotal evidence suggests that educators tend to expend themselves for their students with little thought for themselves, often leading to excessive stress, work-related illness, burnout, and attrition. The following discussion adapted from Self-Care for Teachers (Allen, 2013) reviews the international research on this topic and proposes an alternative approach. The research not only confirms this persistent pattern of excessive stress, overwork, and illness but also confirms educators’ typical inattention to their own needs. Conventional approaches to the problem of excessive stress, overwork and its attendant maladies focus on the external: management strategies such as induction and mentoring programs, salary incentives, or more recently, teacher help lines and wellness programs. The author advocates a more balanced approach, looking inward as well as outward for solutions to this perplexing problem. Although balance is often conceived as a static ideal of symmetry and proportion, it may be best understood–especially in an educational context– as the practical dynamic process of “moving artfully between extremes”, a definition which might equally apply to classroom management, curriculum design, assessment strategies, professional development, prevalent attitudes, and work-life rhythm.http://revistas.usil.edu.pe/index.php/pyr/article/view/37Excessive stressbalanceself-care.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew Allen
spellingShingle Matthew Allen
Self-care, balance and the IB learner profile
Propósitos y Representaciones
Excessive stress
balance
self-care.
author_facet Matthew Allen
author_sort Matthew Allen
title Self-care, balance and the IB learner profile
title_short Self-care, balance and the IB learner profile
title_full Self-care, balance and the IB learner profile
title_fullStr Self-care, balance and the IB learner profile
title_full_unstemmed Self-care, balance and the IB learner profile
title_sort self-care, balance and the ib learner profile
publisher Universidad San Ignacio de Loyola
series Propósitos y Representaciones
issn 2307-7999
2310-4635
publishDate 2013-12-01
description Anecdotal evidence suggests that educators tend to expend themselves for their students with little thought for themselves, often leading to excessive stress, work-related illness, burnout, and attrition. The following discussion adapted from Self-Care for Teachers (Allen, 2013) reviews the international research on this topic and proposes an alternative approach. The research not only confirms this persistent pattern of excessive stress, overwork, and illness but also confirms educators’ typical inattention to their own needs. Conventional approaches to the problem of excessive stress, overwork and its attendant maladies focus on the external: management strategies such as induction and mentoring programs, salary incentives, or more recently, teacher help lines and wellness programs. The author advocates a more balanced approach, looking inward as well as outward for solutions to this perplexing problem. Although balance is often conceived as a static ideal of symmetry and proportion, it may be best understood–especially in an educational context– as the practical dynamic process of “moving artfully between extremes”, a definition which might equally apply to classroom management, curriculum design, assessment strategies, professional development, prevalent attitudes, and work-life rhythm.
topic Excessive stress
balance
self-care.
url http://revistas.usil.edu.pe/index.php/pyr/article/view/37
work_keys_str_mv AT matthewallen selfcarebalanceandtheiblearnerprofile
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