If you’re tempted to cut sleep short, remember that dealing with 30 kids on only a few hours of sleep really can be a nightmare.
#Nightmare teacher ending full#
After spending the night imagining an L-shaped auditorium with hundreds of children, your rectangular class of 30 should seem a little less scary.ĭon’t you think it’s comforting to know that even your worst nightmares are just your brain doing its thing to help you become a better teacher? That should be reason enough to get a full night’s sleep whenever possible. Psychologists in a documentary called “What Are Dreams?” say nightmares are our brain’s way of preparing for situations even worse than our worst-case scenario. This is unfortunate, because you often have about 250 students in this type of dream, including every bad kid you’ve ever seen, and even bullies from your own school days. Your classroom is in the cafeteria, an open field, or an irregularly shaped room where you can’t see all of your students, and they can’t hear anything you say. In fact, in some cases, teachers report that this type of “nightmare” can also show up as a daydream.Ħ. Or, who knows? Maybe you have a genuine, subconscious urge to hurt the colleague who stole your lunch from the teachers’ lounge fridge, the administrator who criticized you in front of your students, or the kid who WON’T STOP TAPPING HIS PEN WHILE YOU ARE TRYING TO GIVE DIRECTIONS. Other interpretations are more straightforward: Violent dreams can show anger and frustration. On a figurative level, fight dreams can express your desire to defend your honor, values, or personal space. You are in a physical fight with a student, fellow teacher, or administrator. It’s also probably your subconscious telling you that when your alarm rings a second time, you better not hit snooze.ĥ. This dream is probably a sign that you’re worrying about your students even when you’re not at school. It involves a group of students showing up at your house, sometimes coming inside to help themselves to bowls of cereal from your kitchen cabinets while you try to think of an activity to keep them busy. This dream is most likely to occur right after you hit the snooze button. After all that work setting up a hands-on biology center for your seventh graders, it’s natural to worry about a sudden change to your teaching assignment. It can be tough to deal with this contradiction. Teaching requires lots of advanced preparation, but also the flexibility to deal with last-minute changes. Your subject or grade level has been changed at the last minute. Even if you’re sure everything is laid out as you want it, get a head start so you can be there before your first early-bird student.ģ. The Dream Dictionary says dreams about being late (whatever you’re late for) can mean avoidance of responsibility, but there is a chance that this one can be taken literally: Maybe you really are apprehensive about being late on an important day of school. Whatever you are - or aren’t - wearing in this type of dream, it’s probably your inner teacher clock saying, “Hey, start thinking about whether you’re ready for your first day back!”Ģ. Both of these relate to the fear that you are unprepared. Ragged or inappropriate clothes can represent feelings of inadequacy. According to the Dream Dictionary, being undressed in a dream represents vulnerability and the fear that one’s weaknesses are exposed.
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Teachers usually report having this dream not only in August, but a few nights before the end of any break. You show up to work in a bathrobe/your pajamas/the clothes you went out in last night.
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Don’t be surprised if you recognize some of the scenarios here.ġ. With the help of my yellowed copy of Tony Crisp’s Dream Dictionary and conversations with a few colleagues, I’ve prepared a completely unscientific, non-research-based guide to six common teacher nightmares. I’m a believer that images from a night’s sleep can provide insight into daytime thoughts, so it’s always been interesting to me that so many teachers report having similar dreams - or, in many cases, similar nightmares.