Every August, it starts again. The Pinterest boards fill with classroom decor, Target sells out of Crayola, and educators brace for the beautiful chaos of a new school year. But behind the welcome banners and curriculum nights, there’s a quieter, heavier truth: teachers are walking back into buildings already running on empty.
Google searches for “teacher anxiety” and “back-to-school stress” spike each August for a reason. And this isn’t just a personal issue. It’s a leadership one.
When stress saturates a school, learning takes a back seat. So, what do we do when the school year has already started and we still feel like the wheels might come off?
We pause. We breathe. And then we lead differently.
Before you launch into vision casting, test scores, and strategic goals, give your staff permission to land. Not just physically, but emotionally.
Presence over perfection. Every time.
Don’t let the tyranny of the urgent steal what your teachers need most: time to breathe and prepare.
Burnout doesn’t come from teaching. It comes from everything that gets in the way of it.
Too often, we slam into August like it’s a final exam. Instead, think of it as orientation.
This isn’t about coddling. It’s about retention.
The first kid who trusts you enough to cry. The first class that transitions smoothly. The first teacher who really laughs after weeks of white-knuckling. These are the moments that matter.
People stay where they feel seen.
Stress doesn’t become toxic because it exists. It becomes toxic when it’s hidden. When teachers feel they have to carry it alone.
Your job isn’t to fix every problem. It’s to create the space where teachers can face them together.
The bravest thing a leader can say right now is: “I see how hard this is. You’re not alone.”
Back-to-school season should be filled with hope, not dread. It should be about building, not bracing. Your staff doesn’t need a hero. They need a human. Someone who will lead with empathy, courage, and just enough rebellion to change the system from the inside out.
You can’t cancel stress. But you can build a culture where it doesn’t win.
Let’s make that the tradition we fight for.