20
Teacher-Tested Tips For a Stress-Free Year
Do you greet the
start of a new school year with anticipation liberally laced with anxiety?
Does the pressure of dealing with student lethargy, parental demands,
and administrative imperatives cause you to wear a path in your hardwood
floors? Is ulcer medication the first item on your weekly grocery list?
Have you tried all the traditional tips for lowering job-related stress
and found them ineffective? Have we got a tip (or 20) for you!
A great deal has been written about what teachers can do to ensure a successful
school year. The typical tips range from "plan, plan, and over-plan" to
"establish a cooperative relationship with parents, colleagues, and administrators."
Most of those tips are sensible and well intentioned, but few make a significant
difference in the average teacher's stress level. Teachers today need
more powerful and useful strategies for dealing with difficult students,
parents, and job-related responsibilities.
As you start this school year, therefore, throw out the traditional
wisdom of ivory-tower experts and try instead some of my
20 Teacher-Tested Tips for a Stress-Free Year

What do you do when the going gets tough? Share your favorite stress reliever on the StarrPoints message board.
Linda Starr, a former teacher and the mother of
four children, has been an education writer for nearly
two decades. Starr is the curriculum and technology editor for
Education World.
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- Start the year off right. Encourage your most difficult students to
sign up for your new "distance-learning" program. Distribute postage
stamps to students without a home computer.
- Contact parents and inform them that, in order to eliminate instructional
differences due to teacher quality, their children will be following
a curriculum in which success will be determined strictly by the effectiveness
of their parenting.
- Adjust your locks so classroom doors can only be opened from the outside
with a key. Be generous with restroom passes.
- Inform students that extra credit will be given for silence during
class discussions.
- As part of a native studies unit, teach your students how to perform
a rain dance. (This works best in cold climates.)
- Tell students you have a weak immune system and that they will be
excused immediately if they come to school complaining of a sore throat
or stomachache.
- Enroll in a wine-of-the-week club.
- Hold a daily lottery in which the winner gets to take the next day
off. Fix the results so your most difficult students win often.
- Inform your principal that you have developed a rare allergy to extra-curricular
activities.
- Obtain a just-in-case prescription for a mood enhancer. Fill it.
- Establish a year-long careers unit. Each week, trade places with one
of your students and allow that student to explore a teaching career
while you lounge in the back of the room. Practice heckling and snoring
to give students a realistic view of the profession.
- Inform your principal that you have developed a gender-related condition
that requires a 15-minute restroom break every hour.
- Keep your desk drawer well stocked with chocolate and Tums.
- Grade on a two-point curve -- A and B.
- Casually mention that your significant other is a juvenile court judge
and your brother is a mob enforcer. Joke about how effective that combination
can be in dealing with troublesome students.
- Start a petition for a Starbucks kiosk in the teachers' lounge.
- Administer a quiz every Friday afternoon. Announce that incorrect
answers will affect students' grades, but that absent students will
not be penalized or required to make up the quiz.
- Inform your principal that you have developed situational agoraphobia
and can no longer assume recess or cafeteria duties.
- Encourage parents to visit your classroom often. Casually mention
the piles of papers that need correcting -- and your hope that they
also will be willing to help out with cafeteria and recess duty.
- Take early retirement.