Bringing Educator Wellbeing to the Forefront at Stanford ECHO

In January, Acknowledge Alliance had the opportunity to share our work with mental health and medical clinicians through the Stanford Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences’ ECHO series, a monthly online learning series focused on school-based mental health in California. Each session in the series features both a didactic presentation and a case discussion designed to support ongoing learning among professionals working with youth and educators.

Former Resilience Consultation Program (RCP) Director Sarah Kremer, who now works with the Stanford allcove program, suggested that Stanford ECHO invite Acknowledge Alliance to present on the timely topic, “Strengthening Teacher Wellbeing During Challenging Times”.

For the session, Resilience Consultation Program Director Tracy Lyons presented a case study drawn from our work supporting educators, while Leora Wolf-Prusan of the Center for Applied Research Solutions led the didactic portion of the presentation. Together, they explored the complex emotional landscape educators are navigating today and the systemic supports needed to sustain them.

Key themes included disenfranchised educator grief, vicarious trauma, and compounded moral injury - experiences that many school staff carry while continuing to show up for their students each day. The presenters also discussed challenges such as fractured leadership coaching and the urgent need for stronger systemic supports, emphasizing that educators must receive the same care and compassion they are asked to provide to young people.

Another important focus of the session was the role of safety, belonging, and dignity in educator wellbeing. Participants discussed how social-emotional learning (SEL) skill building for adults can strengthen school communities and help educators process the stressors they encounter both inside and outside the classroom.

The conversation also raised critical questions for the field. One explored how schools and districts can move beyond the “band-aid” approach of offering one-on-one support for individual teachers and instead develop districtwide policies and programs that promote staff wellbeing at a systemic level. Another addressed the frequently overlooked challenge of clinician burnout, recognizing that those who support educators frequently face many of the same pressures themselves.

These discussions were grounded in the realities of the current social and political moment. Participants acknowledged the added strain many educators are experiencing due to immigration-related fears, housing and food instability, and the disproportionate impact of these stressors on BIPOC staff.

Acknowledge Alliance is honored to be part of the ECHO series to bring these issues to this vital statewide forum. We hope the session helped deepen the conversation about what it truly takes to support educator wellbeing and ultimately create school communities where both adults and students can thrive.