Mr. Funky Teacher, Nicholas Kleve

This is Mr. Funky Teacher with BeAFunkyTeacher.com. I'm coming to you with another Be a Funky Teacher podcast. Welcome back, everyone. Today’s episode is called School Is the Safest Place for Some Kids and Breaks Complicate That. And I want to start by naming something many educators feel but don’t always feel comfortable saying out loud. For some kids, school isn’t just a place to learn. It’s a place to breathe. It’s a place to be, to be seen, to feel seen. It’s a place where routines exist, meals are predictable, adults are steady, and expectations are clear. And when school pauses, even for good reasons, that safety can be disrupted. So let’s talk about that. But before we dig in, I want to ground myself in gratitude. Three things that I’m thankful for. The first thing I’m thankful for is inspirational quotes. A few well-chosen words can change a mindset, spark reflection, or give a kid language for what they’re feeling when they don’t yet have the words. I love inspirational quotes. I have them hanging in my classroom on a light-up board that changes every day. The second thing I’m thankful for is high fives and fist bumps. Those small moments of connection matter. They say “I see you” without needing a speech. The third thing I’m thankful for is children’s books that inspire students to read. Stories open doors. They build empathy, imagination, and belonging. Sometimes they become safe places too. Let’s get into the main topic: school is the safest place for some kids, and breaks complicate that. The truth is, breaks are exciting for many kids, but for some students, breaks are unpredictable, emotionally heavy, disconnected, and loud in ways that school isn’t. Sometimes they’re unsafe in ways that school protects them from. School provides structure, routine, calm, trusted adults, consistency, and predictability. When that disappears, even temporarily, it can feel deeply unsettling. That doesn’t mean breaks are bad. It just means kids experience them differently. School is an emotional anchor for many students. It’s where adults show up consistently, expectations are clear, mistakes don’t define kids, and routines bring calm. For some students, school is where someone notices when something feels off. Teachers often become that emotional anchor. Not because we plan to, but because kids gravitate toward safety. Breaks disrupt sleep schedules, routines, expectations, and emotional regulation. When kids return, some are dysregulated, anxious, withdrawn, overly energetic, or unsure of themselves—not because they’re misbehaving, but because they’re readjusting. This is where empathy matters most. Teachers quietly carry concern for students during breaks. We wonder if kids are okay, if they have food, if someone is checking in on them. That emotional labor doesn’t disappear when the building closes. It follows us home. The return to school isn’t about jumping into content. It’s about reestablishing routines, reconnecting emotionally, recreating safety, restoring trust, and regulating together. Before learning can happen, belonging must return. I’ll say it again and again: regulation before rigor. That doesn’t mean lowering expectations. It means easing kids back in, offering predictability, and balancing structure with grace. When kids feel safe again, academics accelerate. Safety often looks small. A smile. A check-in. Familiar routines. A read-aloud. A calm tone. You don’t have to fix everything. You just have to be steady. This work matters deeply. For some kids, school is the place where they feel protected, capable, valued, and hopeful. As I close, if you’re an educator listening, hear this clearly: your presence matters, especially during transitions. Your consistency matters, especially after breaks. Your calm matters when kids feel unsettled. School may not be the safest place for every child, but for some, it is the only place where they truly feel safe. When we recognize that, we teach differently, lead differently, and show up differently. If you found value in this episode, jump on over to Apple Podcasts or wherever you listen and leave a five-star review. Remember to inspire greatness in young people. And don’t forget to be a funky teacher. Bye now.