Self-Care For Teachers

Self-Care For Teachers Sharing information to help teachers practise self-care, avoid burn-out and improve wellbeing. Why Self-Care for Teachers? Self-care changed my life.

There's a lot of talk in the media and political circles these days that teachers need to do more, be more, achieve more. The government invests a lot of resources in the training and ongoing development of teachers, and they expect to see results. Meanwhile, there is an increasing number of teachers suffering stress-related illness and burnout. Some of these educators struggle through at a reduced capacity, while others leave the profession for good. Either way, something clearly needs to change. Happy, healthy people are more effective teachers and more productive members of society. Many educators put everyone else's health and happiness before their own, in the hope of making a difference. However, this is backfiring because the external expectations and demands of the job continue to increase despite the dwindling reserves of teachers. The plane safety message is all about self-care. Fit your own oxygen mask before helping others. This is what we as teachers need to learn and practise in order for us to go on making a difference long into the future. About Self-Care for Teachers

Self-Care for Teachers is an online teacher wellbeing hub founded by Ellen Ronalds Keene. It began life as a Facebook Support Group and soon expanded to a blog, coaching services and a series of wellbeing resources. Ellen is a teacher, wellbeing coach and passionate self-care advocate who understands the demands of the teaching profession. She has been on her own journey of illness and burnout, and knows how powerful self-care can be in reclaiming health and happiness, both in the classroom and in life. About Ellen

Ellen Ronalds Keene is a writer, teacher and coach specialising in school and teacher wellbeing. She is passionate about preventing teacher burnout and improving the health and happiness of teachers and the whole school community. Through her website, podcast and platforms, Ellen shares tips, tricks and techniques for practising self-care and improving wellbeing. Through personal coaching and meditation teaching, she guides and supports her clients to make the changes in their life needed to achieve more work-life harmony. Ellen also supports teachers through the free Facebook support group Self-Care for Teachers. It is her mission to empower teachers to be their best selves, because when we give to ourselves we have more to give to others. After all, you can't pour from an empty cup! When she isn’t teaching, coaching or practicing self-care herself, she enjoys writing a blog and reading about health, wellbeing and human behaviour. The rest of the time she likes to hang out at home in trackie-dacks with her husband and cat. Ellen says: “Over the last 10 years I have learnt the hard way that life is not only easier and I am happier when I look after me, but I am also able to look after others better too. I am a better teacher, colleague, wife, daughter, friend and human when I prioritise looking after myself. I really want to help others feel better too, everywhere, but particularly in the teaching profession where I see a great need for more policies and system which support wellbeing.”

My annual Self-Care September campaign starts tomorrow!Here's the overview of the 30 self-care activities that I have pu...
31/08/2025

My annual Self-Care September campaign starts tomorrow!

Here's the overview of the 30 self-care activities that I have put together as prompts for the month. You can also get these in a calendar form in a free PDF download https://selfcareforteachers.com.au/calendar

Every day in September I'll be sharing a prompt for a self-care activity you could try.

Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to set aside an extra 15 minutes for yourself every day in September to refill your cup in whatever way you need.

You can follow the prompts, or do your own thing, but either way, I'd love for you to join in by posting a picture, video or story of your self-care activity and tagging me

This challenge is totally free, you won't get in trouble if you miss a day and you don't have to sign up to join in.

However, I have also created some extra resources for those that want to take the challenge to the next level: a private podcast audio course and workbook where I share not only the basic prompts but also some further information to support and inspire you when using them. Sign up here https://selfcareforteachers.com.au/challenge

It's SO important that we are creating a culture in education where we all look after ourselves and encourage each other in prioritising wellbeing.

It's not a panacea by any means, but I believe this 30-day challenge can be a powerful first step in building a habit of putting yourself on the to-do list and cultivating more wellbeing.

I invite you to participate in whatever way feels good to you — just on social media, using the free PDF calendar or with the 30 Days of Self-Care Workbook + Private Podcast course.

Take some time now to decide what a fantastic outcome would be for you from this 30-day challenge. For YOU, not the colleague next to you in the staffroom.

Because you’re a person first and a teacher second and you’re worthy of your own care!

We start tomorrow.

Are you in? Drop me a 💖 below

Teachers don’t strike lightly. They go above and beyond for their students every day, and when they take industrial acti...
05/08/2025

Teachers don’t strike lightly. They go above and beyond for their students every day, and when they take industrial action, it’s because something is deeply broken.

As a former Queensland state school teacher and Queensland Teachers' Union member, I know how heavy this decision feels.

The fact that it was an almost unanimous vote by union members across the state speaks volumes.

It should never have gotten to this point and the fact that it has is because the current Queensland government has made it clear they do not value or respect teachers in the way that they should.

In my 10 years running Self-Care for Teachers, I’ve had countless private conversations with teachers about these same struggles that are being raised as part of this industrial action.

The workforce shortage we are currently facing across the nation has not come out of nowhere. It's been building for over a decade and repeatedly governments at all levels have paid lip service but actually done very little practically to change the systemic issues that are causing it.

This isn’t just about pay (though fair, competitive salaries are critical to retaining great teachers). In fact, most of the general public doesn't even realise that teachers are giving up a day of paid work in order to strike today.

This is about listening to those on the front line, the experts who actually know what is needed in our education system, and about governments making long-term investments in the people who are delivering care and instruction for our students and communities.

Striking is an act of self-care and community care: protecting the professional wellbeing of teachers and standing up for much-needed investment in the future of our education system.

I stand with teachers today, and everyday.

With deep respect and solidarity,

Ellen Ronalds Keene
Teacher Wellbeing & Career Coach, host of the Teacher Wellbeing podcast
selfcareforteachers.com.au

Address

Toowoomba, QLD

Opening Hours

8am - 12pm

Telephone

+61474721296

Website

https://linktr.ee/selfcareforteachers

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