Skip to content
The Catholic Leader
  • Home
  • News
    • QLD
    • Australia
    • Regional
    • Education
    • World
    • Vatican
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Life
    • Family
    • Relationships
    • Faith
  • Culture
  • People
  • Subscribe
  • Jobs
  • Contribute
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • QLD
    • Australia
    • Regional
    • Education
    • World
    • Vatican
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Life
    • Family
    • Relationships
    • Faith
  • Culture
  • People
  • Subscribe
  • Jobs
  • Contribute
No Result
View All Result
The Catholic Leader
No Result
View All Result
Home

New course aims to tackle teacher burnout

byStaff writers
25 January 2022
Reading Time: 3 mins read
AA
teachers

Teacher burnout: One in five teachers leaves the profession within their first year. Photo: CNS

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A new course aims to address a growing crisis of teacher burnout by offering teachers training in mental health targeted at managing the stresses associated with the profession.

The first of its kind in Australia, Australian Catholic University’s Graduate Certificate in Mental Health for Teachers and Educators will be available online from this year as a post-graduate qualification for teachers.

Debra Phillips, who developed the ACU course, said the demands of delivering classes during the COVID-19 pandemic had brought to a head the ongoing crisis in teacher mental health.

Almost half of serving teachers say they have considered leaving the job due to stress and the Australian Council of Deans of Education predicts a huge shortage of teachers within three or four years, as more teachers abandon the profession in the face of increasing stress.

The global pandemic has added to the stresses of teaching. Photo: ACU Impact

Teachers who are already coping with the tremendous emotional burden of the job, the unrelenting workload and the unrealistic expectations of students and parents have faced the added pressures of switching to online classrooms often without adequate preparation or support.

“The pandemic kickstarted us to research what was needed, to get something ready and put it out into the public domain,” Dr Phillips said.

“This course is a timely, ethical response to the growing awareness around teacher stress and workload, exacerbated by the pandemic and its lockdowns.” .

Dr Phillips said teachers often came into the profession fired up with the capacity of a good teacher to change students’ lives but lost their passion through exhaustion and demoralisation.

One in five teachers leaves the profession within their first year, and this trend is expected to continue over the next five years.

“When the fire goes, the desire to do anything is no longer there because there is nothing left to give. You have lower staff morale in schools, and that feeds into the school climate,” Dr Phillips said.

Related Stories

ACU Book of Prayer invites God into ups and downs of student life

Mark Lysaght is casting a NET of faith across the waters

Mum, when will I see you again?

“Teachers no longer have the energy to be innovative or creative.”

Research shows teacher wellbeing is critical to student wellbeing.

“Quality student outcomes are dependent on teachers’ robust mental health, and without it, student
academic achievement can come undone,” Dr Phillips said.

While many universities offer courses that enable teachers to identify and manage student mental health and wellbeing, there has been little available for teachers themselves.

Dr Phillips said many teachers were unaware that their energy was draining away until they hit burnout which is a symptom of eroded mental health.

The new course will aim to provide educators with a foundational knowledge of the factors that surround, impact, and influence mental health and wellbeing over the many different stages of their teaching career.

As well as classroom teachers, Dr Phillips expects teaching executives, school counsellors, youth justice professionals and early
childhood educators to enrol.

“They will learn to identify the workplace and socio-cultural factors that create unease and distress – to target the ones that individual teachers can control and let go of the ones they cannot control,” Dr Phillips said.

One aim of the course is to ask teachers to reflect on why they came into teaching in the first place – and often it’s related to this idea that teaching is a vocation with a spiritual dimension.

The units are structured to reignite that fire and to help teachers to locate it once again.

“For many, the pandemic especially has eroded that desire, and the fire to teach has waned. We know that it can be rekindled,” Dr Phillips said.

ShareTweet
Previous Post

Back-to-school in 2022 like no other year

Next Post

In East European conflicts, Rome plays diplomatic role with aerial view

Staff writers

Related Posts

Prayerful resource: “I imagined staff and students being given a prayer book, published by their university, which they could use to find solace and support during their time here.”
QLD

ACU Book of Prayer invites God into ups and downs of student life

10 February 2022
Mark Lysaght is casting a NET of faith across the waters
People

Mark Lysaght is casting a NET of faith across the waters

8 February 2022
Mother and son: A photo of Fr Harry Chan when he was a child with his mother. Photo: Supplied
Faith

Mum, when will I see you again?

22 November 2021
Next Post
In East European conflicts, Rome plays diplomatic role with aerial view

In East European conflicts, Rome plays diplomatic role with aerial view

P.M. criticised as Aboriginal flag is ‘freed’, but indigenous communities remain deprived and in poverty

P.M. criticised as Aboriginal flag is 'freed', but indigenous communities remain deprived and in poverty

Pride is an obstacle to Christian unity, pope says

Pride is an obstacle to Christian unity, pope says

Popular News

  • Catholic relationship advisers offer five tips to look after your mental health

    Nationwide rosary event happening for Australia’s patroness this Saturday

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Angel’s Kitchen serves hot meals to the hungry in Southport

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Queensland election: The pro-life political parties committed to abortion law reforms

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Br Alan Moss remembered for a life of faith and learning

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Here are the stories of 10 new saints being canonised this Sunday

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
Search our job finder
No Result
View All Result

Latest News

Gwen has given 15,000 hours of cuddles to sick and premature babies
QLD

Gwen has given 15,000 hours of cuddles to sick and premature babies

by Joe Higgins
20 May 2022
0

BRISBANE grandmother Gwendoline Grant has clocked up 15,000 hours cuddling and caring for sick and premature babies...

Helping stroke survivors earns Ozcare volunteer national recognition

Helping stroke survivors earns Ozcare volunteer national recognition

20 May 2022
Br Alan Moss remembered for a life of faith and learning

Br Alan Moss remembered for a life of faith and learning

19 May 2022
Catholic relationship advisers offer five tips to look after your mental health

Nationwide rosary event happening for Australia’s patroness this Saturday

19 May 2022
Francis offers advice on politics: Seek unity, don’t get lost in conflict

Francis offers advice on politics: Seek unity, don’t get lost in conflict

19 May 2022

Never miss a story. Sign up to the Weekly Round-Up
eNewsletter now to receive headlines directly in your email.

Sign up to eNews
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Contribute
  • Jobs
  • Subscribe

The Catholic Leader is an Australian award-winning Catholic newspaper that has been published by the Archdiocese of Brisbane since 1929. Our journalism seeks to provide a full, accurate and balanced Catholic perspective of local, national and international news while upholding the dignity of the human person.

Copyright © All Rights Reserved The Catholic Leader
Accessibility Information | Privacy Policy | Archdiocese of Brisbane

The Catholic Leader acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people as the First Peoples of this country and especially acknowledge the traditional owners on whose lands we live and work throughout the Catholic Archdiocese of Brisbane.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • QLD
    • Australia
    • Regional
    • Education
    • World
    • Vatican
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Life
    • Family
    • Relationships
    • Faith
  • Culture
  • People
  • Subscribe
  • Jobs
  • Contribute

Copyright © All Rights Reserved The Catholic Leader

0
    0
    Your Cart
    Your cart is emptyChoose another Subscription
    Continue Shopping