Sixty percent of adults have considered returning to school, with 70 percent agreeing that higher education prepares adults for successful careers. While younger students often have the freedom to focus solely on school or to study while spending just a few hours a week at a part-time job, most older learners have other responsibilities. Balancing work and school can be difficult, whether your job is full-time parenting, challenging managerial work, or something completely unrelated to the degree you pursue.
There’s no magic key that unlocks the door to an easier balance, no recipe that ensures you won’t have to work hard. Exhaustion, stress, and self-doubt often affect adult students. Preparing yourself for these emotions can make them more manageable, supporting you on the path to greater student success. Here are some winning strategies for balancing work and school.
Setting yourself up for greater student success begins before you set foot in the classroom. Spend some time thinking about the challenges you are most likely to face so you can get a plan in place for managing them. Some questions to ask yourself include:
When your body aches, your mind is overwhelmed by anxiety, or you’re so tired that you can’t think, it becomes impossible to succeed at work or school. Small challenges can feel daunting. You may become convinced that your life is impossible to manage, when really all that’s happening is that you’re tired.
Tending to your physical needs is critical to student success. Be sure to do the following:
Anything worth doing is challenging, otherwise, everyone would do it. Yet, you might not have spent much time thinking about the difficult aspects of returning to school—the fatigue, the frustration, the challenge of balancing work and school. You may also find that your frustration at work increases and your tolerance of annoying co-workers decreases. Don’t dismiss or ignore these emotions, and don’t feel guilty for having them. Negative emotions are a normal reaction to major transitions and challenges. Potent feelings sting less sharply when you anticipate them and view them as normal.
If you can find ways to make work and school work together, then you’ll save time and mental energy. Some questions that can help you make the two more compatible include:
Even when your degree and job seem totally unrelated, finding small connections is key. Doing so keeps you thinking productively about both work and school, and it can make your mind feel less crowded.
If you’re driven enough to return to school while working, you’re probably driven in other areas of your life too. Driven people sometimes struggle to ask for help. The truth is that the people who love you most want you to succeed. So accept the help they offer, however small, and ask for what you need. Even an extra hour a week can make a big difference in your emotional well-being. Some strategies for getting the help you need include:
Many employees worry about appearing less committed to their jobs when they return to school. Some even conceal their continuing education from their employers. An educated employee is a great asset, however, even when your education isn’t directly related to your field. Tell your boss of your plans ahead of time so you can answer any questions and address any concerns. Then ask about programs and accommodations your office offers to continuing learners. You may be able to get partial tuition reimbursement or negotiate a more flexible schedule that includes teleworking.
Taking a single class at a time allows you to invest deeply in your own education, get to know your professor, and befriend other students. Even with just a single class a semester, however, some adult learners struggle. These time management strategies can help you better balance the competing demands you face:
Your time is a valuable asset. Don’t waste it on things that don’t matter. Make a schedule that budgets your time just like you budget your money. Trim the fat—the wasteful phone calls, the errands you don’t really need to run, the time with “friends” you don’t really like. Zealously guard your time like the precious resource it is. Spend some time each week mindfully thinking about how you intend to spend the coming days, then envisioning your plan and writing (or typing) it down somewhere.
Everyone is tired of hearing about self-care. But you hear so much about it because it’s so important. Self-care means different things at different times. Sometimes it’s making a doctor’s appointment or a healthy meal. Sometimes it’s going for a walk with your dog or spending the afternoon playing with your kids. You are a complex being with many needs—physical, spiritual, psychological, intellectual, financial, and more. Self-care is about identifying unmet needs and then carving out time to address them. You can’t succeed if you don’t tend to your most valuable resource: yourself.
Southern Nazarene University supports adult learners of all ages. We’d love to talk to you about your plans or help you find ways to better manage the work-school-life juggling act.