Episodios

  • 83. Your Week Is Going to Be Fine. Here's Why. | Anti-Burnout PLC
    Jan 4 2026

    Join me for this episode of the Anti-Burnout PLC, where we explore the concept of personal growth and transformation.

    This episode offers practical strategies for educators to reconnect with their students and themselves, fostering a supportive and collaborative environment.

    Tune in to discover how to create a plan that truly serves both you and your students.


    🔗 Mentioned in this episode:

    Twelfth Night Unit: Twelfth Night Unit with She's the Man Film Pairing | Scaffolded Close Reading

    It's a Wonderful Life Unit: Literatary Analysis and Film Study Unit

    Hexagonal Norms Activity: Collaborative Classroom Community Norms - Hexagonal Thinking Activity

    For Every One by Jason Reynolds (free resource)


    The Excavation Challenge starts this month — five days, we're building a writing unit from what you already have. New year, new system.


    About the Anti-Burnout PLC: This is a weekly planning session. You show up, we work through something together, you leave ready.

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    18 m
  • 82. 25 Lessons That Saved My Teaching This Year
    Jan 1 2026

    After 18 years of teaching, here are some things I FINALLY figured out.

    I stopped chasing homework completion. I stopped blaming students for not being ready. I started designing differently.

    These are the 25 lessons that changed my classroom in 2025.

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    34 m
  • 83. Pantone Chose White. Here's What That Means for Your Classroom.
    Dec 15 2025

    Pantone chose white for 2026, and their reasoning, "clarity without coldness, structure without severity," felt like someone naming the thing I've been trying to figure out this semester.


    What do you do when students aren't walking with you? I'm calling my approach Loving Insistence.

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    26 m
  • 82. Why Your Students Need More Productive Struggle (And How Oregon Trail Proves It)
    Nov 16 2025

    Remember lining up in the computer lab to die of dysentery? There's something that pixelated pioneer simulator understood about learning that we've forgotten in our rush to make everything accessible.

    In this episode, I'm exploring why the best learning happens when failure is expected, feedback is immediate, and students choose to struggle because the struggle feels meaningful. We're diving into what's changed since 1985, why confusion has become a signal to rescue rather than persist, and how we've accidentally taught students that difficulty means they're doing something wrong.

    We'll Discuss:

    • Why removing struggle actually removes the mechanism of learning itself
    • The critical difference between productive struggle and overwhelming frustration
    • How AI and instant information access have rewired how students approach confusion
    • Four concrete strategies for creating "Oregon Trail moments" in your English classroom
    • Why faster feedback matters more than detailed feedback (and how to actually do it)
    • How to use discussion as a productive struggle space without needing resolution

    If you've noticed students shutting down at the first sign of difficulty, or if you're wondering why summarized versions don't stick, this episode reframes struggle as a feature—not a bug—of genuine learning.

    Oregon Trail didn't have an easy mode. It had strategy. Let's bring that energy back to English class.

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    41 m
  • 81. Dictionary.com named "6-7" Word of the Year & I'm Living in Idiocracy
    Nov 7 2025

    Dictionary.com just named "6-7" their 2025 Word of the Year. It's not even a word—it's numbers from a viral song, celebrated for being "meaningless, ubiquitous, and nonsensical."

    We used to think Idiocracy was satire. Now it feels prophetic. "6-7" becoming Word of the Year isn't just about slang—it reveals what we're valuing as a culture. We're not just dumbing things down; we're celebrating meaninglessness AS content.

    In this episode, I'm connecting what's happening in classrooms to this broader cultural shift toward brainrot...students who are genuinely smart but fluent in content designed to be meaningless, the anti-intellectualism we're not naming, and what teaching for meaning actually resists.

    What we're covering: • Why "6-7" as Word of the Year should concern teachers • The Idiocracy connection—celebrating absurdity over substance • What I'm seeing: awareness gaps, optimization culture, accountability issues • Teaching moves that resist meaninglessness: collaborative discussion, portfolio assessment, texts that require human thinking • Why slowing down to actually think is an act of resistance

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    39 m
  • 80. Building OUT vs. Building UP: What Star Trek Can Teach Us About English Curriculum
    Oct 13 2025

    Star Trek: Strange New Worlds gives you both satisfaction (complete episodes) AND character development (growth across the season). What if English learning works the same way?

    We've been pressured to design curriculum where everything builds UP—each lesson scaffolding to the next in perfect linear sequence. But English skills aren't plot points that get resolved. They're character traits that keep developing through repeated encounters in varied contexts.

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    26 m
  • 79. Revisiting Pre-Pandemic Teaching Strategies
    Oct 2 2025

    In this conversation, I reflect on the changes in education since the pandemic and importance of revisiting effective strategies from the past, such as flipped learning, the role of homework, and the use of physical manipulatives in the classroom.

    Ultimately, we need to remember the core values of teaching and learning as they navigate the current educational landscape.

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    23 m
  • 78. Why Your Students Crave 90s Nostalgia
    Sep 22 2025

    Your students are obsessed with Outer Banks, rewatching Friends for the tenth time, and choosing shows from before they were born over algorithm-recommended content. This isn't random—it's sophisticated rebellion against hyper-personalization and a hunger for genuine community.In this episode, we explore why Gen Z actively seeks intergenerational cultural connection and how English teachers can use this craving to create deeper literary engagement.


    Let's take a look at why and how your lived experience of the 90s and 2000s is suddenly valuable curriculum content, and learn how nostalgic anchoring creates emotional safety for intellectual risk-taking.

    If you're tired of chasing trends to make literature "relevant," let's think about how to teach from authentic cultural knowledge that both energizes you and engages your students.


    Resources mentioned:

    Teaching with 90s Nostalgia Crash Course: subscribepage.io/eZSMtV

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    21 m
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