Spring break is magical until Sunday night, when you realize you have no plan for Monday. In this episode, we share our “soft landing” strategy for the first day back, built around three simple phases: reunion, bridge, and re-anchor. You’ll learn how to reconnect before academics, use low-stakes review to ease back in, and restore routines in a way that feels calm, flexible, and community-centered.
Prefer to read? Grab the episode transcript and resources in the show notes here: https://www.secondstorywindow.net/podcast/first-day-back-after-spring-break/
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This is episode 248 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. In today's
Emily:episode, we are walking you through what a soft landing
Emily:first day back from spring break actually looks like, and sharing
Emily:a teacher approved tip for protecting your first afternoon
Emily:back.
Heidi:But let's start with a try it tomorrow, where we share
Heidi:a quick win that you can try in your classroom right away.
Heidi:Emily, what is our suggestion for this week?
Emily:Okay, this week, try adding some rhythm to your
Emily:classroom. So this could look like call and response chants or
Emily:a clapping pattern for transitions, a quick song to
Emily:kick off the morning, anything like that. Rhythmic group
Emily:activities strengthen social bonds, and they support
Emily:emotional regulation, and they reduce stress.
Heidi:And you get all of that from something that takes like
Heidi:30 seconds.
Emily:Yeah.
Heidi:If you like this idea or anything else we share here on
Heidi:the podcast, would you take a second and give us a five star
Heidi:rating? It's one of the main ways that new listeners find us,
Heidi:and it's really so helpful.
Emily:Okay, coming back from spring break is wonderful, right
Emily:up until Sunday night, when you realize you have no idea what
Emily:you are teaching Monday morning.
Heidi:Yeah. And then that Monday arrives and the kids walk
Heidi:in like they have never been to school before in all of their
Heidi:lives.
Emily:Yeah.
Heidi:So it ends up that all of you are just doing your best to
Heidi:make it through to that final bell.
Emily:And then once the kids finally do walk out the door,
Emily:you are so wrecked. You're tired from trying to hold everything
Emily:together, and you probably are facing a mountain of work to get
Emily:everything back on track.
Heidi:Well, maybe that's not how it goes for you guys, but
Heidi:that was definitely our experience of post spring break
Heidi:teaching for a long time. The idea of preparing for the
Heidi:transition back from spring break mode to full time
Heidi:classroom mode, like that wasn't even on our radar.
Emily:No. And part of that was because by spring, who has the
Emily:energy to be that strategic in your planning? And part of it
Emily:was because what we considered preparing meant working through
Emily:the break, which we didn't want to do.
Heidi:I mean, honestly, we did spend a lot of spring break
Heidi:hours in our classrooms, because like in our mind, the
Heidi:alternative was just scrambling on that Monday morning.
Emily:Yeah, and that is so exhausting in a whole different
Emily:way. But now that we know a little more, we understand that
Emily:it's not an either or situation. You are not stuck choosing
Emily:between a highly structured day that requires working through
Emily:spring break, or a loosey goosey day that you're just trying to
Emily:survive.
Heidi:Yes, you can have a productive first day back
Heidi:without sacrificing your energy or your free time. All it takes
Heidi:is just a little bit of strategy.
Emily:Yeah, you really can have it all, guys, we'll show you.
Emily:Okay, so we're going to consider this first day back your soft
Emily:landing day. It gives enough structure that everyone has what
Emily:they need to settle back into the routine, but it doesn't take
Emily:so much work that you'll be left with a huge to do list. And in
Emily:this episode, we'll help you think through what that soft
Emily:landing needs to look like in your particular classroom.
Heidi:We have talked about the logistics side of this. Episode
Heidi:181 is all about finding pockets of prep before you break, and
Heidi:episode 186 covers the five things to do before you walk out
Heidi:the door. So today is the next piece in this process. Once you
Heidi:have done that prep, what are you actually going to do with it
Heidi:on day one?
Emily:To make it easy, we're breaking the day into three
Emily:phases, the reunion, which is your first hour or so, the
Emily:bridge, which is your mid morning, and the re-anchor,
Emily:which gets you through the afternoon. Each one has a
Emily:specific job, and when you plan with those jobs in mind, the day
Emily:has a shape that works for everyone in the room.
Heidi:Okay, let's take a look at phase one, or the reunion.
Heidi:Plan on this taking your first hour so. The goal is getting
Heidi:kids reconnected with you, with each other and with the
Heidi:classroom before you ask anything academic of them.
Emily:And if you've ever tried to launch a math lesson at 8am
Emily:on the first day back, you already know why the order here
Emily:matters. You got to start with the reunion.
Heidi:Yeah. So a good first day actually starts right at the
Heidi:door. The kids haven't even come in yet. Greet your students
Heidi:intentionally as they come in, you know, with a high five, eye
Heidi:contact, and a genuine, I'm so glad to see you. It just sets
Heidi:the tone for everything that follows. Even if this isn't a
Heidi:routine that you normally have time for in the mornings, and we
Heidi:totally get it if that's the case, but try to make an effort
Heidi:to include it on that first day back.
Emily:If you want to make the return a little more special,
Emily:consider having something ready at students' seat. It could be a
Emily:little sticky note that says, I'm happy to see you, a sweet
Emily:message on the board or some gentle music playing. Anything
Emily:that signals that this is a warm place and you are excited to be
Emily:with them again.
Heidi:Well, even if maybe you wouldn't mind another week or
Heidi:two of break.
Emily:Hey, they don't have to know what you really feel
Emily:inside. This is the outside feelings.
Heidi:Yeah, we'll just make it our little secret.
Emily:Yes. So after you've figured out your warm welcome,
Emily:you will want some kind of structured reconnection
Emily:activity.
Heidi:So I think a go-to activity for this transition
Heidi:time is, Tell us what you did during your break. That seems
Heidi:like it might be a good way to recognize each student and help
Heidi:them settle in, but there are a couple of reasons why you might
Heidi:want to rethink that approach. First, that kind of question
Heidi:really highlights inequalities.
Emily:Yeah, if one kid went on a cruise and another spent the
Emily:week at home, that gap lands hard at exactly the moment
Emily:you're trying to build a connection.
Heidi:And the second reason you might want to avoid that
Heidi:question is for kids who are already finding that transition
Heidi:back to school really hard. Dwelling on the fun that just
Heidi:ended can actually make your job harder. It tends to increase
Heidi:oppositional behavior.
Emily:Yeah, we don't want that at 8:15 on a Monday.
Heidi:No. So use forward focus prompts instead. A quick partner
Heidi:share works really well. Give them one specific thing to
Heidi:share, like one word to describe their break, or one thing they
Heidi:ate, or one thing they are glad to be back for.
Emily:Of course, the kid who went on a cruise deserves to be
Emily:excited about that, but maybe the right format to share that
Emily:excitement is by writing about it and not explaining it to the
Emily:whole class at your morning meeting.
Heidi:Yes, or you can just talk to the students about their
Heidi:break as they come in the door. That allows for reconnection
Heidi:with you without spotlighting the differences in student
Heidi:experiences.
Emily:You can also lean into silliness. Ask everyone to share
Emily:one genuinely boring detail from their break. Lead with your own.
Emily:Maybe you washed socks and had a ham sandwich and lost your phone
Emily:in the couch cushions.
Heidi:Kids really love hearing the mundane details of their
Heidi:teachers' lives.
Emily:Yeah, it's so funny how everything that you do outside
Emily:of school feels like such a mystery to them, and when they
Emily:hear you share something boring, it takes all the pressure off of
Emily:them to come up with something interesting.
Heidi:Now, if you are already someone who does a regular
Heidi:morning meeting with your class, you probably don't need to plan
Heidi:a separate connection activity, because your meeting is already
Heidi:doing that work.
Emily:But if you're up for it, you can make your normal meeting
Emily:routine feel a little special. You could revisit a favorite
Emily:class game, bring back your class cheer, or add a new
Emily:component to your meeting, like a daily affirmation that you
Emily:have students repeat.
Heidi:This is the perfect time of year to sprinkle in that
Heidi:little bit of spark. By now, students are really comfortable
Heidi:with your classroom structure, but something small, like a new
Heidi:addition to your morning meeting routine just makes everything
Heidi:feel fresh at a time when the staleness can really start to
Heidi:feel heavy.
Emily:Okay, by now, you have warmly greeted everyone and had
Emily:a chance to reconnect. Next up, you want to try having students
Emily:do a quick reset of the room. Ask them to tidy their desks or
Emily:clean out backpacks and folders. The movement wakes up the little
Emily:bodies that might still be a little groggy, and resetting the
Emily:space helps kids feel like they belong there again.
Heidi:To keep this from becoming chaotic, keep it
Heidi:structured. Make a specific list of things you want students to
Heidi:do. It's even better if you have photos that you can show so they
Heidi:know exactly what you mean.
Emily:And here's a little tip from an old pro, have a second
Emily:list of classroom tasks ready for your fast finishers, or for
Emily:the kids whose desks don't need as much attention. This could be
Emily:things like testing which glue sticks still work, straightening
Emily:the class library, doing a deep clean of individual whiteboards,
Emily:or sorting through the lost and found. This is when, when we
Emily:were kids, it would be clapping the erasers outside.
Heidi:It always felt like a treat.
Emily:Yep.
Heidi:And that list of extra tasks is also going to be
Heidi:extremely useful when it is time to pack up your classroom at the
Heidi:end of the year. Just a little heads up.
Emily:Yeah, keep that list handy.
Heidi:Once your classroom is reset, move into something
Heidi:simple and familiar. On these transition days, one idea we
Heidi:always champion is assigning students independent work they
Heidi:can do without very much instruction from you.
Emily:And there are so many benefits of this. For one, it
Emily:gives a feeling of immediate success. When kids accomplish
Emily:something straightforward right away, it settles the room before
Emily:you increase the demands.
Heidi:Plus, it frees you up to start to tackle some of your own
Heidi:tasks. If the kids are busy with a review packet, you can finally
Heidi:look at that overflowing email inbox that you hopefully have
Heidi:not checked in a week.
Emily:Or you could start to plan tomorrow's lessons. That
Emily:will help you know exactly what tasks to focus on during your
Emily:prep time.
Heidi:Okay, so on your first morning back, think about four
things:a warm welcome, a moment of reconnection, a room reset,
things:and simple academics.
Emily:My own sequence on the first day back was actually a
Emily:little different from what we've described. I went from the warm
Emily:welcome straight into simple academics, which in my class was
Emily:morning work. It was a familiar routine, and the kids knew
Emily:exactly what to do without needing much from me, and it
Emily:helped get them settled right away. Then came morning meeting
Emily:and our chance to really reconnect. And then I rounded
Emily:out the reunion time with a classroom tidy.
Heidi:So it can be really flexible. Do what works for you
Heidi:and your class. The order isn't rigid. What matters is that
Heidi:you've covered all of the pieces before you try to move back into
Heidi:your full academic schedule.
Emily:And then by mid morning, you're probably ready to start
Emily:waking up that academic thinking. And don't worry,
Emily:you're just easing back in. And so we're going to call this the
Emily:bridge.
Heidi:I love it. And the best tool here is low stakes review.
Heidi:You know, can't say enough about that.
Emily:If we had a dollar for every time we talked about that.
Heidi:Seriously. We'd have $2...no. So think about
Heidi:something that gets their brains working with content that they
Heidi:already know before you're asking them to take in anything
Heidi:new. This could be playing a Kahoot review game, having
Heidi:students draw concept maps about what they remember on a topic,
Heidi:or letting partners quiz each other.
Emily:Now, while review is so important to helping your
Emily:students consolidate their understanding, it serves a bonus
Emily:purpose for you the tired teacher. That's because review
Emily:is easy to plan in advance.
Heidi:Yes, this is so important. If you are trying to
Heidi:avoid working during your break, you need to start planning for
Heidi:your return before the break hits, right? But you might not
Heidi:know exactly where you're going to land in your math or literacy
Heidi:units before the break, which makes planning new content for
Heidi:the return kind of tricky.
Emily:But if you just decide now to spend mid morning
Emily:reviewing something from six weeks ago, you can plan that
Emily:right away.
Heidi:So after your review activity, think of some other
Heidi:low effort academic tasks that will engage your students. This
Heidi:could be a great time for something like a reader's
Heidi:theater, or you could pick up some new books to read aloud.
Emily:But whatever you plan, aim to keep your lesson block
Emily:shorter than usual. Add a movement break between them.
Emily:This is not the day to launch a new unit or give a major
Emily:assessment. Save that for later in the week, when everyone's
Emily:stamina has had a chance to rebuild, including yours.
Heidi:Especially yours.
Heidi:All right, you made it to lunch. You started the day with a warm
Heidi:reunion and then transitioned into some light academic work.
Heidi:By the afternoon, you can move back to your normal schedule and
Heidi:your familiar structures.
Emily:Just continue to keep the cognitive demand low. Activities
Emily:like centers, partner work, or anything students already know
Emily:how to do will help everyone thrive. Familiar formats reduce
Emily:friction and let you reinforce expectations without a lot of
Emily:logistics.
Heidi:And if you work with small groups during a normal
Heidi:school day, we are giving you permission right now to consider
Heidi:skipping them on this first day back. We promise your kids will
Heidi:be fine.
Emily:We know some teachers want to get back to their normal
Emily:routine as fast as possible, and pulling small groups helps you
Emily:feel like things are on track. Then, for sure, go for it. But
Emily:if you're on the fence, you can totally skip it. We won't tell.
Heidi:Yeah, let the kids work independently, and then use that
Heidi:time to plan the rest of the week. Consider it a pocket of
Heidi:prep.
Emily:Love a bonus pocket of prep. And do not feel guilty
Emily:about this. You are meeting their needs and taking care of
Emily:yourself at the same time, and that's a huge win.
Heidi:Now, at some point in the afternoon, it's a good idea to
Heidi:take 15 or 20 minutes to revisit a few classroom procedures. This
Heidi:is how you're going to stay ahead of the problems that crop
Heidi:up this time of year.
Emily:You can make this review feel like a game instead of a
Emily:chore. Start by having students brainstorm your class
Emily:procedures. Write everything they come up with on the board,
Emily:then give pairs or small groups a positive outcome, like, this
Emily:procedure helps us be kind, or this procedure helps us learn.
Emily:And ask them to find a procedure from the list that fits, then
Emily:have a class discussion about what they picked and why. Keep
Emily:things moving quickly so no one gets bored.
Heidi:Or you could flip this around. Ask students to
Heidi:brainstorm the benefits of a specific procedure, like, how
Heidi:does following all the steps for unpacking your backpack help our
Heidi:class? This approach reframes procedures as something that
Heidi:benefits everyone, instead of rules that the teacher has just
Heidi:imposed.
Emily:If you have time, you can really lean into the game
Emily:element. Secretly assign each group a procedure to act out
Emily:charade style. Suggest that the groups choose some students to
Emily:model it correctly and some to model it incorrectly.
Heidi:They love that. The moment you give kids permission
Heidi:to do something wrong on purpose, you know, engagement
Heidi:just goes through the roof.
Emily:Yeah, just make sure you've got your attention signal
Emily:ready to calm things down if they get a little too
Emily:enthusiastic.
Heidi:Yes, you know that will happen. Before the day ends,
Heidi:give students something specific to look forward to tomorrow, a
Heidi:new book that you'll start, a class challenge that you might
Heidi:be launching, or something coming up next week. You want to
Heidi:end the day with some forward momentum.
Emily:Then close with a quick connection circle. We talked
Emily:about this back in episode 186 so if you haven't heard that
Emily:one, go back and listen. Here's a quick version you can use
Emily:right away. Gather students in a circle and give them a moment to
Emily:silently reflect. Then offer a few prompts. What felt easy
Emily:today? What felt tricky? What's one thing you want to remember
Emily:tomorrow?
Heidi:Trust us, as people who have been there, the kids need
Heidi:those guiding questions. Without some support, the reflection
Heidi:tends to go sideways pretty fast.
Emily:Yeah, I can hear the I don't knows, and I can't see the
Emily:blank stares, we're just now in my memory. Have kids give a
Emily:thumbs up when they know what they want to say so you're not
Emily:waiting forever for each person, and then go around the circle
Emily:and let everyone share a response.
Heidi:And obviously the format with this is going to look a
Heidi:little different in fourth or fifth grade than it does in
Heidi:first, but the idea works the same at any level. You want to
Heidi:close with something that marks your class as a community. If
Heidi:you have a class cheer or a song, you can use that now, or,
Heidi:you know, try a new send off ritual.
Emily:Keep the whole thing to 10 or 15 minutes at most. It
Emily:doesn't need to be a deep debrief. It's just helping the
Emily:day end with a sense of completion, rather than just
Emily:running out of time.
Heidi:Okay, so let's pull it all together. Your first day
Heidi:back has three phases. Phase one, the reunion. Plan a warm
Heidi:welcome that fosters reconnection.
Emily:Phase two, the bridge, is about waking up academic
Emily:thinking without overwhelming anyone. Think low stakes review,
Emily:a read aloud and shorter lesson blocks than usual.
Heidi:And in phase three, the re-anchor, it's about restoring
Heidi:your normal rhythms with low cognitive demand. Stick with
Heidi:what's familiar, revisit a few procedures in a fun way. Give
Heidi:your students something to look forward to, and then close with
Heidi:the moment of connection.
Emily:If you want some more spring break prep tips, make
Emily:sure to go back to Episode 181 and 186 for some guidance. We
Emily:promise that the first day back runs a whole lot smoother if you
Emily:plan before you leave, rather than figuring it out at your
Emily:desk on Monday morning.
Heidi:Yeah, ask us how we know about that.
Emily:Plus, then you can really enjoy your spring break, because
Emily:you know you have a plan for when you get back.
Emily:If this kind of discussion is helpful for you, come join us in
Emily:the Teacher Approved Club. Each month we focus on how to manage
Emily:that month's particular challenges with a targeted
Emily:strategy and a brand new resource to help you take it to
Emily:your classroom and put it to work. You can find the link to
Emily:the teacher Approved Club in the show notes.
Heidi:And if you haven't listened to episodes 181 and 186
Heidi:yet, those are the perfect companion episodes to this one.
Heidi:Episode 181 is about finding pockets of prep before the
Heidi:break, and 186 covers the five things to do before you walk out
Heidi:the door. Together the three of these episodes give you the full
Heidi:picture.
Emily:And we would love to hear how you are planning your soft
Emily:start. Come join the conversation in our Teacher
Emily: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 about
Emily:protecting your first afternoon back. Heidi, tell us more about
Emily:this one.
Heidi:Yes, this is so important. We focus so much on
Heidi:students that we often forget to prioritize our own needs. You
Heidi:probably know exactly how this plays out. You make it through
Heidi:the first day, the kids leave, and suddenly you're staring down
Heidi:everything that you pushed aside before the break, the emails,
Heidi:grading, planning for the rest of the week, and your instinct
Heidi:might be just to tackle it all at once.
Emily:Which is a great way to end your first day back
Emily:completely depleted.
Heidi:Yeah, exactly. So instead, before the kids leave
Heidi:that day, make a short list of only what absolutely must be
Heidi:done before tomorrow. We know you've got a lot that needs
Heidi:attention, but for right now, just worry about tomorrow's
Heidi:essentials.
Emily:And then do those things and stop.
Heidi:And that's the whole tip. Do those things and stop. Leave
Heidi:the grading. Leave the catch up planning. You're probably
Heidi:running at about 50% capacity right now, and you will make
Heidi:better decisions about all of it tomorrow, once your routines are
Heidi:re established.
Emily:The other piece of this is avoiding scheduling meetings
Emily:or extra obligations on the first afternoon if you have any
Emily:control over it. It's really not the ideal time for high level
Emily:decision making.
Heidi:Yeah, but you know, unfortunately, you might not get
Heidi:much say about when the principal decides to schedule a
Heidi:staff meeting, but make it your goal to end the first day with
Heidi:some momentum intact. Don't try to compensate for the whole week
Heidi:off in one afternoon.
Emily:Because if you burn yourself out on day one, the
Emily:rest of the week gets harder, not easier, and we've worked too
Emily:hard on that first day plan to let the afternoon undo it.
Heidi:Okay 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 extra credit to the book I just read called
Emily:Die With Zero: Getting All You Can from Your Money and Your
Emily:Life, by Bill Perkins. So this is a unique money book about
Emily:saving you from over saving and under living. So I love how he
Emily:talks about ways you can use your money throughout your life
Emily:to make memories and have experiences while you're young,
Emily:especially, instead of saving all your money for when you're
Emily:too old to enjoy it. So I wouldn't necessarily say you
Emily:should follow everything he says to the T here, but it's a really
Emily:different way to think about your money and your saving and
Emily:retirement and all of that. And I haven't stopped thinking about
Emily:it since I read it. So it's definitely an interesting one to
Emily:read.
Heidi:I have to check that out. That sounds really interesting.
Heidi:It's a different reframe to think of money as a resource to
Heidi:support the life you want to have, instead of supporting the
Heidi:kind of life you want to have 40 years from now.
Emily:Yeah, he talks about how, you know, it's the modern
Emily:mentality, maybe not even just modern, but you know, we think
Emily:only about retirement. We can't wait to retire one day, and we
Emily:want to make sure we can live super comfortably when we
Emily:retire, which, of course, we want to do. But most people are
Emily:sacrificing experiences and quality of life before that when
Emily:they don't necessarily have to, so they're over saving for
Emily:retirement, when they don't necessarily need to save that
Emily:much.
Emily:And he shares some ways that you can kind of get a good idea of
Emily:what you would need to save, because that's the thing is,
Emily:it's like, well, if you're scared of the unknown, it's that
Emily:feeling, well, how would I know how much I'll need? I need to
Emily:save a lot just in case, because you don't know what's gonna
Emily:happen, but he has some ways you can kind of get an idea of how
Emily:long you might live and what kind of risk you might be at,
Emily:but also things you can do to mitigate some of that risk,
Emily:things I like did not even know were a thing. So yeah, so very
Emily:interesting read.
Heidi:I'll have to check that out.
Emily:And what are you giving us credit to, Heidi?
Heidi:Well, my extra credit goes to flying wish paper. This
Heidi:is something that we have done on New Year's Eve for the past
Heidi:few years. But you don't have to limit yourself to New Year's
Heidi:Eve. I think this could be a fun end of the school year or a
Heidi:birthday tradition. So how this works is you have everyone write
Heidi:a little wish on this special paper, and you kind of have to
Heidi:curve the paper into a cylinder, and then you light it on fire.
Emily:So do this outside, if you're gonna do this.
Heidi:Although we've done it in the kitchen plenty of times.
Emily:But maybe we should clarify, don't do this in your
Emily:classroom. We're not saying to light things on fire in your
Emily:classroom.
Heidi:But it could be a fun family tradition, or maybe you
Heidi:want to get together with some co workers for the last day of
Heidi:school hurrah, and just let everyone make a wish for their
Heidi:break. It's an easy way to add a little bit of magic to a
Heidi:gathering and kind of elevate the connection and give it some
Heidi:meaning, which I think is something that we're all chasing
Heidi:these days. We want to feel more connected, and this is a fun,
Heidi:easy way to do that. And I did put a link to the paper in the
Heidi:show notes.
Emily:Yeah, it's a really memorable thing to do. And if
Emily:you have any little pyros, like at my house, my 10 year old was
Emily:just desperate, begging to light everybody's wish paper on fire
Emily:because she was enjoying it so much.
Heidi:And catching the ash as it came.
Emily:Yes, which then crumbles it everywhere and makes a big
Emily:mess. So I do not recommend that in your house, but it is super
Emily:fun.
Heidi:That is it for today's episode. Go ahead and map out
Heidi:your three phases before you leave for spring break. Think
Heidi:about your reunion, your bridge and your re-anchor. And protect
Heidi:that first afternoon. Make your short list, do those things and
Heidi:then go home.
Heidi:We hope you enjoyed this episode of Teacher Approved. I'm 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.