UPDATE: This post was written in 2014. Since that time, there’s been quite a bit of “teacher-shaming” online in various places, where teachers are made to feel as if they’re not dedicated to kids if they look forward to their time off.
I wouldn’t write an article like this one today, because I don’t want to add any guilt to teachers’ plates. I’m leaving the original post up because this was in fact my experience–but please know, it does NOT have to be yours.
I rarely have any idea how many days are left before a special event. I’m just not the kind of person who likes to countdown to anything, from days until a family vacation to days before a holiday. Though some people find it motivating to know how many days they have left, the countdown mentality just hasn’t served me well, especially when I’m anxious for summer break.
Though I don’t have a problem with other people counting down (hey, whatever brings you happiness and keeps you motivated!), I personally prefer to look forward without counting down. Here’s why:
1. Counting days turned the end of the school year into a “sentence” in which I was just biding my time.
Instead of getting up each day with the intention of enjoying my kids, I was just going through the motions and waiting for time to pass.
2. Counting days drained my sense of purpose, which made the school year feel even longer.
Because I was overly focused on the countdown, time seemed to pass even more slowly. I wasn’t focused on helping my students learn anymore, and without that sense of purpose and corresponding accomplishment to motivate me, it felt like I spent all my time on tedious paperwork and assessment tasks. I also had more behavioral problems to deal with, since the kids picked up on my vibe and they, too, assumed no more learning was going to take place. No wonder it seemed like the year was never going to end!
3. Counting days tricked me into believing the time I had left with the kids was insignificant.
Eh, there’s only 24 days of school left, why bother trying something new and innovative with the kids? What’s the point of helping a student understand something I’ve already explained a hundred times—he hasn’t gotten it in the last 156 days, why would he get it now? If I’d dug a little deeper, I would have recalled the times I’d seen huge learning gains or socio-emotional breakthroughs in the course of a single lesson. But instead, I assumed that I wouldn’t be able to accomplish anything worthwhile in the dozens of hours I had left with my students. I let exhaustion shake my belief in my effectiveness as a teacher and my students’ ability to learn and simply gave up.
4. Counting days caused me to miss some of the best opportunities to enjoy my kids.
The end of the school year can actually be a really special chance to connect with students since testing is done and some of the pressure is lessened. I always had a few fun activities planned, but often had a hard time being present with my students because I was so focused on the number of days I had left to get administrative things done. I was mentally checked out and so I missed out on making some awesome memories with my students.
5. Counting days is based on the presumption that today cannot be as good as the future will be.
Because I “couldn’t wait” until the last day of school, I wasn’t focused on what I could have been enjoying or experiencing on the current day. And yet the truth is this: all we have is the present moment. The day we’re hoping for may not arrive, or we might find that our life circumstances are tremendously different when it does, and the carefree fun times we had envisioned never come to pass. Who can afford to waste the time we have right now by wishing for an unpromised tomorrow? Every single day is a chance to do something meaningful and looks for ways to enjoy doing it.
What are your thoughts–does counting down until the last day of school give you more energy or drain it away? What do you do to stay motivated at this time of year?
Angela Watson
Founder and Writer
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I agree but for the reason that if I know the number of days, it stresses me to think that I “only have___ days” to accomplish what I want with the students and also that I have that many days to get my room in order to move across campus. I would rather not know and just continue on my merry way with them.
So much to shout “YES” to here!
it’s easy to fall victim to that “counting down to summer” mentality. I do count down, but to remember that I have so few days left with my students. I love my kids and I always say, only a few months left with a frown. We joke about just continuing class through the summer. I love this time of the year and I look forward to the great things we can do without standards to get in the way of what we want to learn. Oh sure, certain things are unchangeable in the curriculum, but where I get leeway…I take it!
That’s a great perspective! Thanks so much for sharing.
I love to add the countdown to my math meeting. I have always talked it through as having just “this many” days to enjoy each other and get all of our first grade learning in! Each day is a gift in my classroom, for us to be this family unit, never again will it be the same as today, let us learn together up to the end. Plus we review each letter of the alphabet, the last 26 days of the year. Each letter is reviewed and lessons are built around that letter for that day. Each day is celebrated this time of year.
You need to lighten up. A countdown doesn’t mean you don’t value your students, your job, or your time you have left. It’s all about intention–everyone who works as hard as we do deserves to look forward to their summer and the opportunity to take a breath, rest, and reflect. Posts like yours come off as “I’m so above it…I’m a more serious, committed professional than you…” no matter how many “qualifiers” you add.
Sorry the post came off that way to you. If counting down is helpful for you, I think that’s great.
Exactly!!! And you forget that for many of us, counting down is a great way to be sure that we do cover that last half of the book before time runs out.