It is the middle of July and the school year feels both incredibly distant and right around the corner. Right now, most high school teachers are happily avoiding alarm clocks, enjoying the sunshine, and actively trying not to think about faculty meetings. Yet, this quiet mid-summer stretch is exactly when the familiar dread of upcoming mandatory professional development begins to creep into our minds. We all know the feeling of those August kickoff sessions, sitting in a sweltering gym or cafeteria, listening to a presentation that feels entirely disconnected from our classroom reality. It is easy to fall into the trap of complaining about those mandated hours, treating them as chores to endure rather than opportunities to learn.
If personal and professional growth are important, then professional development should be important as well, regardless of whether or not it is required.
When we rely solely on our districts to feed us intellectual stimulation during the school year, we give up control over our own career trajectories. Mandatory sessions are often designed for general compliance because administrators must check boxes for hundreds of employees at once. Expecting a single district-wide presentation to revolutionize your specific high school chemistry or literature classroom is simply unrealistic.
True educators are lifelong learners. If we expect our high school students to take ownership of their education come August, we must model that exact behavior ourselves during the summer. This means transitioning from passive consumers of mandated content into active seekers of our own inspiration.
Taking control of your growth during the summer months does not require a massive budget or sacrificing your hard-earned vacation. You can read a modern pedagogy book while sitting by the pool, subscribe to a podcast focused on secondary education strategies during your morning walk, or follow innovative teachers on social media. Spending just twenty minutes of a quiet July afternoon reflecting on your craft is far more valuable than sitting through a generic lecture later this autumn.
When you shift your mindset from resentment to autonomy, your entire perspective on the upcoming school year changes. You stop waiting for someone else to make you a better teacher and you start doing the work yourself. Before the chaos of August arrives, skip the anticipatory complaints about district meetings. Instead, use a sliver of your summer peace to find an article, a book, or a community that actually feeds your passion for teaching.