The contemporary faculty workload is both visible and invisible. Visible are the courses, the syllabi, the scheduled advising hours, and the committee meetings. Invisible are the hours of discussion facilitation, emotional labor in student emails, feedback that stretches late into the evening, and the cognitive fragmentation caused by digital availability. In online teaching environments especially, work expands quietly and persistently. There is always another post to read, another draft to refine, another student in need of reassurance. Over time, this expansion erodes boundaries. When boundaries erode, reflective practice gives way to reactive performance.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is often introduced into this environment as a productivity tool – something that can draft announcements, summarize readings, or generate quiz questions. While these uses are valuable, they miss a deeper and more transformative possibility: AI can function as a structured reflective partner, helping faculty visualize, model, and design sustainable workflows. Used intentionally, AI does not accelerate academic labor – it contains it.
The Expansion Problem in Online Teaching
Online teaching carries unique pressures. Faculty may teach multiple sections with high enrollment caps while also advising students, serving on committees, and maintaining research or professional engagement. Add caregiving or household responsibilities in unison with some semblance of a social life, and the total cognitive load becomes significant. Studies of online faculty workload consistently document expanded time demands and blurred boundaries compared to face-to-face instruction (Van de Vord & Pogue, 2012; Conceição & Lehman, 2011). Despite this heavy lift, faculty rarely see their workload mapped in concrete terms. Instead, responsibilities are experienced as a steady hum of obligation. The result is not necessarily inefficiency but diffusion – attention scattered across roles without structural containment.
When workload remains unexamined, it expands toward perfectionistic over-functioning – where professional care quietly becomes unsustainable self-demand. Faculty who care deeply about student engagement often over-perform in discussion boards, provide extensive written feedback on assignments, and remain constantly available via inbox. While well-intentioned, these practices are rarely sustainable across a 15-week semester. Sustainability is not a luxury – it is a pedagogical necessity.
Reframing AI: From Efficiency Tool to Reflective Instrument
Sustainable academic workflow design is not simply a time management strategy but an act of reflective practice. Reflective practice, as Schön (1992) suggests, requires structured opportunities to step back from action in order to examine it. When faculty intentionally structure their cognitive energy, response rhythms, and grading containment strategies, they reclaim agency in environments that often reward constant availability. AI tools, when framed as reflective partners rather than replacement engines, can support this intentionality without eroding professional judgment.
A different approach begins with a simple practice-oriented exercise. Rather than asking AI to draft materials, faculty can prompt it to model their workload:
“Develop a sustainable weekly workflow plan for three 3-credit online courses with 40 students each, five advising hours, two committee obligations, and caregiving responsibilities for a busy household of four. Organize by cognitive intensity, include grading containment strategies, and build in burnout prevention checkpoints.”
The power of this prompt lies not only in the output but in the articulation. To write such a prompt, faculty must quantify their teaching load, name their service commitments, and acknowledge personal responsibilities. In doing so, invisible labor becomes visible. This externalization is metacognitive – it transforms vague overwhelm into structured design grounded in reflective practice.
When AI returns a proposed workflow, faculty are invited into a second stage of reflection: evaluation.
- Does this plan assume unlimited energy?
- Where are boundaries explicit?
- Are grading tasks batched?
- Is advising emotionally contained rather than scattered?
- Are there protected deep-work blocks?
- Is there a true day off?
The goal is not to adopt the AI output uncritically. The goal is to use it as a design prototype – a starting point that models reality and invites revision, reiteration, and recalibration. In this way, AI becomes a mirror rather than a manager.
Designing for Cognitive Intensity
One of the most helpful reframes in workflow modeling is organizing tasks by cognitive intensity rather than simply by time.
For example:
- High-intensity work: grading essays, providing individualized feedback, preparing complex instructional materials.
- Moderate-intensity work: discussion facilitation, advising meetings, committee contributions.
- Lower-intensity work: email triage, administrative documentation, course announcements.
When faculty cluster high-intensity tasks into protected blocks earlier in the week, they reduce cognitive fragmentation. Batching grading into two dedicated sessions, rather than grading sporadically every evening, preserves mental clarity. Similarly, containing advising into structured windows prevents emotional spillover into unrelated tasks. AI can help surface these distinctions by suggesting workflow structures based on energy patterns rather than traditional 9-5 assumptions. This design approach honors a simple truth: faculty are not machines. Cognitive endurance has limits. Protecting deep work is not indulgence; it is strategic preservation of teaching quality.
Reflective Practice and the “Good Enough” Threshold
Reflective practitioners continually ask not only “How can I improve?” but also “What is sustainable?” In many online courses, discussion participation becomes a site of overextension. Faculty may feel compelled to respond to every student. Yet research on instructor presence suggests that strategic facilitation – clarifying early, probing midweek, synthesizing at the end – can be equally effective without constant posting (Martin, Wang, & Sadaf, 2018).
Similarly, grading in writing-intensive courses can expand infinitely. Without containment strategies such as detailed rubrics, comment banks, audio feedback, or staggered due dates across sections, the feedback process can dominate weekends.
AI-generated workflow models often include explicit stopping rules: close the laptop at a set time, designate one weekend day fully offline, cap email checks to specific intervals. While these suggestions may appear basic, they function as permission structures. Faculty frequently know these strategies but lack operational reinforcement to enact them. By embedding boundary-setting into the design process, AI supports not productivity culture but sustainability culture.
Ethical and Critical Considerations
Using AI in this way requires thoughtful boundaries. Faculty should not input identifiable student information or sensitive advising details. Institutional expectations, union contracts, and workload policies must inform any workflow plan. AI outputs may reflect generalized assumptions that require contextual adjustment. Most importantly, AI cannot assess the cultural or emotional nuance of individual departments or institutions. The technology offers scaffolding; the educator retains authority.
Critical use also means resisting the narrative that AI should help faculty “do more.” If a workflow model suggests filling every available hour, it should be revised. The measure of success is not maximized output but sustained presence.
Work-Life Balance as Pedagogical Integrity
Work-life balance is often framed as a personal wellness issue. In teaching, it is also a pedagogical one. Faculty who are chronically depleted struggle to offer thoughtful feedback, nuanced facilitation, and emotionally attuned advising (Cruz & Javier, 2023; Slavova & Tarpomanova, 2025). Conversely, instructors who protect cognitive space demonstrate more intentional instructional presence and emotional regulation.
Sustainable workflows improve clarity. Clarity improves presence. Presence improves learning environments. When faculty design their semester with containment in mind- staggering major assignments, batching grading, structuring advising, protecting weekends – they model for students a form of professional self-regulation that is deeply instructive (Conceição & Lehman, 2011). Adult learners in particular benefit from seeing boundaries enacted rather than preached. AI can support this modeling not by replacing human work but by helping faculty consciously design it.
Toward Sustainable Academic Labor
The conversation about AI in higher education often oscillates between excitement and alarm. Missing from much of this discourse is a quieter application: using AI to support faculty reflection about their own labor patterns. Prompting AI to generate a workflow plan is not so much a shortcut as an invitation to pause, quantify, and redesign (Sarkar, 2026). It surfaces hidden assumptions about availability, perfectionism, and overperformance. It encourages faculty to treat their time as an ecosystem rather than a resource to be exhausted.
Mitigating academic labor does not diminish rigor – it protects it. As institutions continue to expand online offerings and faculty responsibilities, designing humane workflows will become increasingly urgent. AI, used critically and reflectively, can serve as a scaffold in this process – not to accelerate work indefinitely, but to contain it within boundaries that preserve intellectual and emotional vitality.
Sustainable workflow design ultimately yields professional sovereignty. Faculty who approach their work reflectively rather than reactively are better positioned to model balance, ethical decision-making, and intellectual clarity for their students. AI will not solve academic overload. But when used thoughtfully, it can serve as a cognitive companion – helping instructors plan, prioritize, and protect the relational core of teaching. In an era that increasingly rewards speed and availability, the more radical act may be designing work that is humane, deliberate, and bounded. Faculty sustainability is not a personal luxury – it is a structural necessity for meaningful, enduring teaching.
Crystal Donlan, MEd, DEd(c), is the Non-Credit Instructional Designer for Penn State World Campus and a faculty member and doctoral candidate in Lifelong Learning and Adult Education. A learning scientist and educator for over 20 years, her scholarship centers on modern literacies, reflective practice, online and distance learning, and the ethical integration of AI in higher education. Crystal’s work in postsecondary teaching and learning has led her to develop several best practice frameworks to support inclusive, multimodal, learner-centered environments.
References
Conceição, S. C. O., & Lehman, R. M. (2011). Managing online instructor workload: Strategies for finding balance and success. John Wiley & Sons.
Cruz, A. M., & Javier, R. D. (2023). The role of social support in mitigating academic burnout among university faculty. Journal of Psychological Studies and Education, 7(1), 89–103.
Martin, F., Wang, C., & Sadaf, A. (2018). Student perception of helpfulness of facilitation strategies that enhance instructor presence, connectedness, engagement, and learning in online courses. The Internet and Higher Education, 37, 52–65. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.iheduc.2018.01.003
Sarkar, A. (2026). From AI hype to workflow reality: A strategic framework for integrating generative AI across organizational functions. Organizational Dynamics, 55(1), 101202. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.orgdyn.2025.101202
Schön, D.A. (1992). The Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in Action (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315237473
Slavova, V., & Tarpomanova, T. (2025). Stress and coping among university faculty and staff at a medical university in the post-pandemic context: A qualitative analysis. Frontiers in Public Health, 13, 1674290. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2025.1674290
Van de Vord, R., & Pogue, K. (2012). Teaching time investment: Does online really take more time than face-to-face?. The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 13(3), 132–146. https://doi.org/10.19173/irrodl.v13i3.1190