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EP 330 Design a self-running classroom that frees you to teach

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Manage episode 496856426 series 94753
Content provided by Angela Watson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Angela Watson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

One of the most exhausting parts of teaching is the constant decision-making. You’re answering questions like:

Where do I turn this in?

Can I go to the bathroom?

What do I do when I’m done?

My pencil broke—what now?

Over and over. All day long.

You’re managing behavior, passing out materials, troubleshooting tech, resetting the room, redirecting energy, keeping everything afloat.

And underneath all of that is the belief—often unspoken but deeply ingrained—that YOU have to be the one holding it all together.

But what if that’s not true?

What if your students—yes, even the littlest ones and the disinterested teens—were capable of taking more ownership than you’ve been led to believe?

What if a well-run classroom doesn’t require your constant presence, attention, and redirection?

What if you could stop doing so many things your students could actually learn to do for themselves?

That’s what this week’s podcast episode is about.

It’s not a list of procedures. It’s not a call to tighten control. It’s an invitation to shift the way you think about classroom responsibility.

Here’s what I walk you through:

Why students want to take ownership—and what’s been getting in the way

How we unintentionally train them to be dependent on us

What it looks like to release control without lowering expectations

How to build routines and roles that don’t rely on reminders or perfection

I’m also sharing four practical pillars that prop up the self-running classroom so you know how to take action and empower your students to share the responsibility for daily routines. Listen in, and when you’re ready to go deeper, consider:

The 40 Hour Teacher Workweek program is now open for enrollment. It gives you the tools and structure to design a classroom that runs smoothly—without sacrificing your nights and weekends. https://join.40htw.com/full-year

This October, Rocket PD is offering my live virtual training called Unlocking Teacher Productivity. It’s a practical, high-impact session to help you simplify systems and protect your time. https://rocketpd.com/cohorts/unlocking-teacher-productivity-with-angela-watson/

Get the shareable article/transcript for this episode here.

  continue reading

362 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 496856426 series 94753
Content provided by Angela Watson. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Angela Watson or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

One of the most exhausting parts of teaching is the constant decision-making. You’re answering questions like:

Where do I turn this in?

Can I go to the bathroom?

What do I do when I’m done?

My pencil broke—what now?

Over and over. All day long.

You’re managing behavior, passing out materials, troubleshooting tech, resetting the room, redirecting energy, keeping everything afloat.

And underneath all of that is the belief—often unspoken but deeply ingrained—that YOU have to be the one holding it all together.

But what if that’s not true?

What if your students—yes, even the littlest ones and the disinterested teens—were capable of taking more ownership than you’ve been led to believe?

What if a well-run classroom doesn’t require your constant presence, attention, and redirection?

What if you could stop doing so many things your students could actually learn to do for themselves?

That’s what this week’s podcast episode is about.

It’s not a list of procedures. It’s not a call to tighten control. It’s an invitation to shift the way you think about classroom responsibility.

Here’s what I walk you through:

Why students want to take ownership—and what’s been getting in the way

How we unintentionally train them to be dependent on us

What it looks like to release control without lowering expectations

How to build routines and roles that don’t rely on reminders or perfection

I’m also sharing four practical pillars that prop up the self-running classroom so you know how to take action and empower your students to share the responsibility for daily routines. Listen in, and when you’re ready to go deeper, consider:

The 40 Hour Teacher Workweek program is now open for enrollment. It gives you the tools and structure to design a classroom that runs smoothly—without sacrificing your nights and weekends. https://join.40htw.com/full-year

This October, Rocket PD is offering my live virtual training called Unlocking Teacher Productivity. It’s a practical, high-impact session to help you simplify systems and protect your time. https://rocketpd.com/cohorts/unlocking-teacher-productivity-with-angela-watson/

Get the shareable article/transcript for this episode here.

  continue reading

362 episodes

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