Teach Middle East Magazine Issue 1 Volume 3 Sep-Oct 2015 | Page 11

Welcome Message Educators’ happiness and wellbeing are vital to a successful education system I t’s time to take a moment and consider yourself. Yes, you. Too often the conversation around education and teaching concentrates on challenges and obstacles. Often, you are buried so deep in your passion and dedication to enriching your students’ learning experience that you forget to take care of you. It’s time to take a different approach. We know that happiness, well-being and positivity have the power to transform our lives and we use these words to talk about high-quality education in the hope that this approach will spread to all schools, universities, parents, students and of course, you, the teacher in Dubai. When I talk about well-being, my meaning of the word goes beyond just eating better and exercising. By focusing on your well-being, you take time for yourself, decompress, be more mindful and subsequently develop the social-emotional skills needed to make you feel happier throughout your day. Take your students as an example. The 2015 World Happiness Report, published in April this year, cites a study of 200 school-based programmes that promoted the social and emotional skills of children. This study found that children taking these programmes gained about 10 percentile points in emotional well-being and behaviour as well as in academic achievement. Unsurprisingly, it also found that low well-being was linked with worse academic performance. It makes sense that children who for one reason or another can’t sit still, focus, or get along with their peers continue to fall behind academically, while concerned parents and teachers feel overwhelmed, not knowing how to intervene effectively. Attention, empathy, forgiveness, and impulse control all help to improve the classroom social climate and increase academic performance. Above all else, the classroom, and you, become happier. We are lucky enough to live in a country and community which places innovation at the heart of its long-term strategy, and we know that happiness and positivity are central to true innovative practice. Making students happier through learning is simply to concentrate on that positivity and mindfulness and spread its messages. By sharing what is already working, we know we can change the nature of the conversation around education and empower those in the education community to make positive changes themselves. This is why we came up with the idea for our What Works events. Six times a year, teachers from across Dubai’s schools come together to run and attend workshops that showcase the best of what they do in their classrooms. For 2015/16, each What Works will showcase a specific theme. The six themes – Well-being, Makers, SteAm, Early Years, Global Citizen and Fusion - will deliver the latest thinking and research in line with the UAE National Agenda that will drive school improvement, encourage more learning and engagement, and promote technical and creative innovation in the classroom. The real value of What Works is not just in the connections made and learning shared on the day of the events, but in the culture change it has affected; notably the power of positivity through bringing schools together and creating a community of educators. H.E. Dr Abdulla Al Karam Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA) 255,000 students from 186 different nationalities. This ‘internationalism’ is celebrated by our students. They told us it makes them happy in their schools. In fact, the number of school students has doubled in the past 10 years and positive growth is expected to continue for the upcoming academic year and beyond. It is with this positive approach that we, the education community, seek to improve teaching and learning in Dubai and above all else, make more of it by ensuring that you, as teachers, are happy and well in your lives and careers. Dubai’s private education sector is unique. Our latest figures show that 169 schools educate more than Class Time | | Sep - Oct 2015 | 9