March brings higher energy and lower stamina, and suddenly your classroom feels louder, messier, and harder to manage. In this episode, we explain why spring classroom management isn’t about cracking down harder, but about rebuilding structure. We walk through four common spring trouble spots: transitions, messiness, chattiness, and behavior outside the classroom. We also share practical ways to reset expectations so the environment does more of the work for you. The goal is simple: create structure now so your day requires less of you tomorrow.
Prefer to read? Grab the episode transcript and resources in the show notes here: https://www.secondstorywindow.net/podcast/spring-classroom-management-headaches/
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Is your class acting like spring break erased every expectation you've ever taught? Try the Teacher Approved Club free for 10 days and get this month's training on keeping expectations alive — plus last month's Quiet Your Chatty Class Challenge. Join at https://secondstorywindow.net/trial
This is episode 247 of Teacher Approved.
Heidi:You're listening to Teacher Approved, the podcast helping
Heidi:educators elevate what matters and simplify the rest. I'm
Heidi:Heidi.
Emily:And I'm Emily. We're the creators behind Second Story
Emily:Window, where we give research-based and
Emily:teacher-approved strategies that make teaching less stressful and
Emily:more effective. You can check out the show notes and resources
Emily:from each episode at secondstorywindow.net.
Heidi:We're so glad you're tuning in today. Let's get to
Heidi:the show.
Emily:Hey there. Thanks for joining us today. In today's
Emily:episode, we are talking about why spring classroom management
Emily:needs more structure, not more control, and sharing practical
Emily:strategies you can use this week to make your days run smoother.
Heidi:Let's start with a try it tomorrow, where we share a quick
Heidi:win that you can try in your classroom right away. Emily,
Heidi:what is our suggestion for this week?
Emily:Okay, this week, try adding a 30-second silent reset
Emily:between transitions. So before you dismiss students to their
Emily:next activity, have everyone pause and take three deep
Emily:breaths together and mentally picture where they're going
Emily:next. Totally simple, but that tiny moment of regulation can
Emily:prevent the chaos that builds when your kids rush from one
Emily:thing to another without any processing time.
Heidi:I love that. It is such a low lift way to give kids a
Heidi:chance to settle before they move. And if you like this idea
Heidi:or anything else we share here on the podcast, would you take a
Heidi:second and give us a five star rating? Ratings and reviews are
Heidi:one way that new listeners find us, so every one really is a
Heidi:huge help to us.
Emily:Well, we have officially made it to March, and by this
Emily:point in the year, your classroom probably feels a lot
Emily:different than it did in September.
Heidi:Yeah, in the spring, everything is a little louder
Heidi:and looser, or a lot louder and looser. Transitions take longer.
Heidi:You're probably finding yourself giving more reminders and more
Heidi:warnings than you did in the fall.
Emily:Warnings, threats, whatever you want to call them.
Heidi:We don't judge.
Emily:And that totally makes sense, because if you have
Emily:followed us for long, you know that one of our favorite topics
Emily:is how the needs of your classroom shift over the course
Emily:of the school year. In fact, we like talking about this seasonal
Emily:shift so much that we literally wrote a book about it. Our book,
Emily:Structure and Spark is available for pre order now on, I know, I
Emily:know for sure it's on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.
Heidi:That is so exciting, or you could find a link to it in
Heidi:the show notes. But since our book will not be out until July,
Heidi:you are on your own for surviving March. Sorry, friends.
Emily:Just kidding, we would never do that to you! Okay, so
Emily:let's take a look at what makes March so very March-like and how
Emily:that impacts what unfolds during the school day.
Heidi:To manage your March classroom, you need to
Heidi:understand what makes this a unique time of year. So let's
Heidi:look at two key characteristics. First, the stamina you had in
Heidi:October just is not there anymore. And second, the energy
Heidi:in the room has definitely gone up. The spring shift in daylight
Heidi:and the warmer weather just brings increased chattiness and
Heidi:all kinds of fun behaviors.
Emily:So we have this perfect storm of higher stimulation
Emily:paired with lower regulation. Think about a noisy transition
Emily:in October. Maybe a few kids got sidetracked halfway to the rug,
Emily:and they're having a little chat. So you stop and ask them
Emily:to try it again. You could tolerate the extra two or three
Emily:minutes that would take because you knew it was going to pay off
Emily:the next day and for the rest of the school year.
Heidi:And that's because back at the start of the year, oh, in
Heidi:the good old days when you were so young, there was enough
Heidi:energy in the system to think long term. But in March, when
Heidi:that same procedure gets a little wobbly, instead of
Heidi:resetting it, you move forward. You do just what you have to do
Heidi:to keep the lesson moving.
Emily:And oh, have we all been there. Your gas tank is running
Emily:on empty here, and when you're running on empty, your brain
Emily:defaults to short term stabilization. You rely on
Emily:reminders and warnings because they are faster and they feel
Emily:easier, maybe, in the moment, than stopping to revisit an
Emily:expectation.
Heidi:And those reminders and warnings and maybe threats do
Heidi:work for a minute, but if the classroom only functions while
Heidi:you are actively holding it together, it's going to keep
Heidi:demanding more and more of you.
Emily:If you are stuck in that 'I just need to make it through
Emily:this tough moment' energy, it means you're relying on control
Emily:to move through the day. Control is teacher-centered, though,
Emily:it's you actively holding the classroom together. Now that
Emily:does stabilize behavior, but only as long as you are actively
Emily:monitoring it. If you don't give the reminder, the talking
Emily:continues.
Heidi:Control feels efficient because it is immediate, but it
Heidi:has to be repeated again tomorrow and the next day, and
Heidi:it only works as long as you are the one working it.
Emily:But structure works differently than control. While
Emily:control is based on your physical presence, structure is
Emily:based in the environment. It's your consistent attention
Emily:signal, your procedures and all of the expectations that don't
Emily:change based on your energy level.
Heidi:Now, while structure is more permanent, the trade off is
Heidi:that it demands a lot up front. It means stopping to practice,
Heidi:reteaching the expectation and making it clear what happens if
Heidi:the students don't follow through. Once it's solid,
Heidi:though, it gives energy back, meaning you do not have to carry
Heidi:every piece of the day all by yourself.
Emily:Here at the beginning of March is actually the perfect
Emily:time to take a good look at how well your structure is holding
Emily:up. As we've talked about before, a lot of teaching
Emily:headaches are predictable. Spring brings higher energy,
Emily:more social drive, schedule disruptions from testing and
Emily:assemblies and students who are just done with sitting still and
Emily:being quiet.
Heidi:And because we know that this spring fever is coming, if
Heidi:it's not already here, we can do something to mitigate it. Your
Heidi:instinct might be to crack down harder, but what students
Heidi:actually need is clear containers for all of that
Heidi:spring energy.
Emily:All right, so let's talk about four common spring
Emily:problems and the structural solutions that make them easier
Emily:to manage without constant teacher intervention from you.
Emily:And we're going to start with one of the biggest headaches,
Emily:sloppy transitions.
Heidi:Oh, the worst. You know how it goes. Students take
Heidi:forever to line up. They're chatting the whole way to the
Heidi:rug. Materials are getting dropped or forgotten, and you
Heidi:are repeating yourself constantly.
Emily:And here's where that control versus structure
Emily:distinction shows up. The control response is to keep
Emily:reminding, "kids talking by the cubes are going to owe me some
Emily:Bonus Bucks if they don't hurry," over and over every
Emily:single transition.
Heidi:And while a warning feels more efficient than stopping to
Heidi:reteach, especially when you're tired, you're going to give that
Heidi:warning tomorrow and the next day, and maybe every single day.
Heidi:In the long run, all you're doing is teaching your students
Heidi:to wait for your voice instead of following the routine.
Emily:Yeah. When it comes to management, control asks, How do
Emily:I get them to stop? But structure asks, How do I support
Emily:what I want to see? So let's look at how to solve this
Emily:problem using structure. And the first step is pausing to
Emily:identify the reason transitions have gotten sloppy. Are the kids
Emily:talking by the cubes because they're feeling chatty, or
Emily:because they're confused about what's expected?
Heidi:Also consider if every sloppy transition is suffering
Heidi:from the same breakdown. If you are seeing the same problem
Heidi:multiple times a day, maybe kids are talking every time you shift
Heidi:between activities, a standard solution could solve multiple
Heidi:problems at once.
Emily:Yeah, a great strategy for decreasing talking is to
Emily:decrease the opportunities to talk. Instead of calling the
Emily:whole class to line up at once, try dismissing a table at a
Emily:time. Or if kids are frequently confused about what they're
Emily:supposed to be doing during a transition, try listing the
Emily:steps on the board.
Heidi:Providing a visual support is such a great way to
Heidi:let the environment of your room do some of your management for
Heidi:you. If a student seems confused, just direct them to
Heidi:the list. That way you don't have to stop, figure out what's
Heidi:confusing this particular child, and then coach them through the
Heidi:next steps. The list does all of that for you.
Emily:Now, of course, if a kid is genuinely confused, you want
Emily:to help them, but a list on the board probably answers 95% of
Emily:the 'what are we supposed to do' questions.
Heidi:I hate that question so much.
Emily:Yep, it's always like the minute you just finished
Emily:explaining what to do.
Heidi:And then once you pinpoint which part of your
Heidi:transition needs to reset, reteach it like it's brand new,
Heidi:even if you did it in September. Model what careful listening
Heidi:looks like. Discuss how to move around the space quickly and
Heidi:quietly, and then practice.
Emily:Now this could easily take 10 minutes, and that might
Emily:feel like time you don't have right now, but what you're
Emily:teaching is that the expectation isn't optional, and the next
Emily:transition and the transitions tomorrow will be smoother
Emily:because students know that you will follow through.
Heidi:This is where accountability comes in.
Heidi:Accountability means consistently enforcing
Heidi:expectations, even when you're tired. I know it's so hard, but
Heidi:it's so important. If students aren't meeting the expectation,
Heidi:stop and have them practice doing it right.
Emily:Nagging, on the other hand, is reminding students over
Emily:and over, without following through. "Please line up
Emily:quietly. I said quietly. I'm still waiting for quiet!" That
Emily:teaches students, they can ignore what you say until you're
Emily:really serious.
Heidi:And if you find yourself thinking, I don't have time for
Heidi:this, stop and challenge that little voice in your mind. What
Heidi:you don't have time for is to give reminders all day long. Ten
Heidi:minutes now means less work every day after.
Emily:Because so many things are happening at once during
Emily:transitions, they can be a huge source of management stress. If
Emily:you want to really dial in on how to troubleshoot your
Emily:transition structure, we did three whole episodes on it.
Heidi:Yeah, we did try to condense it to one episode, but
Heidi:we found quickly there was just too much to say. So go back to
Heidi:episodes 48, 49 and 50, and I know those numbers off the top
Heidi:of my head because we've referenced them so much. There
Heidi:you will find a complete deep dive on all things transitions.
Emily:Okay, now you've got your transition structure sorted out.
Emily:Let's look at another upcoming spring problem, messiness.
Heidi:You know how it goes. You look at your room at the end of
Heidi:the day, the centers are a disaster the classroom library
Heidi:looks like a tornado hit it, supplies are everywhere, and you
Heidi:are spending half of your after school work time just cleaning
Heidi:things up.
Emily:And now the control response here is constant
Emily:monitoring and verbal corrections. Who left these
Emily:books on the floor? If you keep leaving the caps off the markers
Emily:we won't have any left in May! You can so easily turn into the
Emily:mess police.
Heidi:Oh, that felt way too familiar. But if you have been
Heidi:reminding students for weeks and nothing has changed, they need
Heidi:more than reminders. What they need is a reset, and sometimes
Heidi:that reset needs to be big enough to really get their
Heidi:attention. This is where a wake up call moment can work.
Emily:A wake up call isn't about shaming students. It's
Emily:about creating a strategic intervention that makes the
Emily:problem visible and creates urgency to fix it. It keeps the
Emily:focus on the unwelcome consequences instead of calling
Emily:out individual students.
Heidi:So here's an example. Let's say your math centers have
Heidi:been consistently left messy. The manipulatives are
Heidi:everywhere. There's loose number cards. The game boards are bent
Heidi:because they're just getting shoved in the drawer instead of,
Heidi:like, put in nicely. I don't have any rage over those
Heidi:memories, it's fine, it's fine. But after school one day,
Heidi:instead of cleaning up, you leave everything exactly as the
Heidi:students left it. Maybe you even tape off the area like a crime
Heidi:scene with some strips of yellow paper.
Emily:Then when students arrive the next morning and start
Emily:asking questions, you have the perfect opening. You call a
Emily:class meeting, show them the mess and have an honest
Emily:conversation. This is what our math centers looked like
Emily:yesterday. Why is this a problem? What do we need to do
Emily:differently?
Heidi:And then you can get specific about expectations and
Heidi:consequences. Here's what I expect to see when centers are
Heidi:cleaned up, and here's what will happen if materials are not put
Heidi:away correctly, and then you got to follow through.
Emily:The wake up call isn't a punishment, it is a reset.
Emily:You're making the problem impossible to ignore, so
Emily:students understand why change needs to happen.
Heidi:Now this definitely takes more effort than just nagging
Heidi:them about the mess, but the nagging hasn't worked. The wake
Heidi:up call creates a moment where students decide they don't want
Heidi:to keep losing privileges or dealing with consequences, so
Heidi:they choose to act more helpfully going forward.
Emily:Okay. The third problem in March, and something we have
Emily:already touched on, is chattiness. Students are talking
Emily:during work time, during transitions, during lessons, the
Emily:noise level is up, the focus is down, and you feel like you're
Emily:losing your mind.
Heidi:We actually did a whole episode on managing a chatty
Heidi:class back in episode 119, so if this is your biggest struggle
Heidi:right now, go back and listen to that one. In that episode, we
Heidi:shared five targeted strategies for taming chattiness.
Emily:But for today, we want to highlight one thing. When kids
Emily:are chattier in spring, they don't need stricter
Emily:consequences. They need clearer containers for sound. That means
Emily:being explicit about when talking is okay and when it's
Emily:not.
Heidi:This is when visual cues like voice level lights or
Heidi:charts that show, you know, silent work time versus partner
Heidi:talk time can come in handy.
Emily:And yes, you probably went over a lot of this at the
Emily:start of the year. They know better, but spring energy and
Emily:spring distractions make it harder for them to regulate
Emily:without clear reminders built into the environment.
Heidi:Which is why we are excited to share that this
Heidi:month, Teacher approved Club members are getting a brand new
Heidi:resource specifically designed for spring chattiness called the
Heidi:Quiet Class Quest.
Emily:Oh, we're so excited about this. It's so cute. Okay,
Emily:so this is a three day mini unit designed to reset your
Emily:classroom's noise level through structure, not control. It
Emily:includes three short lessons with ready to use materials,
Emily:each focused on helping students understand expectations for
Emily:different types of work time and practice meeting those
Emily:expectations. And it has a cute castle theme since we're on a
Emily:quest.
Heidi:We love a theme here. And the best part is that in mid
Heidi:March, we are hosting a guided implementation challenge in the
Heidi:club. You'll get daily support and encouragement as you work
Heidi:through the quest with your students, so you aren't doing it
Heidi:alone.
Emily:Plus club members get a bonus audio training with even
Emily:more tips for managing that springtime chattiness. Our goal
Emily:isn't to turn you into the noise police or make your kids
Emily:miserable. Instead, we just want to give you the tools to channel
Emily:their spring energy into a productive outlet that works for
Emily:them and for you.
Heidi:If you're not a Club member yet, and spring
Heidi:chattiness is draining your energy every single day, this is
Heidi:a great time to join. You can find more information at
Heidi:secondstorywindow.net/club.
Emily:We'll come back to the Quiet Class Quest in a minute,
Emily:but first, let's talk about the fourth spring problem, behavior
Emily:outside the classroom.
Heidi:So when students are loud in the hallway or disrespectful
Heidi:in the lunchroom, it can feel extra frustrating, because these
Heidi:moments are often when you have the least control. You are
Heidi:moving through shared spaces, other adults might be watching,
Heidi:and you're trying to keep things together while also getting
Heidi:everyone where they need to be when they need to get there.
Emily:One way I've seen teachers deal with this is to
Emily:ignore that it's happening. They just don't know how to fix the
Emily:problem that's happening outside the room, so they let that
Emily:complaint from the music teacher slide.
Heidi:But I have also seen teachers handle it the complete
Heidi:opposite way, and crack down with threats and punishment. I
Heidi:mean, I guess at least they're addressing it. But taking away
Heidi:recess for the next three days isn't really solving the
Heidi:behavior problem in music class.
Emily:So let's look at how we can address this problem using
Emily:structure. One helpful solution is to revisit expectations
Emily:before and after the event.
Heidi:Now this goes beyond a quick, 'remember you need to be
Heidi:respectful in the lunchroom.' It means taking time to actually
Heidi:make expectations visible and holding students accountable for
Heidi:reflecting on how they did.
Emily:For example, if hallway behavior has been rough, before
Emily:you leave the classroom, pull up a quick visual of hallway
Emily:expectations. You can post them on the board or project them on
Emily:your screen. Go through each one. We walk quietly. We keep
Emily:our hands to ourselves. We stay in line. If you've got a minute,
Emily:you may even have a discussion about how these expectations
Emily:protect other classes' learning time.
Heidi:Now this is the part that a lot of people overlook. After
Heidi:you return to the classroom, take two minutes to reflect. How
Heidi:did we do? Did we meet our expectations? What do we need to
Heidi:remember for next time. If students didn't meet your
Heidi:expectations, be clear about what will happen if the behavior
Heidi:continues.
Emily:This is also a great place to use our procedure
Emily:review slides. These are slides designed specifically for
Emily:revisiting classroom procedures with your students in a
Emily:structured, visual way.
Heidi:These are so handy, all you have to do is add the names
Heidi:of any procedures you want to discuss, like walking in the
Heidi:hallway, or lining up for lunch, to the slides. And then you
Heidi:gather your students and ask them to hold up one to five
Heidi:fingers to rate how well they think they are meeting your
Heidi:expectations for that procedure.
Emily:So let's say students rate walking in the hallway as a
Emily:three. You click the slide three times and three stars appear.
Emily:Now you have a visual representation of where things
Emily:stand.
Heidi:And then you just lead a discussion. All right, we rated
Heidi:this a three. What are we doing well that we need to keep doing?
Heidi:What do we need to work on to get to a four or a five? If a
Heidi:procedure is going smoothly, maybe hopefully your morning
Heidi:routine is a solid five. Include that in the list too, so
Heidi:students recognize that they are doing some things well, it's not
Heidi:everything that needs to be overhauled.
Emily:Right. And then after the discussion, you can revisit the
Emily:rating. Now that we've talked about this, what's our plan
Emily:going forward? What are we committing to? This keeps
Emily:expectations front and center, instead of letting them fade
Emily:into background noise.
Heidi:The procedure review slides can be done in about five
Heidi:minutes, but that five minute investment means students are
Heidi:thinking about expectations instead of you having to remind
Heidi:them constantly. It's structure doing the work instead of you.
Emily:All right, let's recap what we've covered today. Spring
Emily:classroom management isn't about cracking down harder, it's about
Emily:rebuilding structure so the day requires less of you tomorrow
Emily:than it did today.
Heidi:We discussed four common spring problems and their
Heidi:structural solutions. So problem one, sloppy transitions. Reteach
Heidi:your expectations and hold students accountable, not by
Heidi:nagging, but by stopping and practicing until they get it
Heidi:right. Problem two, messy spaces and materials. Use a wake up
Heidi:call reset to make the problem visible and create urgency for
Heidi:change.
Emily:Problem three, spring chattiness. Give students clear
Emily:containers for sound. And if this is your biggest struggle,
Emily:check out the quiet class quest in the Teacher Approved Club.
Emily:And problem four, behavior outside the classroom. Keep
Emily:expectations alive by pre teaching before transitions and
Emily:reflecting after. Use tools like our procedure review slides to
Emily:make this quick and structured.
Heidi:If you want more support for spring management, join us
Heidi:in the Teacher Approved Club. And mid March, we are hosting a
Heidi:guided challenge to help you implement it with your students.
Heidi:You'll get lesson plans, materials, daily encouragement
Heidi:and a community of teachers working through it with you.
Emily:You can learn more and join at
Emily:secondstorywindow.net/club, or you can find the link in the
Emily:show notes, and make sure to grab the procedure review slides
Emily:and our other spring management resources from the links in the
Emily:show are working for you. Come join
Emily:the conversation in the teacher approved Facebook group.
Emily:Now for our teacher approved Tip of the Week, where we share an
Emily:actionable tip to help you elevate what matters and
Emily:simplify the rest. This week's teacher approved tip is
Emily:front-load your hardest transition. Tell us more about
Emily:it, Heidi.
Heidi:Well, if there's one transition during your day that
Heidi:consistently goes off the rails, maybe it's coming back from
Heidi:recess or switching from whole group to centers, or packing up
Heidi:at the end of the day, try front loading it. Front loading means
Heidi:you spend 30 seconds before the transition to set students up
Heidi:for success. You're not just reminding them what to do,
Heidi:you're activating their mental picture of what success looks like.
Heidi:So for example, if cleanup time is always chaotic, before you
Heidi:dismiss students to clean up, have them close their eyes and
Heidi:picture exactly what they're going to do. You're going to put
Heidi:the markers in the bins with the lids on tight. You're going to
Heidi:stack the papers neatly. You're going to push in your chair. I
Heidi:want you to picture all of that in your mind. And then you can
Heidi:ask a quick check in question. Thumbs up if you know exactly
Heidi:what you're cleaning up first. This gets students mentally
Heidi:committed before they make any kind of movement.
Emily:And that sounds so simple, but the tiny moment of
Emily:mental rehearsal reduces the cognitive load during the
Emily:transition. Students aren't figuring out what to do, they're
Emily:executing a plan that they already made.
Heidi:The beauty of front loading is that it takes about
Heidi:30 seconds, and if you pair it with a posted list of steps, you
Heidi:are really setting students up for a successful transition.
Emily:So try it with your hardest transition this week and
Emily:see if it makes a difference. Our guess is you will see
Emily:smoother, faster transitions with way less teacher
Emily:intervention.
Heidi:Okay, to wrap up the show, we are sharing what we're
Heidi:giving extra credit to this week. Emily, what gets your
Heidi:extra credit?
Emily:I'm giving extra credit to the Shark Stain Striker
Emily:portable carpet cleaner.
Heidi:I'm impressed. You could say it, that's like a tongue
Heidi:twister.
Emily:I know, and it's such a mom thing to be like, I love my
Emily:little carpet cleaner. So I used to have a Bizzle little green
Emily:machine, I think is what they were called, and it did the job
Emily:okay, of cleaning up like little carpet messes. But I always
Emily:hated how hard it was to clean after. It just always seemed
Emily:like you couldn't really get it clean. So I upgraded to this
Emily:Shark Stain Striker several months ago when my kids had a
Emily:tummy bug, if you know, you know. And, but it is so good, it
Emily:has an onboard self cleaning tool that runs clean water and
Emily:cleaning solution through the whole machine, including the
Emily:hose and the attachment, so you can put it away knowing it's not
Emily:gross in there, like it's all cleaned out.
Heidi:That's amazing.
Emily:It's amazing. But not every model of this strain
Emily:striker, oh see the tongue twister got me there. Not every
Emily:model of the Stain Striker has the onboard self cleaning. So
Emily:double check the description of whichever one you're looking at,
Emily:make sure it says that. But I got the hair pro version, which
Emily:I think is designed, probably for pets, and that has it. So
Emily:just make sure you definitely want that feature.
Heidi:Yeah, that sounds like a handy dandy tool, especially if
Heidi:you've got kids around.
Emily:Yeah, you don't want a cleaning tool that then needs to
Emily:be cleaned. And you know, if you even can't get it clean, then
Emily:that's just so frustrating. Like, well, I don't want to use
Emily:this because I don't think it's clean inside, gross. So this is
Emily:a win.
Heidi:I feel like I picked up that habit when we were
Heidi:custodians in college, we'd have to clean our vacuum.
Emily:Yeah.
Heidi:I still clean my vacuum all the time.
Emily:Yep, or I can't tell you how many hours I spent cleaning,
Emily:like the detergent drawers in the washing machines, and just
Emily:like, well, gotta get this nice and clean in here. Gotta clean
Emily:the cleaner. Do I do that in my house now? No, I don't. I
Emily:probably should. Okay, what are you giving extra credit to,
Heidi:Well, my extra credit goes to Clay Moo craft kits. I
Heidi:Heidi?
Heidi:know I mentioned these a few months ago because I got them
Heidi:make two little rose baskets. Oh, cute. And I loved
Heidi:for Emily's youngest for Christmas. But now I've tried
Heidi:them myself, so I can give it a two thumbs up. My order for
Heidi:Eloise qualified for a surprise bonus kit, and the kit that came
Heidi:was a basket of roses. And I just don't think a 10 year old
Heidi:would be into that. Having made it now I could see she
Heidi:definitely wouldn't be, so I kept it for myself. She got
Heidi:cute, like a unicorn, and there's lots of fun ones.
Heidi:having just a nice activity to do at the end of the day that
Heidi:wasn't doom scrolling on my phone. So I'm gonna have to
Heidi:check out some of their other kits now. And even with my poor
Heidi:arthritic hands, it wasn't too bad. So definitely worth a shot
Heidi:if you need something for your analog basket.
Emily:Well, I mean, that's our new thing is analog hobbies.
Emily:We're all in on it. So we'll add this to the list of things you
Emily:can do without your phone.
Heidi:Perfect. Yeah, I think last week I was talking about
Heidi:sticker by number. So I guess I'm a whole new woman this year.
Emily:Yeah, yeah. We've got coloring, sticker by numbers, I
Emily:was cross stitching the other day, which was something I used
Emily:to do all the time, but not in many moons. So check us out.
Emily:We're so analog.
Heidi:That is it for today's episode. Remember, structure
Heidi:isn't about working harder. It's about making the day require
Heidi:less of you tomorrow than it did today.
Emily:Try one of these strategies we shared today and
Emily:let us know how it goes in the Teacher Approved Facebook group.
Heidi:We hope you enjoyed this episode of teacher approved. I'm
Heidi:Heidi.
Emily:And I'm Emily. Thank you for listening. Be sure to follow
Emily:or subscribe in your podcast app so that you never miss an
Emily:episode.
Heidi:You can connect with us and other teachers in the
Heidi:Teacher Approved Facebook group. We'll see you here next week.
Heidi:Bye for now.
Emily:Bye.