Slow Down to Speed Them Up: Why Rushing Helps No One

If you’ve ever felt the pressure to race through the curriculum like you’re running late for a flight, trust me — you’re in good company. Teachers everywhere are juggling pacing guides, multiple curriculums, assessments, meetings, behavior plans, lost glue stick lids, and the occasional mystery smell coming from someone’s backpack. (kidding, not kidding)

It’s a lot.

But here’s the truth we sometimes forget in the frenzy:
Learning isn’t a sprint. It’s not even a marathon. It’s a walk with kids who stop to look at every butterfly, rock, and weirdly-shaped cloud along the way.

And that’s exactly how it should be to save ourselves from the stress of a fast-paced schedule.

I was stressing about getting things done last week and this stop sign caught my eye. I was hitting the road for another out-of-town workshop with teachers – the third one in a week. I had a long drive ahead of me, a lot on my mind, and I wasn’t even 100% sure I was ready for the day ahead of me.

As my mind was racing with everything I had to do, I found myself stopped at this stop sign for longer than usual. Like most of you probably do, I typically roll through this stop sign unless there is a car coming that forces me to wait. This day, however, I found myself thinking about the real meaning (and law) that surrounds this stop sign. That day, I actually followed the rule. I stopped – but not forever.

As I started going again I began to think about why I might have stopped and thought about things for so long on that particular day. The reason? I had procrastinated getting things ready for this event and was beyond stressed, thinking I had forgotten things at home. I rushed and rushed that morning to pack my car and collect everything needed to take with me to the conference.

The same thing goes for the way we handle things in our classroom. We rush and rush to get through things when we really should be stopping and thinking more often.


The Magic Happens in the Slow Moments

We’ve all done it — felt the tug of the calendar, heard that little voice saying, “You should be on Unit 5 by now,” and sped through something kids clearly needed more time with.

But when we slow down, everything shifts.

That’s when students start asking the good questions.
That’s when you see that little eyebrow lift that means, “Ohhhh… now I get it.”
That’s when learning clicks instead of clunks.

Those moments don’t happen because we rushed.
They happen because we lingered long enough for understanding to take root.


Doing Things Right Beats Doing Things Fast

There’s an old-school wisdom here that still holds strong:
If students don’t understand it, moving on won’t magically fix it.

It’s like trying to teach a kid how to ride a bike by shouting instructions while you sprint next to them. Sure, everyone gets a workout, but nobody’s actually riding.

The same goes for blending sounds, regrouping in subtraction, writing complete sentences, or any of the million little things we teach every day. Kids need repetition. They need time. They need us to breathe, slow down, and let them practice the wobble until they’re steady.

Forward-thinking teaching isn’t about doing more faster —
it’s about doing what matters well.


Your Pacing Guide Is a Guide… Not a Stopwatch

Listen, I love a neat box to check as much as the next teacher. But pacing guides are exactly that — guides. Not iron-clad, no-wiggle-room contracts sworn on a stack of Scholastic flyers.

If your students need:

  • one more day
  • one more example
  • one more mini-lesson
  • one more round of practice
  • or just one more chance to breathe

…it’s not a setback.
It’s good teaching.

Great teaching, honestly.


When We Slow Down, Students Speed Up Later

Here’s the magic twist:
Slowing down now often means moving faster later.

When students deeply understand foundational concepts, everything built on top actually goes smoother. You spend less time reteaching. Less time redirecting. Less time untangling misconceptions that hardened like a rogue glue stick on the rug.

A strong foundation is the ultimate time-saver.


Give Yourself Permission to Pause

If no one else has said it today, let me be the one:
You’re doing enough.
You’re covering enough.
You’re moving at the right speed because you’re responding to the kids in front of you.

Take the extra day.
Sit in the moment.
Work it out together.

You’re not falling behind — you’re building them up.

And, if you need to spend a little extra time at a stop sign to collect your thoughts, that’s ok. As long as there isn’t someone honking behind you. 🙂

-Adam

Wrapping Up the Year with Heart: Celebrating, Remembering, and Saying Goodbye (for Now!)

Well friends, here we are—that magical, bittersweet, glitter-and-glue-sticks-covered time of the year: the end of the school year! 🎉

You’ve done it. You’ve guided your class through hundreds of read-alouds, lost approximately 47 pencils per week (minimum), and built a classroom family that laughs, learns, and maybe gets a little too excited for indoor recess. It’s time to celebrate the growth, the giggles, and the glorious mess that was this school year.

Here are some tried-and-true ways to make the end of the year unforgettable—for your students and for you!


🎓 Celebrate the Successes

Before the glue bottles go dry and the crayon boxes get packed away, take time to spotlight how far your students have come.

1. Student Superlatives with Heart
Skip the typical “Most Likely to…” and instead create personalized awards that highlight each child’s unique strengths.

  • “Kindness King”
  • “Queen of Curiosity”
  • “Master Mathematician”
  • “Most Likely to Brighten Your Day”

Click here to get my pack of 25 classroom awards for only $5.00!

2. Growth Reflection Books
Have your students make “My Year in Review” booklets. Pages could include:

  • “My favorite memory from this year…”
  • “Something I learned that made me proud…”
  • “What I want to remember forever…”

You’ll be amazed at the depth, humor, and honesty that comes from even the youngest learners.


📸 Create Lasting Memories

1. End-of-Year Photo Booth
Set up a corner with a simple backdrop (wrapping paper works wonders), some silly props, and signs like “1st Grade Grad!” or “Peace Out Kindergarten!” Snap individual photos or small group shots and print them as keepsakes.

2. Memory Videos
Compile a slideshow of classroom moments throughout the year—field trips, dress-up days, those oh-so-proud moments when they finally “got it.” Set it to some upbeat music and cue the happy tears!

3. Class Time Capsule
Have each student write a note to their “future self” or draw a picture of something they loved this year. Seal them up in a big envelope and encourage parents to open it with their child a year later. The cuteness level? Off the charts.


🎁 Thoughtful End-of-Year Gifts (Without Breaking the Bank)

You don’t need to spend a fortune to leave your students with something meaningful.

1. Personalized Pencils or Crayons
Tie a ribbon around a pencil that says, “You’re SHARP! Have a great summer!” Or melt broken crayons into fun-shaped molds with a tag that says, “You color my world!”

2. Books with a Note Inside
Gift each student a favorite picture book (hello, Scholastic points!) with a handwritten message inside the front cover. You never know which one becomes that book—the one they hold onto for years.

3. Summer Fun Bags
Think bubbles, sidewalk chalk, stickers, and a freeze pop. Add a tag that says, “Have a POPpin’ Summer!” These make great last-day handouts and smiles are guaranteed.


🧡 And Don’t Forget…

This time of year is hectic, emotional, and full of change. But it’s also a time to slow down and soak in the joy you helped create. You were their safe space. Their encourager. Their constant. That matters.

So go ahead—shed a few tears, take all the pictures, give those last hugs, and know that you’ve made an impact that lasts far beyond the classroom walls.

Here’s to YOU, teacher friend, and to a summer full of rest, reflection, and maybe… just maybe… an empty email inbox! 😉🌞 -Adam

🎉 Wrapping Up With Wonder: End-of-Year Activities Your Students Will Never Forget!

Hey teacher friend,
Can you believe it? The end of the year is peeking around the corner like a kid trying to catch the surprise in a birthday bag. You’ve taught hard, loved big, and made memories—and now it’s time to send your students off with a little magic they’ll carry all summer long. So grab your sunglasses, your camera, and that stash of stickers you’ve been hoarding, because I’ve got some A+ ideas to make the last few weeks full of smiles, reflection, and fun.

1. Picnic + Read-Aloud = Perfection

Take the learning outside! Throw a beach towel over your shoulder and head outside with a basket of your class’s favorite read-alouds. Let kids bring a stuffed animal or pillow from home and turn your playground into the coziest outdoor reading nook ever. Bonus: Let them “read” to their stuffies for extra giggles.

Photo by Mikhail Nilov on Pexels.com

2. Autograph Books with Heart

Print out simple autograph books for students to sign for each other, but here’s the twist: Encourage them to write compliments or favorite memories with each classmate. It turns into a keepsake they’ll actually read again—and it fosters kindness right up to the final bell.

3. Theme Days That Bring the Party

Go out with a bang by turning the last week into a celebration!

  • Monday: Hat Day 🧢
  • Tuesday: Game Day 🎲
  • Wednesday: Wacky Socks + Dance Party 🧦🕺
  • Thursday: Art Explosion 🎨
  • Friday: Pajamas & Popcorn Movie Day 🎬🍿

Each day = simple. The fun = major.

4. Letters to the Future

Have students write letters to their “next grade selves.” They can write what they’re excited for, what they want to remember, or even what they hope their next teacher knows about them. Seal them up and send them home with a sticker that says, “Open the night before school starts!”—trust me, parents will thank you!

Photo by KATRIN BOLOVTSOVA on Pexels.com
Photo by Yan Krukau on Pexels.com
Photo by Pavel Danilyuk on Pexels.com

5. Mini Graduation Ceremony

Kinders, firsties, and second graders LOVE feeling official. Print “diplomas,” play the graduation song, and hand out rolled-up certificates with their names written in big, bold print. Take lots of pics. Be warned: tears (from you) are very possible.

6. End-of-Year Memory Posters

Pass out big sheets of paper and markers and let your students create memory posters with drawings, classmate names, and favorite things they learned this year. Hang them in the hallway like your own class museum!

7. Pack with Purpose

Turn cleaning into a classroom job! Assign students to “teams” to help pack up supplies, sort books, or clean centers. Throw on some fun music and make it a competition (with a dance break halfway through, of course). Give awards like “Best Bin Organizer” or “Most Spirited Sweeper.”

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

✨ Don’t Forget: YOU Made Magic Happen

Before you turn off the classroom lights and head out for some well-deserved rest, take a second. Look around. Remember the hugs, the lightbulb moments, the giggles during read-alouds, and even the glitter spills. You’ve changed lives this year. That’s not just worth celebrating—it’s worth shouting from the rooftops.

You’ve got this, teacher friend. Let’s finish strong—then rest even stronger. 💛 -Adam

Leap into Learning: Exciting Leap Day Activities for Elementary Classrooms

Hello teachers and enthusiastic learners! Adam here, and today we’re diving into the world of Leap Day activities for elementary classrooms. Leap Day, that rare occurrence that happens only once every four years, is a fantastic opportunity to inject some extra fun and creativity into your lesson plans. So, let’s leap right in and explore engaging activities that will have your students jumping for joy!

Leap Year History Lesson:

Start the day by sharing the fascinating history of Leap Year. Explain the concept of adding an extra day to the calendar every four years and the reasons behind it. Make it interactive by involving students in discussions about why we have Leap Year and what it means for our calendars. So why do we do it? Well, the Earth takes about 365.25 days to go around the sun. To keep our calendar in sync with the Earth’s journey, we add that extra day to the calendar every four years. This day is February 29th, and it helps make sure that our days and seasons stay in the right order. Imagine if we didn’t have leap years – over time, our calendar would get out of sync with the seasons, and things like spring, summer, fall, and winter might not happen when they’re supposed to. Leap years help us keep everything organized and make sure that our calendar matches up with the way the Earth moves around the sun. So, in a leap year, you get an extra day in February, and that’s a special day called “Leap Day.” It’s like a bonus day that helps us keep our calendar working just right!

Math Olympics:

Turn your classroom into a math Olympics arena with leap-themed math games. Create stations where students can practice addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division using Leap Day-related numbers. Incorporate fun props like frog-shaped counters or leapfrog game boards to make math more engaging. Over on my YouTube Channel I have a video about a fun frog-themed game I actually found at Dollar Tree a while back that would be perfect for some leaping-counting FUN!

Leap Into Reading:

Foster a love for reading with leap-themed literature. Choose books that feature frogs, jumping adventures, or tales of time travel. Have a read-aloud session or set up reading stations where students can explore Leap Day-themed books independently. Find these books and more on my Amazon Storefront here!

Leapfrog Science Experiments:

Transform your classroom into a science laboratory with leapfrog-inspired experiments. Explore the concept of gravity and motion by having students create and test paper frogs to see how far they can leap. Discuss the scientific principles behind the leaps and encourage students to make predictions and observations.

Leap Day Art Extravaganza:

Unleash the artistic talents of your students with Leap Day-inspired art projects. Provide materials for creating frog masks, leap-themed collages, or even a Leap Year calendar. Display their masterpieces around the classroom to celebrate their creativity.

Leap Minute Challenges:

Introduce a series of minute challenges related to leaping. From jumping jacks to leapfrog races, these activities will not only keep students active but also reinforce the concept of time measurement. Create a friendly competition atmosphere to make it even more exciting.

Leap Day Writing Prompts:

Ignite the imaginations of your young writers with Leap Day writing prompts. Ask them to imagine a day in the life of a leaping frog or to write a creative story involving time travel on Leap Day. Encourage them to share their stories with the class for added fun.

As we leap through this extra day on our calendars, let’s make the most of the opportunity to infuse our classrooms with excitement and learning. By incorporating these Leap Day activities, we can create a memorable and enriching experience for our elementary students. So, put on your imaginary leap shoes and get ready for a day filled with education, creativity, and lots of leaps and bounds! Happy Leap Day, everyone! Don’t forget to checkout the books, games, and other items in my Amazon Storefront Leap Day Idea List!