By Angie Miller
A teacher recently told me about the ridicule she faced when speaking to an audience of teachers at her school. During her presentation, one colleague leaned back in his seat, ripped her handout into squares, crumpled two squares into small balls, stuffed them in his ears, and stared at her with crossed arms.
Horrible, right? But鈥攊f we are honest鈥攏ot unfamiliar. Sometimes as teachers, we are not nice to one another.
Who among us has not facilitated meetings while other teachers have engaged in continuous eye rolling and commentary? And it doesn鈥檛 just happen in meetings. Fellow teachers have disparaged me to parents when I wasn鈥檛 around. Unhappy about articles I鈥檇 written, one colleague left menacing, anonymous notes in my mailbox threatening to get me fired.
When a teacher lives in fear of confrontation, ridicule or being talked about, this is professional bullying.
I do not want to malign our profession. Most educators I have worked with want to support one another. We encourage each other to try new things, taking risks, and strive for collegial conversations that challenge ideas and perceptions. In a profession that gets raked over the coals by others outside the field, it is uncomfortable to acknowledge this reality that pulses in our own hallways out of sight of parents and administrators.
We would not tolerate this behavior from our students. So I鈥檓 asking, why do we allow it to happen to us?
Professional bullying takes many forms. One of the most dangerous? When dominant teachers attempt to coerce colleagues into their way of teaching, a way that does not always play to the strengths of all teachers or benefit all students. I鈥檓 ashamed to admit that I have implemented classroom practices that didn鈥檛 feel right to me. I coped with this in the same way many have: feign compliance, close door, and stop collaborating. When I do this, I contribute to the building鈥檚 hemorrhaging toxicity, defensively keeping my practices only within the walls of my classroom.
How do we change a bullying school culture? I have some ideas about where to start.
- First recognize sensitivity to criticism. Teaching is one of the few professions that is part of our identity. When we feel under fire, we feel criticized. Instead of hearing 鈥渓et鈥檚 get better together!鈥 we hear 鈥測ou aren鈥檛 good enough.鈥 This builds resentment in a building. Understanding this basic concept can help you approach colleagues better.
- Lead by example. Be the person who never utters a negative word to others. Put cards on desks, smile in the hallway, inquire about families at the copier, make meals during hard times, tell colleagues when you hear the kids say something wonderful about them. Affirm, affirm, affirm. Choose not be a contributor to toxicity.
- Ask for help. Recognize what your colleagues are good at and ask them to give you advice. When people feel recognized and valued, they let their guards down and allow for vulnerability. And vulnerability is always necessary for growth.
- Gather your allies. Most likely the professional bullies hold power that is inconsistent with their numbers. Take stock of who among your colleagues are most excited for change, intellectually curious, and passionate about educational issues. Collaborate with them. Celebrate those teachers and you will slowly change the tone and emotional energy of the building.
- Call out bullying when it happens to you. Think of how we expect kids to handle bullying鈥攚e expect them to say to their classmates, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 like that. Stop.鈥 This is nerve-wracking and most of us avoid conflict. But when we privately pull another colleague aside and say, 鈥淢y feelings were hurt today when you did this. Can you tell me what I鈥檝e done to upset you?鈥 their poor behavior is called into question. Every single time I have had a conversation like this with a colleague, the air has cleared鈥攅very single time.
This year let鈥檚 commit to making our schools no-bullying zones. Let鈥檚 practice with our colleagues what we preach to our students.
Angie Miller is the 2011 New Hampshire Teacher of the Year, a TED presenter and a National Geographic Teacher Fellow. A freelance writer and school librarian, Angie can be followed at and @angieinlibrary.
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