Time-Saving Tips for Antenatal Teachers & Birth Workers. Essential to apply! 🙂
Let’s be honest—being an antenatal educator or birth worker isn’t exactly a 9-to-5 kind of gig.
You’re prepping classes, updating resources, answering messages from anxious parents-to-be at all hours, packing your bag (again), driving to venues, and possibly squeezing in the occasional cuppa that isn’t cold.
So how do we save time without compromising the magic we bring to each class or client?
Grab your lukewarm brew, and let’s dive into some real-life, tested-by-teachers strategies to help you reclaim your hours (and maybe your sanity).
1. Template Everything
From emails to feedback forms, birth plan worksheets to course outlines—if you’re writing the same thing more than twice, it’s time to template it.
Top tip: Create a folder called “Grab & Go” and fill it with ready-to-edit templates. It’s a lifesaver when your brain’s too tired to think of the word “placenta.”
2. Batch Your Planning
Planning one session at a time? That’s adorable. But batch-planning multiple classes in one go? That’s next-level.
Set aside a block of time once a month to plan lessons, print materials, and stock up on markers (because we all know they’ll run out when you need them most).
3. Automate Where You Can
Use scheduling tools for social media, automated reminders for bookings, and email sequences for new clients.
Because spending 20 minutes writing the same “Hi, thanks for booking!” email? That’s time you could be using to not respond to WhatsApp messages during dinner.
4. Use Printables You Can Reuse
Invest in quality visual aids and printable activities that don’t need updating every month. Laminate your favourites and create a reusable ‘class kit’—just grab and go.
Need engaging and reusable printables? I’ve got you covered in my TPT store and website!
5. Pack a Birth Worker ‘Go Bag’
Keep a pre-packed bag with essentials: pens, printouts, visuals, battery tea lights (for the ambience!), snacks, and a spare hair tie because… you just never know.
No more scrambling last minute or realising you left your pelvis model on top of the fridge again.
6. Record Common Demos as Videos
You know that balloon and ping pong ball demo you always get asked to repeat? Record a quick video version. Share it with clients after class—it saves time and reinforces the learning.
Bonus: You’ll look extra tech-savvy.
7. Stick to the Schedule (Mostly)
Start and end your classes on time. It respects your time and your clients’—and stops sessions from turning into two-hour therapy groups. (There’s a time and place… and it’s not always Tuesday at 8pm.)
If needed, build in a ‘chatty time’ buffer at the start or end so people feel heard and the class stays on track.
8. Use Feedback to Focus
Collect feedback regularly—but don’t just smile at the praise. Look at what isn’t working. Cut what doesn’t add value. Focus on the sessions and tools that really hit home. More impact, less faff.
9. Create a Ready-to-Go Calm Corner
For in-person classes, set up a reusable “Calm Corner” with visuals, affirmations, and breathing prompts. It saves time explaining and creates a self-led learning moment. Also a great spot for the overthinkers to reset. I use Display Boards (Amazon affiliate link!) for this.
10. Take Time Off (Yes, Really)
You are not a birthy robot. Schedule in actual breaks—proper ones where you switch off, rest, and don’t just catch up on admin in your pyjamas.
Burnt-out educators can’t support others.
Final Thoughts
You’ve got the heart of a doula, the brain of a teacher, and the stamina of a marathon runner with a birth ball under one arm. But you don’t need to do it all the hard way.
Work smarter, not harder. Prep once, reuse often, automate the repetitive bits, and protect your time like it’s the last piece of hospital toast after birth.
You deserve it. 💛