Saturday, June 27, 2026

The Lifelong Learner at the Head of the Table

The middle of June has a distinct rhythm. The frantic energy of closing out grades has finally cleared away, leaving a quiet space that we have desperately earned. For most of us, this is the time to step away from the classroom both physically and mentally and let our minds drift. Yet, as the initial exhaustion fades, a familiar itch usually sets in. It is the quiet realization that while the classroom is empty, our own growth cannot simply pause until August.

​We often get so caught up in the role of the expert that we forget the magic of being the beginner. True expertise in education is not a fixed destination but a continuous pursuit. There is an immense power in diving back into our subject matter during these quiet months, discovering a new historical perspective, a fresh mathematical proof, or a literary interpretation that we missed before. When we rekindle our own intellectual curiosity, we bring a completely different energy to the table when the school year resumes.

​Learning about our content is only half the battle. The true artistry lies in how we invite young minds into that space. This summer is the perfect window to refine the craft of stepping back. Transitioning a classroom away from lecture and toward a student-centered environment requires immense intentionality. It takes time to design spaces where students confidently drive the conversation and challenge one another directly. Fine-tuning our ability to facilitate deep, discussion-based learning means studying the subtle art of the silent pause, the strategic nod, and the prompt that sparks a debate rather than an answer. We have to practice the discipline of speaking less so our students can think more.

​Perhaps the most compelling reason to remain a student is the profound impact it has on the teenagers sitting in front of us. Our students need to see us struggle with new ideas. They need to watch us navigate uncertainty and model what it looks like to genuinely listen to an opposing viewpoint. When we openly identify as fellow learners who are continuously refining our craft, the classroom culture shifts dramatically. It transforms from a theater of performance into a collaborative workshop. 

Enjoy the sunshine and the well-deserved rest, but do not let the dust settle on your own curiosity. The best teachers are always the ones who never quite managed to stop being students.

Saturday, June 20, 2026

True Rapport Endures

The final bell rings, the hallways empty, and a sudden silence settles over the classroom. After months of intense daily interaction, shared inside jokes, and breakthrough moments, the sudden shift to summer vacation can feel incredibly abrupt. It is entirely natural to look around the quiet room and wonder if the deep rapport built with your students has simply vanished into the summer air.

​True connection does not have an expiration date. The relationships we cultivate over nine months do not dissolve the moment the school year officially concludes. Instead, summer offers a different and quieter space for that rapport to sustain itself.

​Consider the simple power of a birthday message. When you take a moment in July to wish a student a happy birthday, it signals that you still view them as an individual worthy of acknowledgment outside the strict confines of the academic calendar. It proves that your care was never conditional on their attendance or their performance in your class.

​Similarly, the communication often flows back to us in meaningful ways. When a rising senior reaches out in July to ask for a college recommendation letter, they are not just checking a logistical box. They are actively choosing you because they trust your perspective and value the bond you shared. They remember how well you understood their strengths, and they are inviting you to remain a part of their future journey.

​These small summer interactions are gentle reminders that our impact endures. The rapport did not end when the grades were finalized. It simply changed format, transforming from a daily classroom routine into a lasting foundation of mutual respect that easily carries over into the sunshine months and beyond.

​Maintaining these quiet points of connection reminds us that our influence extends far beyond the academic year.

Saturday, June 13, 2026

The Annual Pivot

​Every summer brings a unique opportunity for reflection. The hallways are finally quiet, the grades are submitted, and we have a moment to catch our breath. It is the beautiful reset button of the teaching profession. But if we are not careful, that reset button can start to feel like a loop. There is a massive difference between building a three-decade legacy of growth and simply hitting copy-and-paste on our lesson plans until retirement.

​When we first start out, survival is the goal. We spend hours crafting the perfect unit, aligning standards, and finding activities that do not flop. Once we find something that works, the temptation to lock it in forever is incredibly strong. It is comfortable, it saves time, and it keeps the grading predictable. However, the students walking through our doors change constantly, and the world they are preparing for shifts even faster.

​Stepping out of our comfort zone during our summer planning does not mean throwing away everything we know. It is about treating our curriculum like a living organism. Maybe this is the coming school year we finally let go of that one reading assignment that everyone snoozes through. Maybe we experiment with a new digital tool, or plan to let the students take the wheel on a project design. When we allow ourselves to be learners alongside our classes, the entire atmosphere shifts.

​The secret to avoiding the professional slump after a decade or two in the classroom is simple curiosity. If we are bored with the material, our students stand absolutely no chance. By choosing to iterate, tweak, and occasionally dismantle our favorite units during the break, we keep our own fires lit. We ensure that our final year of service is just as vibrant, relevant, and impactful as our very first.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Practicing What We Preach

Over the first week of summer break, my inbox contained several messages from students I taught this past year. Not grade disputes or missing assignments, but something entirely different. They were asking what they could do now to be ready for next year.

Some wanted problem sets. Some asked for topics to review. A few just said they did not want to feel lost when school started again. After emphasizing all year that the end of May is a mile-marker rather than a finish line, it was good to see the message had been received, and that the students understood the fact that learning continues beyond any one course, even during the summer. 

As teachers this should cause us to pause and think about our own habits.

Every year, students are told that the skills they learned require consistent practice. They are encouraged to stay curious and to keep their minds active. Yet when the final bell rings in May, how many teachers shift into recovery mode, stepping away from content, putting off planning, convincing themselves they will get back into it later in the summer.

Meanwhile, some students are already looking ahead.

There is something quietly powerful about that mindset. It is not about grinding through worksheets all summer. It is about a sense of ownership. They see learning as something that continues, even without a classroom. They are not waiting to be told when to start.

It makes me wonder how often we as teachers model that same approach. Not in a performative way, and not at the expense of much needed rest, but in a steady and intentional way. The kind that says growth is ongoing, even in small doses.

Maybe that looks like revisiting a tricky concept from last year and thinking about how to teach it better. Maybe it is exploring a new instructional strategy without the pressure of immediate implementation. Maybe it is simply reflecting on what worked and what did not, while the memories are still fresh.

The students who emailed me are not asking for perfection. They are asking for direction. They are showing up early, before the school year even begins, ready to take the first step.

There is something worth paying attention to in that. Perhaps, by quietly practicing a bit more curiosity and a bit more intention over the summer, our words next year will carry a bit more weight next year when we ask the same of our students.

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Plan a Little, Breathe a Lot

Every summer, there is a familiar promise that this year will feel different. This will be the year when the school days are less rushed, when lessons feel smoother, when there is finally time to breathe between bells. And yet, by October, many teachers find themselves back in the same cycle of planning late, reacting fast, and trying to stay one step ahead of tomorrow.
It does not have to be that way.

There is something quietly powerful about setting aside just one hour a day during the summer to think ahead. Not to overhaul everything or build a perfect system, but to simply move the starting line forward. One hour is manageable. It does not take over your break, and it leaves room for rest, travel, and all the things that make summer feel like summer. But over weeks, those hours add up to something meaningful.

Imagine walking into the first week of school with a clear outline of your units, a rough map of your pacing, and at least a few lessons that are ready to go. That kind of preparation does more than save time. It lowers stress. It gives you space to focus on your students instead of constantly racing the clock.

Of course, no plan survives the school year untouched. Students need different things, schedules shift, and unexpected moments always show up. But adjusting a plan that already exists is far easier than building something from nothing at the end of a long day. A small tweak to a lesson feels manageable. Starting from scratch at eight in the evening feels overwhelming.

Planning ahead also gives you the chance to be more thoughtful. During the school year, decisions often happen quickly. Over the summer, there is room to consider what really worked, what did not, and what could be better. That reflection turns into stronger lessons and more intentional teaching.

This approach is not about perfection. It is about momentum. Each hour you invest now is one less moment of stress later. Each small piece you put in place becomes part of a larger structure that supports you when things get busy.

By the time the school year begins, you are not scrambling to catch up. You are already moving forward.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Focus On Understanding

The day after the last bell rings carries a particular kind of quiet. The urgency is gone. The hallway noise has faded. What remains is space to think about what actually happened in the classroom over the past year and what it all meant.

This year, more than most, likely felt different. Artificial intelligence moved from curiosity to constant presence. Students used it, tested it, relied on it, and sometimes leaned on it more than they should. It produced essays, solved equations, summarized readings, and offered polished responses in seconds. It gave answers with ease.

But something important lingered beneath that ease. An answer is not the same thing as understanding.

Understanding takes time. It involves confusion, revision, and the slow construction of meaning. It shows itself when a student can explain an idea in their own words, connect it to something unfamiliar, or recognize when a solution does not quite make sense. These are moments that cannot be outsourced. They require internal work.

When students turn to AI, they often receive something that looks complete. The reasoning appears smooth. The conclusion appears confident. Yet without careful guidance, students can mistake that surface completeness for genuine comprehension. The risk is not simply that they skip effort. The risk is that they lose sight of what learning actually feels like.

This is where teaching becomes sharper and more intentional. If answers are now abundant, then the work of the classroom shifts. The goal is no longer centered on producing responses that can be generated instantly. The goal becomes cultivating thinking that cannot be replicated so easily.

Tasks that invite explanation begin to matter more than tasks that reward retrieval. Opportunities for students to wrestle with ideas take on greater value than opportunities to arrive quickly at conclusions. The classroom becomes a place where reasoning is visible, where mistakes are useful, and where partial understanding is a step rather than a failure.

This does not require abandoning technology. It requires reframing its role. AI can serve as a tool for exploration, a starting point, or even a partner in drafting. It can model clarity. It can provide examples. Yet it cannot replace the moment when a student realizes why something works or recognizes how two ideas fit together.

As summer begins, there is a chance to reset expectations. Not by resisting new tools, but by refining the kinds of thinking that matter most. The future classroom will not be defined by whether students can find answers. It will be defined by whether they can make sense of them.

In that space between answer and understanding, teaching remains essential. It is slower, less predictable, and far more human. That is precisely why it still matters.

Saturday, May 16, 2026

The Space They Leave Behind

The atmosphere in the building shifted in a subtle but unmistakable way this week. By the time Thursday morning arrived, the senior class had finished their final requirements and departed to prepare for the festivities of the weekend, and their absence resonates through the architecture of the school. The common areas and the cafeteria feel strangely spacious without the oldest students occupying their usual corners. Even without a designated senior hallway or rows of lockers, the physical footprint of their departure is easy to track in the sudden abundance of open floor space and the quieter hum of the morning commute.

On Thursday and Friday, the underclassmen seemed to walk with a bit more purpose. I watched my sophomores and juniors navigate the transitions between classes with a newfound sense of ownership. With the seniors gone, the social hierarchy of the school undergoes a rapid and quiet transformation. The students remaining in my classroom are suddenly the leaders of the building, and I noticed them sitting a little taller in their chairs during our final discussions of the week. There is a specific kind of energy that fills the void left by a graduating class, and it was fascinating to witness that transition happening in real time over those days.

Friday afternoon brought the usual rush of the weekend, yet it felt more permanent this time. I spent my final hour at my desk looking over the plans for the coming week and reflecting on the strange rhythm of the academic calendar. Teachers often speak about the exhaustion of May, but there is also a profound sense of closure that comes when the building begins to empty out. I will not be present at the ceremony on Sunday morning because my commitments as a deacon at my church require my full attention. While my colleagues are gathered to celebrate the graduates, I will be serving my congregation and offering my own silent prayers for the young people moving on to new adventures.

The quiet that settled over my classroom on Friday afternoon was a reminder of why we do this work. We dedicate ourselves to the growth of these students and then we watch them step out into the world. Even though I did not have many seniors in my own classes this year, I felt their influence in the hallways and in the way my younger students carried themselves this week. The building is a place of constant motion and evolution. By the time I return on Monday morning, the graduation will be in the rearview mirror, and the cycle will begin its final turn toward summer. I am grateful for the chance to witness these transitions and for the peaceful moments of reflection that the end of the school year provides.