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.

Saturday, May 9, 2026

The Art of the Meaningful Goodbye

The final two weeks of the school year often feel like a frantic race to clear the desks and submit the last of the grades while everyone involved is staring longingly at the exit sign. In the middle of this chaos, it is easy to treat these remaining days as a hurdle to be cleared rather than a strategic opportunity for professional growth. Psychology offers a concept known as the peak-end rule which suggests that the way a person remembers an entire experience is heavily weighted by how it felt at its most intense point and how it eventually concluded. For a high school teacher, this means that the tone you set in these closing hours will likely define a student’s entire memory of your course and their own sense of academic identity. If the final impression is one of stress and disarray, the hard-earned progress of the previous months can be overshadowed by a sense of exhaustion.

Professional development usually focuses on how we start a unit or how we deliver content, yet the art of the meaningful goodbye is a pedagogical skill that requires just as much intentionality. Instead of letting the energy fizzle out into movies or unstructured time, you can use this window to solidify the narrative of the year. When you take a moment to look a student in the eye and name a specific strength they displayed in March or a hurdle they cleared in October, you are doing more than being kind. You are acting as a mirror that reflects their growth back to them in a way that a digital gradebook never can. This is the moment where the abstract goals of the curriculum become concrete lived experiences for the young people in your charge.

Making space for even a few minutes of real talk about what the group achieved together lets students wrap their heads around the fact that this chapter is actually closing. When you show them how to walk away from a year of hard work with some perspective and a little bit of pride, you are giving them a life lesson that matters way more than memorizing the specific terms of a treaty or the phases of mitosis. You are essentially teaching them how to move on without leaving their progress behind.

The paperwork waiting on your desk in June is never going to end, but your chance to make a kid feel like they were actually noticed and valued this year has a very real expiration date. These small and parting conversations are often the only things that stay with a student once the summer heat hits. We spend so much time obsessing over how to grab their attention in the first five minutes of August, but we rarely put that same energy into how we hand that attention back to them in the final week of May. Treating these last few days with the same respect you gave your opening lesson plan ensures that the connection stays intact and the year ends on a high note rather than a tired one.

Think about the kids who spent most of the year hiding in the back row or the ones who struggled to keep their heads above water. For them, this fortnight is a chance to rewrite their own story before the bell rings for the last time. If they walk out of your room knowing their presence made a difference, the whole year counts as a win regardless of what the test scores say. This kind of focus is what separates a mentor from someone who just delivers a curriculum. It takes a lot of willpower to ignore the growing pile of forms and focus on the humans in front of you, but finishing with that kind of heart is the best way to protect yourself from the burnout that always seems to lurking around the corner. 

By making the choice to close out the year with some soul, you show a huge amount of respect for your students and for the sheer amount of work you put in since the first leaves fell.

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Moving Beyond The Cumulative Final

The traditional ritual of the final exam season often feels like an immovable pillar of the academic calendar. Teachers and students alike spend weeks bracing for these high-stakes assessments with a mixture of exhaustion and dread. However, it is worth examining whether these intensive cumulative tests truly serve a modern educational purpose. We must consider the possibility that the end of a semester could be spent on meaningful reflection rather than frantic memorization.

​If the assessments administered throughout the term are truly accurate and valid, then a final exam becomes redundant. A teacher who tracks student progress through authentic projects and regular check-ins already possesses a comprehensive map of what each student understands. There is no logical reason to believe that a single two-hour sitting provides more reliable data than months of consistent performance. If we trust our daily grading practices, we should feel confident in the final marks we have already gathered.

​A common defense for these exams is the need to prepare students for the rigors of higher education. Many educators feel a sense of duty to simulate the high-pressure environment of a college lecture hall. While the desire to see students succeed in the future is noble, preparing a teenager for another teacher or a distant college professor is not the primary purpose of a high school class. Our fundamental responsibility is to the student in front of us right now and the specific learning objectives of our own curriculum. We should prioritize deep engagement with our subject matter over the performance of academic stamina for a future that has not yet arrived.

​Moving away from the final exam model allows for a more humane conclusion to the school year. It opens up space for creative synthesis and collaborative work that reflects how adults actually use knowledge in the real world. By letting go of this outdated tradition, we can focus on the growth that has occurred over the entire semester. We should value the steady journey of learning more than the ability to survive a stressful finish line.

Saturday, April 25, 2026

The Echo in the Hallway

As we approach these final weeks of the academic year, the air in the faculty lounge often becomes heavy with the weight of countdowns and collective exhaustion. We find ourselves tallying the days remaining until summer break and venting about the mounting piles of grading or the restlessness of our students. It is a natural human response to a demanding profession, yet we must remain acutely aware of the silent audience that listens to our every word. Our students are far more observant than we often give them credit for, and they possess an uncanny ability to overhear the frustrations we think we are whispering in the corridors or behind closed doors.

When we allow complaining to become the primary language of our workspace, we inadvertently give our students permission to adopt that same bitter tone. If they hear us grumbling about the administration or lamenting the behavior of a specific class, they learn that dissatisfaction is the standard response to challenge. We cannot expect a classroom to be a sanctuary of respect and hard work if the atmosphere is poisoned by the teacher's own vocalized discontent. A smoothly-running classroom is built on a foundation of mutual civility, and that civility begins with the way we speak about our environment and the people within it.

The final stretch of the year is precisely when our professional composure matters most. While it is tempting to join the chorus of those wondering if they can endure another four weeks, we must remember that our attitude sets the emotional thermostat for the entire building. If we project an image of being burdened by our students, they will inevitably feel like burdens and act accordingly. By choosing to filter our complaints and focus on the purpose of our work, we model the very resilience and maturity we want to see in them. We have the power to break the cycle of negativity simply by choosing a different vocabulary for our fatigue.

Instead of bonding over what is wrong, let us try to finish the year with a commitment to a higher standard of speech. This does not mean we ignore the very real challenges of education, but it does mean we stop giving them a megaphone. When we lead with grace and keep our frustrations private, we create a space where students feel valued rather than tolerated. Let us show them that even when the finish line is in sight and energy is low, a true professional maintains a spirit of gratitude and a quiet dedication to the task at hand. Our silence regarding our complaints will speak volumes to the young people watching us lead.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

The April Standard of Trust

By the time April rolls around we have spent countless hours together in the classroom with our students. We have established our rhythms and our inside jokes and our unspoken expectations. This late in the game the training wheels should be off. I believe that if we have done our jobs well we should be able to step out of the room without the entire structure crumbling into dust. I trust my students and last week I decided to show them exactly how much.

I was absent last Monday and the plans I left were a direct reflection of that confidence. The plans for the sub simply said, "The students know how to run the class and what is expected of them." I provided a brief outline of the work but I did not micromanage the minutes. I did not leave a list of names to watch or a script of threats regarding their grades. I treated them like the capable young adults they are becoming because that is the only way they will ever learn to actually lead themselves.

The note from the substitute confirmed everything I hoped to be true about my classroom. They wrote, "I was extremely impressed with the self-sufficient, smart, and highly motivated students."

That kind of feedback is the ultimate win for an educator in the spring. It is easy for students to behave when their primary teacher is watching from the desk but the real magic happens when they choose to be excellent on their own. This note told me that my students do not just follow instructions; they understand the mission. They took ownership of the space and the schedule and the outcomes without needing a heavy hand to guide them.

If you are still writing five-page sub plans in April you might want to ask yourself why. We should be empowering these kids to take the wheel by this point in the year. When we give them the chance to be self-sufficient, they almost always rise to the occasion. Trust is a powerful motivator and there is no better feeling than knowing your class can thrive even when you are not there to witness it.

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Ditch the Desk Calendar and Lead the Final Lap

The spring air is finally breezing through the hallway windows and bringing a familiar restlessness to our classrooms. We all know the feeling well. The weather grows warmer, the final bell feels a little further away, and the temptation to mentally pack our bags becomes a daily struggle. This time of year always tests our endurance. We look at our planners and dream of summer break. It is entirely natural to feel exhausted after months of grading essays, managing classroom dynamics, and pouring our emotional energy into our students.

However, we must resist the urge to turn these final weeks into a simple waiting game. The tradition of writing a countdown on the whiteboard or crossing off days on a desk calendar seems harmless at first glance. We tell ourselves it builds excitement. In reality, it sends a clear message that our current time together is merely an obstacle to overcome. Counting down the days diminishes the value of the present moment and turns our remaining lessons into mere filler. We inadvertently teach our teenagers that learning is a chore to survive rather than a journey to appreciate.

Our students are incredibly perceptive. High schoolers possess a sharp ability to read the room and gauge our authentic energy levels. They will absolutely follow our lead when it comes to their end-of-year mindset. If we drag our feet and treat the month of May like a holding cell, our students will immediately mirror that exact apathy. They will stop trying, stop listening, and start staring at the clock. Our attitude sets the thermostat for the entire classroom environment. When we mentally check out, we give them silent permission to do the exact same thing.

Instead of simply surviving until June, we have a profound opportunity to make every single day count. These last few weeks represent a crucial window of time. For some of our graduating seniors, these are the final moments they will ever spend in a secondary education setting. For other students, our room might remain the most stable and supportive environment they experience all year. We owe it to them and to our own professional integrity to finish the semester strong. We can choose to lean into the material and find fresh ways to engage their young minds.

We can bring back the joy of teaching by sharing a specific passion project or introducing a unique topic we truly love. We can take the time to celebrate their measurable growth over the past several months. We can intentionally recognize the hard work they have put into their education. When we demonstrate continued enthusiasm and maintain our academic standards, the students will naturally rise to meet those expectations. They will stay focused because we remain focused.

Let us erase the countdowns and focus deeply on the faces sitting right in front of us. The summer vacation will arrive right on schedule without us keeping a constant tally. Until that final bell rings, we have meaningful and transformative work to accomplish. Let us model the perseverance and dedication we hope to instill in our young adults. 

Let us make every day count and conclude the school year with purpose, positive energy, and an unwavering commitment to our craft.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Mirror Effect

​Your energy serves as the thermostat for the entire classroom. It dictates the atmosphere from the moment the first student crosses the threshold until the final bell rings. We often spend hours obsessing over lesson plans and digital tools while neglecting the most potent instrument at our disposal. That instrument is our own visible passion for the subject matter. If a teacher appears bored by the curriculum then the students will certainly follow that lead. They possess an uncanny ability to sniff out a lack of sincerity or a dip in enthusiasm. When we switch to autopilot the students intuitively check out because they mirror the investment of the person leading the room.

Authenticity Breeds Connection

​Genuine engagement is not about being a polished performer or an entertainer. It is about showing up with a sincere interest in the material and a real curiosity about the learning process. High schoolers are particularly sensitive to authenticity. They crave mentors who actually care about the ideas being discussed. When you lean into a difficult concept with genuine excitement you give your students permission to care as well. Your curiosity creates a safe space for them to take intellectual risks. If you want a room full of active participants you must first be the most active participant in the building.

Pushing Through the April Slump

​The arrival of April brings a unique set of challenges as the weather warms and the finish line appears on the horizon. This is the exact moment when our personal engagement matters the most. You can revitalize your practice by rediscovering the specific stories that first made you love your subject. Breaking the daily routine by moving the furniture or taking the lesson outside can refresh your own perspective and yours students as well. High levels of teacher engagement often look like deep listening and sharing the things that still surprise or challenge you within your field of expertise. We must intentionally choose to stay present during these spring weeks to prevent a collective slide into academic indifference.

The Ripple Impact

​The ripple effect of a captivated teacher extends far beyond a single test score. It builds a culture where learning is viewed as a lifelong pursuit rather than a series of boxes to check. You are the primary model for how an adult interacts with new information and complex problems. When you demonstrate that you are still learning and still fascinated by the world you provide a blueprint for student success. Your personal investment is the silent engine that drives student motivation. Keep your own fire lit because you cannot share a spark that you do not possess. Your presence is the most important part of the curriculum.