The latest TES Teacher Wellbeing Report paints a stark picture of the current education system globally. Teachers remain committed to their students and proud of the work they do, but many are now operating at the edge of capacity. The issue isn’t a lack of passion or professionalism. It’s the cumulative pressure of workload, behaviour challenges, safeguarding demands and emotionally charged interactions that are becoming part of everyday school life.
According to the report, 73% of educators identified workload as their primary source of stress, while 58% cited student behaviour as a major stressor. More concerningly, only 4% of respondents said they were able to work within their contracted hours, with many regularly working well into evenings and weekends.
What stands out throughout the report is that conflict in education is no longer confined to isolated incidents. It now exists in multiple forms across the school environment. Teachers are managing low-level disruption, emotionally heightened parent conversations, safeguarding concerns, distressed students, competing expectations and increasingly complex classroom dynamics, often all within the same day.

Conflict in schools is now a daily pressure
The report highlights that many staff feel unsupported when dealing with difficult behaviour and conflict situations, particularly when leadership responses are inconsistent or when staff lack the time, confidence or knowledge to de-escalate situations early.
This is where conflict management training comes in, not as a tick-box exercise, but as an investment in staff wellbeing, confidence and safety.
At Training for Reality, our Situational Awareness & Conflict Management course was designed specifically for real-world environments where conversations, behaviours and situations can escalate quickly.
Unlike generic online training, the course focuses on human behaviour, communication and emotional regulation under pressure. Staff learn how to recognise the early warning signs of escalation, understand stress responses in both themselves and others, and use structured communication techniques to regain control of emotionally charged situations.
Building staff confidence
For staff in education, that could mean:
- Recognising when a student is becoming emotionally dysregulated before behaviour escalates
- Using de-escalation techniques to reduce disruption and conflict in the classroom
- Maintaining personal safety and professional boundaries during challenging interactions
- Managing confrontational parent meetings calmly and professionally
- Building confidence when dealing with aggressive, distressed or highly emotional individuals
The course also develops situational awareness skills, helping staff better read environments, behaviours and risk factors before incidents develop further.
Importantly, this isn’t about turning teachers into security staff. It’s about giving them the tools to navigate difficult human situations with more confidence, calmness and self-control.
In the TES report, teachers described feeling overwhelmed, unsupported and emotionally exhausted. Training that helps staff feel safer, more capable and more prepared can have a significant impact not only on wellbeing, but also on retention, morale and whole school culture.
Because when staff feel more confident handling conflict, everybody benefits; the teacher, the student, the parent and the wider community.
To learn more about our Situational Awareness & Conflict Management training for schools, colleges and universities, contact us.

