Happenings

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EVENTS & HAPPENINGS

Stop Pretending! You Are Not Fine.

Tuesday February 24, 2026 
10 a.m. – 12 p.m. (PST)
Capacity: 20 people

Remote

“How you doin’?” to which we often respond, “I’m fine,” is sometimes an inaccurate depiction of how we really are feeling while at work. Preliminary results of the survey, Unwellness in the Work Culture, show that 69% of participants feel pressure to appear composed or resilient when they are overwhelmed and 73% of participants believe pretending to be well leads to stress, burnout, discouragement, and feeling overwhelmed. These preliminary results suggest that the preexisting burnout and stress from workload, pressure to teach and conduct research, and meeting deadlines are exacerbated by pretending to have it together. These results also suggest that these forms of unwellness are produced outside of the educator; that is, structures at work contribute to the educator’s unwellness.

Join me and others as I lead us into a deep dive of the literature, further explore the preliminary results of the survey, Unwellness in the Work Culture, and create a plan that embodies our personal well-being. Please reserve your seat for this event and learn more about it, including cost. This event can be curated for a group of people (i.e., academic department, student services unit). If that is the case, please complete this form.

Do Something! Your Team is Not Fine.

Tuesday March 10, 2026
10 a.m. – 12 p.m. (PST)
Capacity: 20 people

Remote

If your role includes supervising a team of part-time or full-time educators, this event is for you. Supervisors might not be surprised that individual team members they supervise are stressed and burned out. Heck! Supervisors are stressed and burnout, too, of course. But supervisors may be surprised by contradictions when they communicate to team members about wellbeing and support in the workplace. Preliminary results of Unwellness in the Work Culture show that while 52% of participants are comfortable setting boundaries around workload and availability for themselves and 52% said that supervisors and colleagues respect these set boundaries, 69% hide feelings of frustration, stress, and exhaustion from supervisors and colleagues. Meanwhile, 91% said that pretending to appear composed prevents them from asking for help and support. Supervisors can be a form of structure that contributes to the unwellness of their team. 

Join me and others as I lead us into a deep dive of the preliminary results from participants of the survey, Unwellness in the Work Culture. From this perspective, we will focus on our wellbeing. Please reserve your seat for this event and learn more about it, including cost. This event can be curated for a group of educators who have direct reports. If that is the case, please complete this form.

Don't Feel Bad Anymore! Using Data to Reveal Structural Inefficiencies at Work

Thursday April 2, 2026 
10 a.m. – 12 p.m. (PST)
Capacity: 20 people

Remote

In the survey, Unwellness in the Work Culture, to the statement, “What at work contributes to your unwellness,” one respondent said, “Get[ting] wrapped up in e-mail[s] and not getting done [with] my list and …feeling behind, lack of time to get everything done that needs to be done, being overwhelmed to the point that it’s hard to start anything that needs to be done.”

When skills like planning, prioritizing, and organization are no longer enough to get work done, the problem is not the individual—it’s the work culture. Something is wrong when even our best skills fail us, when time at work is insufficient to meet expectations, and when pressure and guilt follow us home. Together, we will draw from research on educators’ stress, burnout, and fatigue, and take a deep dive into what other respondents said in the survey, Unwellness in the Work Culture, about what at work contributes to their unwellness. We will anchor ourselves in the practice of reflection for a deeper understanding of where we spend our time at work, collect data that support where our time is spent, and articulate barriers that prevent us from doing the work we say we care about most; consequently, time spent on the things that are outside of our role. From this perspective, we will clarify why feeling bad for not doing enough at work ignores the structures that prevent us from ever doing our work at all.

Please reserve your seat for this event and learn more about it, including cost. This event can be curated for a group of people (i.e., academic department, student services unit). If that is the case, please complete this form.

Pedagogy of Unwellness Learning Community

Audience: Faculty
Modality: Best In-Person
Length: Minimum of 3 hours
Capacity: 15 people

The purpose of the Pedagogy of Unwellness Learning Community is to explore our teaching experience in the classroom where pedagogy intersects with wellness. This exploration is guided by (a) discussing the rapidly shifting contexts in which we are teaching, (b) examining how our wellness is impacted by different ecosystems through Bronfenbrenner’s ecological model for development (1974), (c) acknowledging our unwellness as part of moving towards wellness (Khúc, 2024), and (d) centering our full humanity as a pedagogical practice (Baker & Pope-Ruark, 2025 as cited by Artze-Vega, 2024). From these framings, we will deepen our understanding of pedagogy and wellness in the classroom by annotating a course syllabus of our choosing that will serve as a template to examine or prepare subsequent course syllabi.

Inaugurated at a public research university in Southern California, a shift in the perspective of faculty-participants that their unwellness impacted students and their teaching practices increased by 60% between a pre- and post-survey. “…Part of my (un)wellness comes from feelings of isolation. I …hope to actively think about my students’ sources of (un)wellness and implement some of the practices covered in this community (Anonymous, faculty-participant, Summer, 2025).” As a result of the learning community, the inaugural faculty cohort created the Pedagogy of Unwellness Teaching Guide, which will be shared in this event.

Please connect with me to discuss bringing Pedagogy of Unwellness Learning Community to your group of faculty.

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