You've spent the last nine months doing what math teachers do: solving for every variable, adjusting on the fly, and making sure all your students cross the finish line. You’ve earned this time off.
But here's the thing: many math teachers spend their summer break catching up on curriculum planning, working on their classroom, or feeling vaguely guilty for not doing either. Sound familiar?
This summer, consider a different approach. Think of it as your pause.
The numbers on math teacher burnout are hard to ignore, and teacher wellness is at the heart of the conversation. According to RAND's 2025 State of the American Teacher survey, 53% of K-12 teachers reported feeling burned out, and they worked an average of 49 hours per week in 2025, which is ten hours more than their contracted hours.
Students whose teachers experience high anxiety tend to perform worse academically, particularly in math. In other words, teacher wellness is not a luxury. It is a direct investment in student outcomes.
The demographic picture is equally sobering. In 2024, female teachers reported a burnout rate of 63%, compared to around 49% for male teachers, and the gap is widening, not narrowing. Teachers of color carry a disproportionate share of that burden: 59% of Black teachers and 58% of Hispanic teachers reported burnout in the 2024-2025 school year.
The data makes the case. What should you do about it?
In ClearMath, our Teach-Teach-Pause instructional model is built around a powerful idea: students need intentional space to stop, process, and re-engage before moving forward. Two Concept Lessons teach the big ideas, then a Re-Engagement Lesson creates a deliberate pause to solidify understanding, address misconceptions, and make sure no one gets left behind. The pause is not downtime. The pause is where things click.
The same is true for you.
Teacher self-care is not about bubble baths and scented candles (though that's nice, too). It is about building intentional recovery into your summer so you return to the classroom as the educator you want to be, not the exhausted one you were in May. Your students get a re-engagement lesson. You deserve one, too.
Teacher stress relief does not have to be elaborate. Research consistently points to a few high-impact habits that support educator well-being without requiring much more than consistency. Here are 10 to get you started.
Move your body. Physical activity is one of the most well-documented buffers against burnout. You don't need a gym membership or a training plan, just movement that isn't pacing the hallway between classrooms. A 20-minute walk counts.
Protect your mornings. During the school year, mornings belong to everyone else. This summer, take them back. Even 30 minutes of unscheduled time before the day starts can make a measurable difference in how you feel.
Set a work boundary and hold it. Decide how many hours per week you'll spend on school-related tasks this summer and stick to it. Planning ahead is great. Losing July to it is not.
How math teachers recharge over summer looks different for everyone, but the goal is the same: arrive in August with more than you had in May. That means protecting sleep, managing stress, and reconnecting with whatever makes you feel like yourself outside of the classroom.
ClearMath's teach-teach-pause model works because the pause is where understanding solidifies. The same principle applies to you. This summer is not a gap in your teaching career. It is the pause that makes everything after it better.
Take it, and take care.
Self-care isn't always solo. The National Institute (Math) brings together math teachers for hands-on workshops, keynote speakers, and genuine connection at Arizona's Fairmont Scottsdale Princess, featuring a world-class spa, exceptional food, and a pool that practically begs you to sit beside it. Professional development has never felt so nice.