Summer break can look long on the calendar and still feel like you’re carrying school on your back. We’re talking honestly about why so many teachers start June exhausted and then spend the rest of the break “prepping” instead of recovering and feeling joy. If you’ve ever treated staying late as proof you care, or opened your laptop on a holiday because anxiety wouldn’t let you rest, this conversation will feel uncomfortably familiar in the best way.
We unpack what boundaries really mean for educators: not vague self care, but specific decisions about what will not cross the line anymore. That includes work boundaries you can practise in summer and keep all year, like setting a true no work window, using a simple brain dump notebook so ideas don’t hijack your downtime, and building systems that protect your evenings. We also get practical about grading and feedback, sharing smarter ways to check learning at school so “no grading at home” becomes possible, not just aspirational.
Then we hit the big ones that drive teacher burnout and work-life balance issues: staying hours past contract time, saying yes to every committee and club, and the always-on pressure of school email. We make the case for deleting school email from your personal phone, not only for your peace of mind, but also to reduce stress, distraction, and unnecessary risk. We end by naming one boundary you can adopt immediately and take into the next school year.
If this helps, subscribe for more teacher boundaries and burnout recovery strategies, share the episode with a coworker who needs permission to log off, and leave a review so more tired teachers can find us. What boundary are you committing to this week?
June Reading Comprehension 2nd Grade | Summer Reading Passages & Questions
Perfect for end-of-year learning, summer school, or preventing summer learning loss, these short, engaging reading passages help students continue to practice comprehension skills.
Help stop the summer slide and help students love reading with Summer Reading Comprehension Stories written for 2nd grade with questions and response practice.
👉 Summer Reading Comprehension for 2nd Grade
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