Sept. 22, 2022
Post-secondary leaders reflect on creating healthy environments for working and learning
Working and learning in a post-secondary setting has its rewards, but it鈥檚 not without challenges, as several 草莓污视频导航 leaders discussed during last month鈥檚 event.
Some of these challenges can have a significant impact on well-being, which is why the deans of the Faculty of Nursing and Werklund School of Education and associate dean (mental health) of the Schulich School of Engineering have worked with their teams to embed practices into the culture and structure of their faculties. During the , they discussed their individual and collective experiences.
Inform your path forward through empathy
Dr. Sandra Davidson, PhD, has seen many kinds of workplaces in her more than 25 years as a nurse and leader 鈥 some healthy, others not, and she鈥檚 taken lessons from both. The nursing dean has learned what not to emulate while working in a toxic environment and has held onto the 鈥渟ecret sauce鈥 she noticed while working in more healthy ones.
Heathy work environments, Davidson said, made her feel less alone: 鈥淵ou always felt like there was somebody there ... you had that support network.鈥 Despite working in a complex and challenging field, a sense of connection made Davidson feel 鈥渓ess in the weeds鈥 than she might have been.
Bringing forward her personal experience to her leadership positions, Davidson said leadership can impact an organization stewarding its culture toward that sense of connection. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a certain level of visibility, and people are watching,鈥 she said.
鈥淲hat you talk about, and what you make time for, signals what is important.鈥 That鈥檚 in part why Davidson鈥檚 team decided to elevate the importance of mental health and wellness in their faculty.
In addition to policies and practices that came out of nursing the Campus Mental Health Strategy (CHMS), Davidson stressed how it matters to be purposeful and model best practices each day, such as creating boundaries.
鈥淲e need to give ourselves permission to disengage and allow others to do the same,鈥 she said.
Create pre-conditions for a flourishing learning environment
Almost a decade ago, Dr. Dianne Gereluk, PhD, and colleagues noticed tension in their workplace. 鈥淭here was something amiss in terms of the culture and ethos,鈥 said the Werklund dean. After advocacy from various levels of staff, the faculty set a plan to articulate personal wellness and collective well-being in an effort to change its culture.
What started with surveys and consultation gradually led to evolving programs, policies and practices that have shaped how Werklund embeds well-being into its culture for not only faculty and staff, but also for students. Or, as Gereluk described them: 鈥淭he future teachers, the future educational leaders, the future psychologists.鈥
Some of these initiatives have included launching mandatory courses for Bachelor of Education students on health, developing equitable and transparent workload guidelines for faculty and staff, and introducing a performance goal related to well-being for support staff.
鈥淲e needed to think of well-being as the precondition for learning and create conditions for a safe learning environment,鈥 said Gereluk.
Meet your community where they鈥檙e at
When Dr. Kim Johnston, PhD, started teaching, reflecting with colleagues on their own past student experiences revealed more about personal journeys than academic ones. A common refrain: 鈥淚 would have started therapy sooner.鈥
These discussions, plus Johnston鈥檚 own experiences dealing with stress management, led her to her current role as associate dean of mental wellness with the Schulich School of Engineering.
The school, also an adopter of the CMHS, incorporated mental wellness into its , creating a newly dedicated wellness room, certificate program and co-curricular activities that support student wellness.
In her presentation, Johnston stressed the idea that implementing well-being practices can be done by anyone, and, in many cases, sometimes what鈥檚 needed is simply connecting students to pre-existing resources.
鈥淲e actually have upper-year students coming into first-year classes sharing stories, talking to each other about what it is they鈥檙e going through,鈥 said Johnston, adding that, by sharing tools and strategies among one another, conversations and help-seeking behaviour can become even more normalized.
Don鈥檛 feel you need to do it all at once
The opportunities seem endless, and potentially overwhelming; you just have strike a balance, said CHMS director and associate professor Dr. Andrew Szeto, PhD.
鈥淎cademic culture is focused on productivity, at the expense of other things like [our own] well-being,鈥 Szeto said. 鈥淚t takes a fine balance.鈥
Gereluk highlighted the threat of workplace burnout. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 imagine sustaining a pace, a level of cognitive ability, a level of tone and tact when you鈥檙e that exhausted,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ork hard 鈥 then take the proper break. The work will always be there鈥 this is not our life, this is a challenging, good job.鈥
Thinking about her experience in teaching and learning, Johnston reflected on a conversation with colleagues: 鈥淭he advice is: you don鈥檛 need to do absolutely everything this year. It鈥檚 OK to think about: what is the one thing I want to give a shot at this year?鈥
Davidson echoed her colleagues. 鈥淩eplenish yourself so that you can give your best work, so that you have some energy left at the end of the day.鈥
Next up, join the Campus Mental Health Strategy for fall expo, UFlourish. Happening Oct. 24 to Nov. 4. Explore the lineup and register for events. More programming still to be added.
The Summer Wellness Series is co-presented by the Campus Mental Health Strategy and Taylor Institute for Teaching and Learning. The series offers insights and discussion on pertinent themes in mental health in teaching and learning. Learn more and find all recorded Summer Wellness Series sessions .
鲍颁补濒驳补谤测鈥檚 Campus Mental Health Strategy is a bold commitment to the importance of mental health and the well-being of our university family. Our vision is to be a community where we care for each other, learn and talk about mental health and well-being, receive support as needed, and individually and collectively realize our full potential.
The is dedicated to better understanding and improving student learning at 草莓污视频导航. Its mission is to strengthen teaching and learning communities, cultures, and practices to create extraordinary learning experiences.