March is chaotic, but it’s also full of clarity. In this episode, we share five small things you can do right now to make teaching easier and set up a smoother fall, from creating a simple next-year parking lot to saving student work as future models. We also talk about using March as a low-stakes time to test-drive that routine you keep putting off, as well as share about our Quiet Your Chatty Class Challenge. You can calm spring chatter now, create more mental and physical space, and know that you’ll be ready for next year with systems you’ve already practiced.
Prefer to read? Grab the episode transcript and resources in the show notes here: https://www.secondstorywindow.net/podcast/march-classroom-tasks/
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This is episode 249 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 teacher approved
Emily:strategies that make teaching less stressful and more
Emily:effective. You can check out the show notes and resources from
Emily: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. Today we are
Emily:talking about five things you can do to make teaching easier
Emily:right now that will also set you up for a smoother back to
Emily:school, seriously. And we have a teacher approved tip for making
Emily:sure everyone pays attention while you give directions.
Heidi:Our try it tomorrow this week is a little different from
Heidi:our usual classroom strategies. This one is just for you, that
Heidi:hard working teacher. So Emily, tell us about this.
Emily:All right, so tomorrow, grab a sticky note and write one
Emily:word on it. March. Put it somewhere you'll see it, like
Emily:your desk, your monitor, your plan book, wherever. And the
Emily:next time you feel yourself getting really frustrated with
Emily:student behavior or just the general chaos of this time of
Emily:year, look at the note.
Heidi:Yeah, March can feel like such a slog. Why is it 31 days?
Heidi:It's such a long month.
Emily:The longest month.
Heidi:Seriously. And sometimes just having that reminder is
Heidi:enough to give yourself a little grace.
Emily:Yes, you're not doing anything wrong. It's just March.
Emily:It's just March.
Emily:If you enjoy what we share here on the podcast, we would love it
Emily:if you would take a second and leave us a five star rating and
Emily:review. It's one of the easiest ways to help new listeners find
Emily:us.
Heidi:All right. Are you ready to take a look at five things
Heidi:you can do in March to prepare for back to school?
Emily:I bet you anything, there's like nobody has blog
Emily:posts about this. There are not other podcast episodes on it,
Emily:and we promise we have not lost our minds or our calendars. We
Emily:are well aware that the first day of school is still five, six
Emily:months away. So today is not about handing you a list of
Emily:August tasks to start tackling in March, because that would be
Emily:completely unhelpful.
Heidi:Definitely. But even though the first day is still
Heidi:months away, March does provide a brief window of opportunity
Heidi:for helping make that time a little easier. That's because
Heidi:you are in the thick of things right now. You know exactly
Heidi:what's working and what makes you want to close your door and
Heidi:eat lunch alone.
Emily:Which, for the record, is sometimes the right call.
Heidi:Totally. Zero shame about that. But it's important to
Heidi:recognize that the clarity you have right now is valuable but
Heidi:fleeting, and by July, a lot of everything you're aware of right
Heidi:now is just gonna fade into a general blur.
Emily:So today we're talking about five small things you can
Emily:do today that will pay off later. This is the definition of
Emily:working smarter, not harder. You're making sure that the
Emily:effort you're putting in today makes both the end of this
Emily:school year and the start of next school year a little easier
Emily:to manage.
Heidi:That is like our favorite kind of magic trick. So let's
Heidi:look at our first suggestion, which is to reflect on what you
Heidi:already know about next fall.
Emily:And really, this could not be simpler. You're probably
Emily:doing some version of this in your mind already.
Heidi:Yeah, by now, most teachers have probably turned in
Heidi:their letters of intent, so you know at least a few things about
Heidi:next year. Are you staying in the same grade or switching
Heidi:grades? Are you staying in your room or moving? Are there any
Heidi:team changes that you need to account for?
Emily:And all of that is just floating around in your head
Emily:taking up space. So this first task is to get it out of your
Emily:head and onto paper. We are calling it a next year parking
Emily:lot, a running list where you can drop anything that comes to
Emily:mind about next year as it surfaces.
Heidi:The key thing here is remembering there's no pressure
Heidi:to make decisions. You're just giving those thoughts somewhere
Heidi:to live so your brain can let them go and you can deal with
Heidi:everything else on your plate right now.
Emily:Yeah, because that background stress is real and
Emily:it's really draining. When you've got a dozen unresolved
Emily:'what about next year' questions that are just floating around,
Emily:they add up even when you're not consciously thinking about them.
Heidi:Exactly. It's like having open tabs in your brain, and
Heidi:that makes me nuts. So grab a big sticky note, a scratch
Heidi:paper, or even your notes app, and start a list of what's
Heidi:changing, and then for each change, jot down a quick note
Heidi:about what that might mean for you.
Emily:So if you're moving rooms, you might need to
Emily:remember to save boxes. If your team is gaining or losing a
Emily:member, then you might need to figure out a new distribution of
Emily:responsibilities.
Heidi:But you really, you can figure all of that out down the
Heidi:road. You don't need to know any of these details right now. You
Heidi:just need a designated space to park all those thoughts that
Heidi:keep racing through your brain. That's the perfect kind of task
Heidi:for March, and it will save you from having to recall all of
Heidi:those questions five months from now.
Emily:Once you've got your thought parking lot started, you
Emily:can turn your attention to our second March task, which is to
Emily:declutter with intention.
Heidi:March is actually a really good time for
Heidi:decluttering for two reasons. One, the clutter from the last
Heidi:six or so months has probably built up quite a bit by now, if
Heidi:your room is anything like mine was, and that clutter makes an
Heidi:already chaotic classroom feel worse. When spring fever is at
Heidi:its peak, reclaiming your physical space gives you back
Heidi:some sense of agency. It's one of the few things you can
Heidi:actually control right now.
Emily:And the second reason is to think of decluttering as a
Emily:gift to future you. Fewer materials now means less to
Emily:pack, less to move, and less to organize in August. Every item
Emily:you let go of in March is one less item on your end of year
Emily:list.
Heidi:Now, if you are someone who thrives with a big project,
Heidi:maybe you want to come in on a Saturday and knock it all out
Heidi:for once, and good for you, if that lights you up. But for us
Heidi:lesser mortals, without that kind of stamina, you can take
Heidi:this on a tiny bit at a time. Just start by picking out one
Heidi:small area to focus on each week, that could be a drawer or
Heidi:a cabinet even.
Emily:Or even just one shelf in a cabinet. The nice thing about
Emily:doing this now is that you really have time for small steps
Emily:to make a big difference. If you've got 12 weeks left of the
Emily:school year and picked one area to declutter each week, you
Emily:could make pretty good progress on deep cleaning most of your
Emily:room.
Heidi:We have a whole episode, episode 60, all about spring
Heidi:cleaning your classroom. Check that out if you want some more
Heidi:tips. But the thing to keep in mind is to be discerning about
Heidi:what you decide to keep.
Emily:Yeah, I think this is a common trap for teachers.
Emily:Getting rid of something potentially useful, even if it's
Emily:something you have never actually used, can make you feel
Emily:panicky. There's often the worry that you might need it someday.
Heidi:That is how I held on to a set of coin rubber stamps for
Heidi:years. I got them at a workshop early, early in my teaching
Heidi:career, and I could never figure out what to do with them. I just
Heidi:did not have it in me to manage ink pads. They were so nice, and
Heidi:they seemed so special, and I just couldn't let them go. And
Heidi:when I left second grade, you know what happened? They went to
Heidi:a new teacher, never even having been opened after taking up
Heidi:space in my math cupboard for over a decade.
Emily:Oh yeah, that is a cautionary tale that most of us
Emily:can relate to. You need space for things that will actually
Emily:help your students now, not things that might help future
Emily:students someday. When you unearth one of those treasures,
Emily:ask yourself, have I touched this in two years? If the answer
Emily:is no, it's not a someday item, it's a museum piece.
Heidi:And you have our permission to let it go. Donate
Heidi:what's still usable, recycle the rest. Another teacher will be so
Heidi:grateful to have it. And if it helps, consider that it is doing
Heidi:more good being used by students, even if they're not
Heidi:your students, rather than sitting on a shelf.
Emily:You know, we need to get a custom, like, easy button that
Emily:you can use, that that sings, let it go. So when you like find
Emily:something, you hit the button and it'll sing to you, and
Emily:you'll be like, All right, I'll let it go.
Heidi:Perfect.
Emily:And while you're at it, take a look at your classroom
Emily:library. Are there books that never get picked up? Are some
Emily:falling apart or outdated? We know it goes against a book
Emily:lover's heart to part with a book, but sometimes it's the
Emily:right choice.
Heidi:Yeah, even public libraries clear out old books
Heidi:all the time. I follow some librarians on threads, and
Heidi:they're always talking about that, and people are shocked
Heidi:that libraries get rid of books.
Emily:They'd be stuffed.
Heidi:Yeah, and a little weeding now means a fresher,
Heidi:more functional library in the fall, without having to do a big
Heidi:overhaul in August, when you've already got 65 other things on
Heidi:your list.
Emily:And your room's so hot and you just don't want to be
Emily:sitting there digging through your library. Plus, if you clear
Emily:out unused books, you'll have shelf space to buy new ones,
Emily:just in case you've accrued some scholastic bonus points this
Emily:year.
Heidi:Buying new books is always the right answer. I don't
Heidi:care what the question is.
Emily:Nope, correct. If you ever need us to back you up on a
Emily:book purchase, just send us a message, and we are more than
Emily:happy to help you justify it.
Heidi:I'd say that's one of our gifts maybe.
Emily:Yep.
Heidi:Okay, so you're thinking about upcoming changes. You're
Heidi:slowly working away at decluttering. Emily, what is
Heidi:next?
Emily:Well, our third tip for March is to save student work as
Emily:future teaching tools. This one is so easy, it almost feels like
Emily:you're getting away with something.
Heidi:I love a sneaky good idea.
Emily:And there are so few of those in teaching, so you've got
Emily:to grab them when they come by. Okay, if you're staying in the
Emily:same grade, right now you're teaching content that you're
Emily:going to teach next year. And one of the most powerful things
Emily:you can do when you introduce a new assignment is show students
Emily:examples of what the work actually looks like.
Heidi:Of course, you can always make that example yourself. You
Heidi:probably have done that plenty of times, I know I have.But
Heidi:kid-generated models land so much better than anything
Heidi:teacher-made. When students see work from actual kids, they see
Heidi:that the standard is achievable.
Emily:And that creates a real shift, and it's so easy. While
Emily:you're teaching these units right now, be intentional about
Emily:saving a few pieces. Grab examples that clearly show what
Emily:you're looking for, maybe even include different levels, like a
Emily:strong example, a middle example and a still developing example.
Emily:Seeing that range helps kids understand the expectation.
Heidi:Just for privacy, remove any names before you share
Heidi:anything with a new class, and you're good to go.
Emily:Yeah, you don't need your second graders telling, you
Emily:know, third grade Johnny, hey, we saw your work today, and it
Emily:wasn't the good example.
Heidi:Avoid that, avoid that at all costs. And when you have
Heidi:your pictures, drop them into a folder on your drive, something
Heidi:simple, like a label of work examples organized by subject,
Heidi:will help you know exactly where everything is, and that's it.
Heidi:When these units come up again next year, you won't be
Heidi:scrambling to create samples from scratch, or, you know,
Heidi:trying to remember what good work looked like. You're going
Heidi:to have the real thing all ready to go.
Emily:You can extend this same idea to anything else you might
Emily:want to reference in the future. Photograph anchor charts before
Emily:they come down, take a picture of a strong notebook setup, and
Emily:definitely grab photos of any bulletin boards you like. You
Emily:tell yourself you remember, but you won't remember. It's like
Emily:every year I have to look at last year's pictures of how I
Emily:set up my Christmas decorations, or my mantle and shelf decor.
Emily:I'm like, How did I do this? I never remember, and you won't
Emily:remember either.
Heidi:Okay, ready for tip four? This is for the version of you
Heidi:who has a running wish list of things that they always say
Heidi:they're going to implement next year.
Emily:This is my chronic downfall. Every summer, I would
Emily:build this vision of the kind of classroom I was going to run
Emily:this year. And this would be the year for the consistent morning
Emily:message. This would be the year I figured out rubrics for
Emily:grading. This would be the year for weekly family communication
Emily:that didn't feel like a chore every week. And then August
Emily:would hit, and it's just 100% survival mode. So those ideas
Emily:would get pushed back again. And when I finally came up for air
Emily:in October, it felt too late to start something new, so it got
Emily:pushed again to next August, rinse and repeat over and over.
Heidi:Well, you know for sure, I was not any better at that. In
Heidi:fact, I was probably enabling a lot of your bad habits.
Emily:I guarantee it.
Heidi:But it's just such a draining cycle to be trapped in.
Heidi:You can see how these ideas would benefit your classroom and
Heidi:your students, but figuring out how to manage new systems on top
Heidi:of starting the school year is almost guaranteed to fall apart.
Heidi:So if you want to have something different, we need to do
Heidi:something different.
Emily:And that is why our fourth tip is to try out the
Emily:thing you've been wanting to try. Whatever that might be, a
Emily:new grading system, a new type of technology, or a new class
Emily:routine, March is your moment for greatness.
Heidi:Or you know, if not greatness, at least giving it a
Heidi:solid effort. That's because right now, you have something
Heidi:valuable, a class that already knows your routines. They trust
Heidi:you. So when you introduce something new, you're not also
Heidi:managing new relationships and new schedules and new everything
Heidi:at the same time.
Emily:Yeah, you just get to try the thing. Think of it as a low
Emily:stakes prototype. Start that morning message, test a
Emily:different end of day procedure, or try a new transition routine.
Emily:See what actually takes too long, what needs tweaking, and
Emily:honestly, what you don't enjoy as much as you thought you
Emily:would.
Heidi:Yeah, definitely pay attention to that part. There
Heidi:are ideas that sound great in theory and feel exhausting in
Heidi:practice. Finding that out now with students who are already
Heidi:used to you is so much better than finding it out in week two
Heidi:with a brand new class.
Emily:Okay. And that brings us to our fifth March task, which
Emily:is something you are going to thank us for. Next week, we are
Emily:kicking off the Quiet Your Chatty Class Challenge inside
Emily:the Teacher Approved Club, and we want to invite you to join us
Emily:by starting a free trial.
Heidi:Spring chatter is real and it's here. You maybe have
Heidi:noticed that. The energy is high, focus is scattered, and
Heidi:getting students to actually listen while you're giving
Heidi:directions can feel like a full time job on top of your full
Heidi:time job.
Emily:But we can help you manage that. As part of the
Emily:challenge, you'll get three already-done-for-you mini
Emily:lessons and systems specifically designed to address classroom
Emily:talking. Plus you'll get printables, a teacher's guide,
Emily:and a daily video with us, so we can help walk you through it.
Heidi:You can use all of this right now with your current
Heidi:class to get things a little quieter during work time. But
Heidi:here's the back to school piece, and this is what we love about
Heidi:it. When you go through the challenge now with those
Heidi:students that already know you, this will be your practice run.
Heidi:You're learning how the pieces fit together, getting all of the
Heidi:materials prepped, figuring out what works, before you ever have
Heidi:to introduce any of it to a brand new group of kids.
Emily:So then when fall rolls around, you're not trying
Emily:something new, while also building relationships and
Emily:teaching first week procedures. You'll already know the system
Emily:and have your materials all prepped. It means you'll be
Emily:implementing something you've already tested.
Heidi:If you have ever introduced a system you've never
Heidi:tried before, while simultaneously doing everything
Heidi:else September requires, you know exactly how much easier it
Heidi:will be to figure things out now.
Emily:You can start your free trial through the link in the
Emily:show notes. So come join us for the challenge. Get some real
Emily:relief from the spring chatter, and walk away with materials and
Emily:systems that will be already prepped for you in the fall. So
Emily:it is a double win.
Heidi:Okay, those are our five tasks you can do in March to get
Heidi:ahead for back to school. And we promised you they wouldn't be
Heidi:overwhelming, and they weren't, right?
Emily:I agree, yes, right. I'm speaking for the listener.
Emily:They're nodding along.
Heidi:Thank you, Emily. So number one, reflect on what you
Heidi:already know about next fall. Start a next year parking lot to
Heidi:get those floating thoughts out of your head and onto paper.
Emily:Number two, declutter with intention. Set a goal to
Emily:sort through one small area per week. Let go of the museum
Emily:pieces, weed your classroom library, and enjoy the mood
Emily:shift that comes with a cleaner space.
Heidi:Number three, save student work right now as
Heidi:feature teaching tools. Next year, you'll have real student
Heidi:samples ready to go, instead of scrambling to create something
Heidi:from scratch.
Emily:Number four, test drive the new management system or
Emily:routine you keep meaning to try. Use your current class as your
Emily:low stakes prototype, so you're not figuring it out in week two
Emily:of next year.
Heidi:And number five, start a free trial of the Teacher
Heidi:Approved Club and join us for the Quiet Your Chatty Class
Heidi:Challenge. Get immediate relief from spring chatter and walk
Heidi:away with systems and materials already prepped for fall.
Emily:Make sure you check the show notes for the link to start
Emily:your free trial and join the challenge, we would love to see
Emily:you there.
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 to try
Emily:the five finger game, and this is the perfect tool for helping
Emily:reset shrinking attention span. So tell us more about it, Heidi.
Heidi:Well, this is such a good one for getting students to
Heidi:actually listen while you're talking. The dream, right? So
Heidi:here's how it works. When you are about to give directions,
Heidi:hold up your hand with all five fingers up. You know, don't wave
Heidi:around in the air. You can just have your hand in front of you.
Heidi:And then ask your students to mirror you. They hold up their
Heidi:own five fingers against their chests. Once they're ready, you
Heidi:just give your directions. Anytime someone talks out of
Heidi:turn, blurts or interrupts, you put down one finger, and your
Heidi:students then immediately mirror you. So they're watching,
Heidi:they're paying attention, and they are physically tracking how
Heidi:the class is doing as a group.
Emily:And because everyone mirrors every finger, students
Emily:aren't just managing their own behavior. They're aware of the
Emily:groups. They're quietly holding each other accountable without
Emily:you having to say a word about it.
Heidi:And that means you don't have to give any warnings or
Heidi:call out names, and that shifts the dynamic completely. You just
Heidi:put a finger down and keep going, and the students will
Heidi:figure out the rest pretty quickly.
Emily:Just make sure you're keeping the talking to the
Emily:minimum, even the most focused student can only pay attention
Emily:for so long.
Heidi:And if you teach younger kids, you might be able to keep
Heidi:them invested in this process just by making it feel like a
Heidi:challenge. "Let's see if we can get everyone to listen to my
Heidi:directions without talking. Do you think we can do it with zero
Heidi:interruptions?"
Emily:If you teach older kids, though, they might need a bit
Emily:more of an incentive. Tie the outcome to whatever motivates
Emily:your class. If all five fingers are still up at the end of
Emily:directions, maybe they earn a brain break, a couple minutes of
Emily:free choice, an extra recess minute, or whatever works for
Emily:your group.
Heidi:Try it this week. It takes about 30 seconds to teach,
Heidi:and you can introduce it before your very next set of
Heidi:directions.
Emily:And this pairs beautifully with the Quiet Your
Emily:Chatty Class Challenge that we mentioned earlier. If spring
Emily:chatter is wearing you down right now, that challenge is
Emily:going to give you a whole toolkit of strategies, just like
Emily:this one.
Heidi:To wrap up the show, we are sharing what we're giving
Heidi:extra credit to this week. Emily, what gets your extra
Heidi:credit?
Emily:I'm giving repeat extra credit to the TV show Shrinking.
Emily:Season three is airing now on Apple TV, and I'm pretty sure I
Emily:gave this extra credit in season one and season two.
Heidi:It's just so good.
Emily:It deserves it. I think it's the best show on TV right
Emily:now. If you like humor and heart and found family, and Harrison
Emily:Ford being the absolute best version of himself, I think
Emily:maybe ever, you will love it. Every season just gets better.
Emily:So what are you waiting for? Go watch it.
Heidi:Yeah. How rare is that this show gets better each
Heidi:season?
Emily:Yes, it usually goes the other way.
Heidi:Yeah, because I liked the first season, but I wouldn't say
Heidi:it completely won me over. I think I was still, like, waiting
Heidi:for, like, a big, heavy drama twist. So I was bracing myself,
Heidi:and then you get to the end, you're like, Oh, it was just,
Heidi:like, it was dealing with real things, but not in a way that
Heidi:left you emotionally wrecked.
Emily:Yes, which I do appreciate that about the show.
Emily:It's not just fluff. They're covering real human emotions and
Emily:experiences, but in a way that feels, what's the word I want to
Emily:say? I was gonna say wholesome, but that doesn't feel right.
Emily:It's, it feels real but, but not too heavy and sweet, but not
Emily:saccharine.
Heidi:Yeah, it's, it's like Ted Lasso, but maybe slightly less
Heidi:funny?
Emily:I think it's funnier than Ted Lasso. But in a different
Emily:way.
Heidi:Ted Lasso's kind of broad humor.
Emily:Yes.
Heidi:And this is very like, intelligent, quiet moments.
Emily:Yes, it's a little like, Wait, what did he say? Oh, it's
Emily:so good. I love it so much. What are you giving extra credit to,
Emily:Heidi?
Heidi:Well, my extra credit is going to the Proper Mountain
Heidi:Woman's Club.
Emily:Yahoo.
Heidi:Which is something that you Emily introduced me to, and
Heidi:we've had so much fun doing this the past few months. Our mom
Heidi:even joined us. It's just been so much fun. And don't let the
Heidi:name intimidate you. It is not about survival skills.
Emily:No rope tying required.
Heidi:Instead, it's more like Girl Scouts for grown ups, but
Heidi:with a fun theme, instead of, you know, I don't know what Girl
Heidi:Scout badges, I wasn't in Girl Scouts.
Emily:No, me neither, sadly.
Heidi:But each season has a different focus. And then
Heidi:there's a list of possible merit badges you can earn. And the
Heidi:badges are all digital, which was kind of sad, but if you earn
Heidi:enough of those badges, you qualify for a physical patch. So
Heidi:that's been really fun.
Emily:Yeah.
Heidi:And this week we are wrapping up the winter session,
Heidi:which has been all about Emma M Lion.
Emily:Which is the book series that we love.
Heidi:Yes.
Emily:That's an extra extra credit for this week that we're
Emily:both giving double extra credit to, because I know we've given
Emily:it before, but it is so good, best book series. I just
Emily:finished going through it for a second time on audio. It's so
Emily:good.
Heidi:Oh, that's so fun. So we have earned merit badges for
Heidi:having tea parties, making Valentine decorations, and even
Heidi:howling at the moon. But it does also have practical suggestions
Heidi:like deep cleaning your bathroom, finishing a project,
Heidi:tidying your desk, which I still have not done.
Emily:I know I need to, I should like right now go do my
Emily:washing my makeup brushes one.
Heidi:Oh, there you go. Yeah, that's an easy one. So I bring
Heidi:this up now because the spring season is starting March 20, and
Heidi:if you want a gentle invitation to be more present in your life,
Heidi:this might be what you're looking for. I feel like it has
Heidi:been so good for me to have these little nudges to just add
Heidi:some whimsy to my day, like wearing a brooch on Thursdays is
Heidi:one of the merit badges. And you know, honestly, it did not make
Heidi:me a more productive person to wear a brooch, but it just felt
Heidi:so ridiculous that it made my Thursdays have a little more of
Heidi:a sparkle. I feel like it made winter a lot more enjoyable. So
Heidi:I'm looking forward to it.
Emily:I feel like, especially in winter, it's nice to have
Emily:these, but I mean, at any time, I think it's good, and whimsy is
Emily:my word of the year, so I was already looking for ways to add
Emily:whimsy to my life. So this, like, has just worked out to be
Emily:perfect. And you can just do whatever merit badges you want.
Emily:You don't have to do any that don't speak to you.
Heidi:Yes, like, there's one that was like, spend 50 hours
Heidi:outside or something.
Emily:No, it was 100.
Heidi:Oh my gosh, yeah, we're not doing that.
Emily:In winter?
Heidi:I did not even give it a second thought.
Emily:No, and I'm also not going to learn how to make Beef
Emily:Wellington. Like, I'm just not. But there are plenty of things
Emily:on here that, like, maybe I wouldn't have necessarily
Emily:thought, like, oh, I want to do that. But it was just
Emily:interesting enough that I'm like, I'm going to try that. And
Emily:then, and then it was so fun. Like, when we made the, we did
Emily:foil embossing for Valentine's Day decorations, and I had never
Emily:even thought about that before, but it was so much fun.
Emily:And the kids did it with us.
Emily:Yeah, it was great.
Heidi:We went to a fountain after dark and threw in a coin.
Emily:Yeah, we've had tons of fun.
Heidi:Yeah, learning about Victorian poets and composers
Heidi:and all kinds of things.
Emily:Memorizing Queen Victoria's children.
Heidi:I got cards to make flashcards, so I can still get
Heidi:that one. We do not have a discount code if you want to
Heidi:sign up for this, but I know there are some out there, so if
Heidi:you do want to sign up for this, definitely look around for a
Heidi:discount before you join.
Emily:If I see any for the spring season, I will put them
Emily:in our stories on Instagram.
Heidi:Smart, perfect.
Emily:And if you like earning merit badges, I just have to put
Emily:a little plug. And this idea came to me before we did this
Emily:club. You're going to really like the Summer Teacher Summer
Emily:Talk Session.
Heidi:So we're already hard at work on it.
Emily:Yes, yes, it's going to be so fun this summer.
Heidi:That is it for today's episode. Pick one thing from
Heidi:today's list and use it not only to make March a little easier,
Heidi:but to make back to school a little easier as well.
Emily:And if you want to join us for the Quiet Your Chatty
Emily:Class Challenge, the link to start your free trial of the
Emily:Teacher Approved Club is in the show notes, and we would love to
Emily:have you there.
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.