Year’s End: An Opportunity for Intentional Reorganization for Teachers


12 December 2025


Learn how to turn the end of the year into a strategic moment to reflect, reorganize your planning, and build a lighter and more sustainable teaching routine, drawing on current research about teacher well-being and workload.

The end of the school year typically means closing out classes, grading exams, and finalizing curriculum. But research on teacher workload reveals something more: this period offers a strategic opportunity for reorganization, one that can prevent accumulated stress and overwork before they take root.

What the Research Says About Teacher Overload

Teachers’ work extends far beyond classroom hours. Preparing materials, grading, filling out forms, managing administrative tasks, and attending meetings consume a significant portion of their schedule, often without formal recognition.

Multiple national and international studies indicate that many teachers regularly work far more than their contracted hours. These extra demands arise from last-minute requests, tasks that do not appear in official workload calculations, or responsibilities that shift to teachers by default. This constant accumulation generates a persistent feeling of time scarcity, which directly affects health, retention in the profession, and the quality of pedagogical work.

Another recurring finding is the connection between overload and emotional strain. Teachers facing intense work schedules report higher levels of exhaustion, even when they manage to maintain strong classroom performance. This reinforces an important point: dedication and commitment are not enough when the workload is structurally disproportionate.

Studies also observe that increased time spent on non-instructional tasks, pressure for measurable results, and alternating between different teaching modalities have intensified teachers’ pace of work, reducing the time available for planning, study, and rest. Taken together, these findings show that teacher burnout is not circumstantial. It has structural roots and tends to worsen during moments of transition, such as the end of the school year.

Why the End of the Year Is Strategic

Given this context, the end of the year can be used intentionally as a moment to:

  • Conduct a realistic assessment of your workload: understand how you divide your time among teaching, preparation, grading, administrative tasks, and additional responsibilities, bringing visibility to demands that often remain hidden.
  • Reorganize pending tasks and accumulated responsibilities: use this period to sort materials, records, and plans, avoiding the transfer of unfinished work into the next year.
  • Plan the upcoming year with clear boundaries: intentionally create space for lesson preparation, grading, rest, and self-care, based on concrete data from your own routine.
  • Promote self-care and well-being: after an intense year, allow time for physical and emotional recovery to reduce the risk of burnout.
  • Engage in dialogue with the school about institutional demands: discuss task distribution, administrative support, and possible adjustments, using evidence to support proposals for collective reorganization.

Practical Strategies Inspired by Research Findings

Based on the studies and the specific context of the school year’s end, a few practices can help teachers begin the next cycle in a more balanced way:

  • Document activities and the time invested in teaching, planning, grading, meetings, and administrative duties to create a clear picture of your actual workload.
  • Reflect on the year as a whole, identify what worked well, what created difficulties, what required more energy, and what practices could be adjusted.
  • Reorganize pedagogical materials, files, and documents—both physical and digital—to reduce clutter and make the next period easier to start.
  • Set aside time for rest and leisure during vacation or break periods, ensuring meaningful physical and mental recovery.
  • Talk with colleagues or school leadership about task distribution, resource sharing, and forms of support, using data to strengthen collective requests.

A Long-Term Perspective: Making Teaching Sustainable

When the end of the year is seen not merely as a closing period, but as an opportunity for intentional reorganization, teachers can reshape the way they manage their professional routines. With planning grounded in evidence, attention to personal well-being, and active institutional dialogue, it becomes possible to reduce overload and create a more sustainable teaching practice for educators and for the quality of learning.

The research also highlights the need for institutions and public policies to recognize the essential time required for activities beyond classroom instruction, such as planning, grading, professional development, and rest. Only then can teaching be valued in a way that aligns with its complexity, and burnout can stop being treated as an unavoidable condition.

References

CREAGH, S.; THOMPSON, G.; MOCKLER, N.; STACEY, M.; HOGAN, A. Workload, work intensification and time poverty for teachers and school leaders: a systematic research synthesis. [n.p.], 2023. Available here. Accessed on: Dec. 10, 2025.

DANTAS, N. M. E.; CARNEIRO, L. S. S.; SOUSA, A. S. Adoecimento de professores universitários: a Síndrome de Burnout em docentes de IES privadas. Revista DELOS, Curitiba, v. 18, n. 69, p. 1–24, 2025. Available here. Accessed on: Dec. 10, 2025.

FARBER, K.; BISHOP, P. A. (2025). Burnout theory, pandemic teaching, and teacher efficacy: What is lost when schools return to “normal?” Journal of Educational Research and Practice, 15, 1–18. Available here. Accessed on: Dec. 10, 2025.

FITZSIMONS, S.; SMITH, D. S. “Just plough on and pretend it’s not happening”: Understanding burnout in teacher educators in Ireland and the United Kingdom. International Journal of Educational Research Open, v. 9, p. 100491, 2025. ISSN 2666-3740. Available here. Accessed on: Dec. 10, 2025.

FLORIPES, A. D. S.; LIMA, A. S.; OSHIYAMA, C. C. C.; ALMENDROS, D. S. O.; HOLTZ, K. B. J. X.; JESUS, L. F. D.; RAMALHO, M. C.; MORAES, M. A. V. A sobrecarga docente e seus reflexos na qualidade do ensino na educação regular. Revista FT, 2025. Available here. Accessed on: Dec. 10, 2025.

HULME, M.; BEAUCHAMP, G.; WOOD, J.; BIGNELL, C. (2024). Teacher Workload Research Report 2024. University of the West of Scotland. Available here. Accessed on: Dec. 10, 2025.

MAGTALAS, S. (2024). Teacher’s Workload in Relation to Burnout and Work Performance. International Journal of Multidisciplinary: Applied Business and Education Research, 5, 4111–4123. Available here. Accessed on: Dec. 10, 2025.

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