• Ep 326: The Classroom Game Teachers Keep Coming Back To
    Mar 24 2026
    Ever wonder why some classroom games just keep showing up in secondary classrooms season after season? The answer isn’t teacher laziness. It’s that these games actually work. Host Khristen Massic is here in this episode of The Secondary Teacher Podcast to lay out the truth: if you’re a secondary teacher searching for “the classroom game teachers keep coming back to,” stop reinventing the wheel and start leaning into routines that make your life easier.Here’s a common rookie mistake Khristen calls out—constantly switching up activities out of fear that students will get bored or you’ll look out of ideas. That belief makes teaching harder than it needs to be, especially for multi-prep teachers. Instead, the smarter move is finding and sticking to a classroom routine that’s repeatable, no-prep, and that teens genuinely enjoy. Real talk: repeating something students like isn’t boring. It’s stabilizing.What’s the teacher go-to? Would You Rather. Khristen walks through exactly why this game hits the sweet spot in secondary classrooms. It’s got a low barrier to entry—every student can answer, even if they missed the last class. There’s no right answer, so it’s safe to participate. And the best part? It invites explanation and debate naturally, creating structured conversation without chaos. Whether you use it to give students a reason to move to a side of the room or keep them seated for a quiet reset, the result is the same: teens talking, reasoning, and connecting.You get to control the frame: start, stop, and transition, making Would You Rather the opposite of free time—it’s structured fun that you run. Khristen shares a classroom example of a teacher using Would You Rather as a bell ringer, with students debating choices and bodies moving, leading to real engagement and classroom energy. Another teacher points out that teen-appropriate matters. If the questions feel “babyish,” secondary students will resist, roll their eyes, and try to derail. So picking the right set of questions isn’t just a detail—it’s essential for classroom routines that stick.Would You Rather isn’t just an August icebreaker. Throughout the year it adapts: use it in September to break the ice, October-December when everyone’s tired for a reset, January-February to rebuild routines after break, and March-May as a quick engagement tool when burnout and testing season hit. One routine, multiple jobs. Your classroom toolkit shouldn’t be a one-season wonder.Khristen offers practical teacher tips for running Would You Rather based on classroom energy. High-energy? Get students moving across the room, sharing reasonings and quick transitions back to work. Low-energy or days when movement isn’t ideal? Keep students seated, have them vote with fingers or whiteboards, turn and talk, share out with structured sentence stems like “I chose because .” Either way, you get engagement and reasoning practice, all without chaos.And here’s the kicker: routines like Would You Rather aren’t just for fun. They help build work-life balance for teachers, saving you from scrambling for new activities every day. Students love predictability. Especially teens. And if you've got multilingual learners, these routines strengthen their speaking and thinking in a low-pressure way. Khristen reminds teachers she’s got resources ready: Would You Rather for Teens and a Student Engagement Activities Bundle. But even if you’re making your own, the routine itself is gold.So if you’ve been feeling the pressure to switch things up or Google classroom games at the last minute, take a beat. Build structured routines that work for you, not just for your students. Repeat what works. Make classroom engagement your foundation, not a frantic scramble.If today’s episode made your teaching life even a bit easier, share it with your colleagues. Take care of yourself. This is your permission to ditch the busywork and anchor your classroom in what actually keeps teens engaged.Own your classroom. Don’t let chaos run the show.Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolboxGet the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https://khristenmassic.com/resetShop my Teachers Pay Teachers store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Khristen-Massic-Cte-Teacher-Coach
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    11 mins
  • Ep 325: Why Filler Activities Backfire (In a Secondary Classroom)
    Mar 17 2026
    Ever tried a so-called fun end-of-class activity and ended up feeling more exhausted than you started? In this episode of The Secondary Teacher Podcast, host Khristen Massic takes aim at why filler activities backfire in a secondary classroom, and she does not hold back. If you’ve ever walked out of your classroom after ten minutes of “fun” with more side chatter, off-task students, and your energy zapped, you’re not alone.Our primary keyword phrase today is “why filler activities backfire in a secondary classroom”—and Khristen’s here to name what so many don’t say out loud. The problem isn’t that you’re missing some critical engagement gene; it’s that typical filler games like Trash Ball or toss-the-ball-for-points are only engaging for the one kid holding the spotlight. Everyone else? Zoned out, waiting, or finding their own fun. In a classroom of teens, when most are just watching, dead air creeps in—and that’s when behavior issues show up uninvited.Here’s the trap: teachers want to send students out on a high note, keep things light with games or review challenges. But activities where just a couple of students are active while everyone else is on the sidelines create what Khristen calls “audience time.” That audience time is drift time. The longer students sit as spectators, the more likely you’ll have random noise, check-outs, or even outright chaos. It’s not about being a bad teacher—teens are human, and humans fill dead space, usually not how we want.What’s the better way? Khristen makes it clear: if it’s not all play, don’t use it for your last ten minutes. All play routines mean everyone participates, all at the same time, with structure and clear boundaries. That’s how you eliminate problematic idle pockets and maintain a smooth classroom routine. This isn’t about making activities flashier; it’s about making them more distributed and structured, so nobody’s left waiting for “their turn” while the energy drops and classroom management ramps up.Take Trash Ball, for example—a go-to review game for some. Host Khristen Massic shares how it leaves most of the secondary classroom disconnected while one student aims for a prize, and the rest just hope they get picked next. You end up spending more time redirecting behavior than actually teaching or reviewing. And let’s be real—no amount of positive intentions can outmaneuver an activity design that creates built-in dead spots.Khristen gives listeners a simple test: before you try any end-of-class activity, ask, “How many students are actively participating at the same time?” If the answer isn’t “everyone,” scrap it for a more structured routine. She’s all about activities where all students make a choice—writing, moving, voting, reflecting, partner-sharing—anything that involves the entire room at once, with a timer and a clear start and stop. That’s how you move from hoping for engagement to actually getting it.Middle and high school teachers juggling multiple preps, this episode is tailor-made for your reality. If you’re tired of walking into your next period already drained, start matching the right kind of activity to those last hectic minutes. Filler activities backfire in a secondary classroom because they create drift and drain your energy—not because you’re not engaging enough. Khristen’s take? It’s time to rebel against “but it’s a game—they should love it” thinking and get honest about what really steers classroom routines.For teachers seeking work-life balance and less stress, Khristen’s “all play” approach means you’re not burning energy on crowd control. You’re crafting predictable, repeatable routines that let you end class steady, not spent. Her advice? Before you hit play on any filler, check if it involves the whole class. If not, save it for another time, and choose something structured that keeps everyone engaged.The Secondary Teacher Podcast is all about real teacher tips—no fluff, just hard-earned wisdom. Host Khristen Massic closes with encouragement: it’s not your fault when “fun” activities fizzle. You’re not failing; you’re learning to pick routines that work for the real kids in front of you.Stand tall, skip the dead air, and end your class strong. Class dismissed—on your terms.Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolboxGet the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https://khristenmassic.com/resetShop my Teachers Pay ...
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    8 mins
  • Ep 324: The Moment You Can Feel the Class Slipping (Secondary Classroom Routines)
    Mar 10 2026
    When you teach middle or high school, especially as a multi-prep teacher, you know that moment. The split second you sense your class tipping away from you—the energy shifts, side conversations spark, the structure thins, and suddenly you’re facing what host Khristen Massic calls in this episode, “the moment you can feel the class slipping.” If you’ve taught longer than a week, you know that feeling in your bones.Too many teachers wait until chaos takes over, thinking they can just push through or that a full-blown emergency classroom management plan is the answer. But here’s the hard truth: if you jump in when the room is already off the rails, you spend way more energy wrestling it back into shape. Host Khristen Massic learned that lesson in her computer lab, watching students go from focused to scattered in the blink of an eye—the shift always started small, long before the true mess hit.The old way? Pretending you can control every drift all the time, talking louder to chase after attention, hoping it’ll just fizzle out. That path’s a one-way ticket to burnout. There’s a better way—spot your “slip signals” early: voices rising, students wandering, off-task “can I…?” requests popping up, or that sinking feeling when boredom sets in for students who finish their work early. The secret isn’t tough love or dramatic intervention. It’s all about having a simple, repeatable classroom routine in your back pocket.Host Khristen Massic lays out a strategy for these moments—a 90-second reset. Not a complicated, cutesy, time-wasting game, but a concrete, structured routine that resets the room before chaos even gets a chance. For secondary classrooms, even with teens who are downright allergic to forced fun, a “Would You Rather?” with clear, quick directions and a moment for students to move or signal choices shifts collective energy without sacrificing instruction time.Tight timers set the mood—students know there are boundaries, and you don’t sacrifice control. Whether they move to one side of the room or simply signal their answers seated, every student gets a moment to participate, turn and talk, and hear quick shares before you glide them right back to the core task. It’s not about the silly question. It’s about restoring the focus so you can keep your lesson and your sanity intact.Listen, this is for the exhausted teacher who’s sick of dreading the last 15 minutes of class—who hates losing valuable prep time because you spent it cleaning up after a runaway period. If you wish classroom routines felt more like tools and less like Band-Aids, you’ll want these teacher tips that prioritize both your peace of mind and your students’ engagement.The best part? You don’t need to invent a new classroom management plan. Sometimes, what saves your energy (and your patience) is responding fast, with a repeatable move, instead of scrambling for answers while the noise level rises. Spot the signals, hit a quick reset, and build a rhythm that protects your whole day—not just the current block. There’s no shame in class energy shifting; it’s not a failure, it’s a signal. If you answer with a routine, you get your control (and your prep period) back.So next time you feel the room starting to slip, skip the guilt trip. Run a 90-second reset, watch the atmosphere shift, and get everyone back on track—yourself included. That’s real classroom management. That’s work-life balance for teachers who want to actually thrive, not just survive.Take care of yourself and shut down the myth that chaos is just part of the job. Stop losing your voice and your peace—try a reset, and watch how well you handle that “slip moment” next time. Keep rebelling against burnout, one smart classroom routine at a time.Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolboxGet the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https://khristenmassic.com/resetShop my Teachers Pay Teachers store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Khristen-Massic-Cte-Teacher-Coach
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    12 mins
  • Ep 323: Why the End of Class Turns Into Chaos (Even When the Lesson Was Good)
    Mar 3 2026
    Ever walk out of a classroom thinking, “Why does the end of class turn into chaos even when the lesson was good?” You’re not the only secondary teacher who knows that sinking feeling: the lesson was airtight, the kids were working, and suddenly, with twenty minutes left, everything derailed. In this episode of The Secondary Teacher Podcast, host Khristen Massic throws some truth at a question every middle or high school teacher has asked. If you’ve juggled more than one prep or spent too many periods fighting for control at the end, keep reading.The common mistake? Blaming yourself when your students blow through an activity in half the time you planned. That feeling of failure? It’s not your fault. The reality is estimating time—especially in a secondary classroom where kids finish at different paces—is a high-wire act. The real issue is not the lesson, it’s what happens next. Host Khristen Massic tells the story of her first year teaching a careers class. She spent hours crafting what she thought would span three days. Her students finished it in under one period, leaving her scrambling, improvising, and—let’s be honest—surviving. Sound familiar?Here’s the better way: prepare for what happens after the lesson. The keyword here is routine, and not just any routine. Khristen introduces the idea that “done means next”—when the main activity ends, students must have a clear next step. This simple structure is a game-changer for those moments when chaos is just waiting for an opening. Instead of banking on a perfect plan, decide ahead of time what the go-to transitions are, so you’re not stretched thin, playing cruise director, or patching holes on the fly. Consistency beats creativity when the clock betrays you.Khristen lays out three routines that cover almost every secondary classroom scenario when early finishers threaten your sanity: quality check, reflection, and extension. These aren’t more worksheets or busywork—they’re predictable routines you can train your students to expect whenever their main work is done. You’re done? Good. Now check your answers, write one thing you learned, or attempt the challenge question. No more dead air. No more drifting. Just structure that lets you and your students finish strong.Don’t fall into the trap of the “filler activity.” Too many teachers reach for a quick game or activity that’s fun for one student but leaves the rest of the room zoning out or getting rowdy. Khristen is clear: activities that make most kids spectators backfire. The class needs structure, not another opportunity to check out. This is one of the most teacher-approved tips you’ll get this year: if your “next activity” doesn’t engage the whole room, it’s asking for trouble.Who’s this episode for? Secondary teachers wrestling with multiple preps, newer teachers still developing their classroom routines, and every educator who ever felt the spiral from engaged class to unsettled chaos. If you want fewer firefights at the end of class and more calm, focused transitions, this one’s for you. Khristen gets real about the energy drain of improvising and points teachers straight to routines that actually work.It’s not about being endlessly creative or perfectly predicting how long an assignment will last. It’s about setting up routines that work whether you teach high school engineering or a broad, requirement-driven careers class. Host Khristen Massic’s method takes the pressure off, so you can focus on what matters: building relationships, guiding learning, and keeping the room together. That’s how you find your work-life balance in a system designed to keep you hustling.Next step? Choose one “done means next” routine you’ll start this week. Post it, practice it, and back yourself up the next time kids beat the clock. You’ll spend less time firefighting and more time enjoying the end of your class, instead of watching it unravel. The best part? Your students will know what to do, you’ll look (and feel) in control, and the last moments of class won’t undo all your good work.If you’ve ever stared at the clock and felt the chaos coming, you’re in good company. Tune in, steal a routine, and take back those last unpredictable minutes. Because being unflappable beats being unprepared—every single time.Own your finish and let the chaos find another classroom.Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolboxGet the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school ...
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    10 mins
  • Ep 322: Teacher Work-Life Balance — The Leave-on-Time Close-Down Routine
    Feb 24 2026

    Teacher work-life balance isn’t just some poster quote — it’s the daily fight to leave school on time without your brain dragging the day home with you. Host Khristen Massic tackles the truth: escaping the endless open loops of grading, planning, and unfinished to-dos is the real challenge for secondary classroom teachers. You don’t magically “choose” balance; most days, you’re walking out with chaos still echoing in your head.

    It’s time to shatter the myth that good teaching means always catching up. Khristen calls out the classic mistake — trying to finish everything, only to carry home a mental crate of unclosed loops. For years, even pre-kids, she literally lugged a crate of work between school and home, convinced this was normal for teachers with multiple preps, unpredictable days, and lab setups.

    The better way? Pick one “closing loop” before you leave. Don’t ask what all needs doing; ask which task will make tomorrow feel lighter. Whether it’s drafting the first five minutes of directions or prepping materials so first period isn’t a disaster, closing just one loop gives your brain real relief.

    Khristen lays out actionable teacher tips — a 10-minute end-of-day routine for teachers, plus a 2-minute close-down for explosion days. Brain dump the open loops, anchor your next task, do one friction-removing action, reset your space, and write your “parking line:” Tomorrow during prep, I will… That sentence is your permission slip to leave without dragging the mental weight home.

    She’s got a hard-earned reframe for teachers who default to “I’ll just do it at home.” Not everything needs finishing for you to be a great teacher. Some tasks howl loudly, but aren’t essential. The job expands because your day is overstuffed — not because you’re failing.

    If you’re weary of carrying teacher overwhelm into family time, this episode is for you. Secondary classroom routines like Khristen’s close-down strategy honor your sanity — so home can actually feel like home. Try the routine for three days, and notice not just your productivity, but the shift in your nervous system.

    Stop chasing perfect. Close one loop, claim your peace, and let your brain rest — because good teachers don’t finish everything; they finish what matters.

    Go ahead — leave school on time. Start a quiet revolution.

    Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.

    Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolbox

    Get the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https://khristenmassic.com/reset

    Shop my Teachers Pay Teachers store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Khristen-Massic-Cte-Teacher-Coach

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    10 mins
  • Ep 321: Bell-to-Bell Engagement Without Burning Out
    Feb 17 2026

    Ever felt the panic when the bell rings and there’s still an ocean of class time ahead? Bell-to-bell engagement without burning out isn’t just a catchy phrase — it’s the lifeline for secondary teachers juggling multiple preps. This episode of The Secondary Teacher Podcast tackles a problem every teacher eventually faces: you planned what you thought was an airtight lesson… and your students finish early. Now you’re staring down the clock, wondering what to do when students finish early (especially when phones aren’t allowed).

    Here’s the hard truth: no one trains you for the chaos that hits when pacing goes sideways. Host Khristen Massic names that sinking feeling and shares a real first-year moment — pouring hours into a careers unit, only to watch students wrap it up with half the period still sitting there. Cue the classroom spiral.

    Most teachers think the solution is “plan tighter.” But the real fix isn’t perfect pacing — it’s early finisher routines you can repeat every time. Not a hundred activities. Not a brand-new mini-lesson. Five simple, reliable options you can teach once and reuse forever.

    In this episode, you’ll hear strategies like the quality check loop, structured peer checks, and micro-extension challenges — finish-early routines that work in a secondary classroom without extra prep or extra explaining. Bell-to-bell engagement becomes easier when students already know the next step.

    This is for the multi-prep teacher who’s tired of feeling like they “failed” when a lesson ends early. If you want stronger classroom routines, calmer transitions, and less decision fatigue — this episode will help you build a system that protects your energy and supports real work-life balance.

    If you’re ready to stop scrambling and start teaching with a plan for the “leftover minutes,” press play.

    Go teach bold, not burned out.

    Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.

    Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolbox

    Get the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https://khristenmassic.com/reset

    Shop my Teachers Pay Teachers store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Khristen-Massic-Cte-Teacher-Coach

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    11 mins
  • Ep 320: Copy, Paste, Prep—How to Repurpose One Great Lesson Across All Your Preps (Without Starting from Scratch)
    Feb 10 2026

    Stop burning yourself out trying to reinvent the wheel for every class.

    As a secondary teacher juggling multiple preps, I used to think that engagement required fresh, new lesson plans every single time—until I figured out the magic of copy, paste, prep.

    In this episode, I’ll show you how to repurpose your best protocols, activities, and lesson structures across all your different subjects, saving you massive planning energy and letting students do more of the thinking.

    I’ll break down practical strategies for creating reusable systems, keeping each class engaging (without endless novelty), and finally leaving school without dragging a crate of work home. If you’re searching for sustainable planning, lesson ideas for multiple preps, or just ways to avoid teacher burnout, this one’s for you.

    Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.

    Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolbox

    Get the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https://khristenmassic.com/reset

    Shop my Teachers Pay Teachers store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Khristen-Massic-Cte-Teacher-Coach

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    13 mins
  • Ep 319: Classroom Routines That Protect Your Planning Period
    Feb 3 2026

    Your planning period shouldn’t vanish in a swirl of chaos and repeat questions—I’ve been there, and I know just how draining that cycle feels for secondary teachers juggling multiple preps.

    In this episode, I’m sharing the classroom routines that genuinely protect your focus, your planning time, and your sanity, without adding ten more things to your plate.

    Whether you’re drowning in student interruptions, classroom cleanup stress, or just desperate for systems that actually work, I’ll walk you through simple, repeatable routines (like the lifesaving red-yellow-green help signals and easy materials return hacks) that reduce your overwhelm and give you those precious calm minutes back.

    If you’re ready to reclaim your prep and leave the classroom lighter, this is your episode!

    Too many preps and not enough time? Let’s make your planning period actually work for you.

    Unlock 20 time-saving strategies designed to keep your students engaged and your sanity intact with the free Simple Teaching Strategies Toolkit. Each strategy comes with detailed instructions, objectives, and a materials list, all editable in a convenient Google Doc. https://khristenmassic.com/toolbox

    Get the Planning Period Reset Toolkit—a free set of quick-start tools to help you protect your time, focus faster, and finally finish something… even during chaotic school days. https://khristenmassic.com/reset

    Shop my Teachers Pay Teachers store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Khristen-Massic-Cte-Teacher-Coach

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    12 mins