Ep. 294 | Why Embarrassing Moments Make Better Teachers w/ Jen Casa-Todd

Embarrassing classroom moments aren’t failures, they’re opportunities. Discover how embracing mistakes, building relationships, and laughing at yourself can transform your teaching and strengthen student connections.

Let’s be honest, every educator has that moment.

You know the one.
The tech fails.
You say the wrong thing.
You trip, freeze, or completely lose your train of thought.

And for a split second, you think: “Well… that’s it. My credibility is gone.”

But what if that moment is actually doing more for your classroom than your perfectly planned lesson ever could?


Why Embarrassing Classroom Moments Might Be Your Greatest Teaching Tool

In this episode recorded with Jen Casa-Todd, we reflect on a simple truth:
Embarrassing moments are not a matter of if, they’re a matter of when. And instead of fearing them, we should expect them. Why? Because they humanize us. Students don’t connect with perfection, they connect with authenticity.

You can check out the video, audio podcast, and blog post below.

This episode is sponsored by Teq. One of the biggest challenges in schools right now is capacity. Educators are asked to do more, often with new tools, and very little support. Teq helps by combining classroom technology like SMART Boards and STEM resources with professional learning that respects educators’ time and reality. It’s support that makes technology usable, not overwhelming.

Learn more at Teq.com.

In this episode, Jen Casa-Todd and I dive into a topic every educator experiences—but rarely talks about openly: embarrassing classroom moments. We get a bit vulnerable and discuss some of our most cringe-worthy classroom moments and what we did to turn that embarrassment into empowerment. Instead of avoiding or regretting these situations, we explore how they can actually become powerful opportunities for connection, growth, and even joy. We’ve all had (or will have) them so let’s talk about them and use them to our advantage. This is one episode you won’t want to miss. Buen provecho!

Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

About Jen

Jennifer Casa-Todd is a wife, mom, educator, former Literacy Consultant, and the author of several books focusing on Digital Leadership. Jennifer was the recipient of the YSCPC Teaching Excellence Award (2023), and recipient of the ISTE Digital Citizenship Network Award (2020). She is a Google Educator Group leader, a Google Certified Innovator, and a board member for the Canadian Library Association. Jennifer has a Masters in Education with a specialization in Curriculum and Technology. Jennifer can currently be found supporting pre-service teachers at Lakehead University (Ontario). She has been a presenter, featured speaker, and keynote speaker at conferences across Canada and around the world. She is passionate about amplifying student voice and showing teachers, parents and students how they can use technology positively and productively.

Connect With Jen


The Power of Laughing at Yourself

One of the most powerful shifts you can make as an educator is learning to laugh at yourself.

Not in a self-deprecating way, but in a way that says:
“Hey, I’m human too.”

When you model this:

  • Students feel safer making mistakes
  • The classroom becomes more relaxed
  • Learning becomes more joyful

And suddenly, that embarrassing moment becomes a shared experience instead of a personal failure.


Relationships Change Everything

Here’s the real game-changer:

When you’ve built strong relationships with your students, they don’t judge your mistakes, they forgive them.

In fact, they often:

  • Laugh with you
  • Support you
  • Appreciate you more

Because they see you not just as a teacher, but as a person.


Teaching Is a Lot Like Cooking

If you’ve ever tried a new recipe, you know things don’t always go perfectly.

Sometimes:

  • You forget an ingredient
  • You overcook something
  • You improvise

But that doesn’t mean the meal is ruined.

Teaching works the same way.

Every “mistake” is just part of the process—and sometimes, it leads to something even better than what you planned.


Final Thought

The next time something embarrassing happens in your classroom, don’t rush to hide it.

Pause.
Breathe.
Laugh.

Because that moment might just be the one your students remember most, and the one that brings you all closer together. Buen provecho!


Ep. 293 | Why Cheap Headsets Are Actually Costing You More w/ Alan Sherbourne

Classroom headphones breaking during testing? Discover why cheap school headsets cost more long-term and how durable audio solutions improve student performance, support AI assessments, and reduce tech replacement cycles in K–12 education.

This episode is sponsored by TWT Audio.

Are your students dealing with broken headsets, poor audio, or unreliable microphones when it matters most? TWT Audio designs headsets for educators, by educators—built for real classrooms, durable, and comfortable for all-day use.

With over 5 million units sold, schools trust TWT because they simply work—delivering consistent performance without the constant replacements.

Stop rebuying cheap headsets. Invest in what lasts.

TWT Audio — hear the difference.

If you’ve ever dealt with broken headphones during testing season, you already know the chaos.

In this episode, I sit down with a Alan Sherbourne, a former educator turned edtech leader, and now VP o marketing at TWT Audio to break down the real cost of low-quality classroom audio. We explore why schools keep replacing headsets year after year, how poor audio impacts student performance (especially for multilingual learners), and how durability, clarity, and thoughtful design can completely change the game.

You’ll hear:

  • Why “cheap” tech ends up costing more long-term
  • The hidden risks of poor audio during testing and AI assessments
  • How durability and modular design extend device life cycles
  • What educators should actually look for when purchasing headsets
  • Why wired solutions are making a comeback in the age of AI cheating

If you’re preparing for testing season or planning next year’s tech purchases, this episode is a must-listen.

Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

About Alan Sherbourne

Alan Sherbourne is a former Administrator of Technology and Innovation in one of the largest school districts in the nation, where he helped drive impactful, forward thinking initiatives at scale. A proud Army veteran, he continues his service beyond the military by leading with discipline, purpose, and a commitment to others. He is a passionate advocate for Career and Technical Education as well as adult education, championing pathways that create real world opportunities for learners of all ages. Deeply rooted in his community, Alan serves on multiple boards, contributing his expertise to help shape local growth and development. Above all, he is committed to student success and putting people first in everything he does.

Connect With Alan Sherbourne and TWT Audio

Ep. 292 | From Classroom To EdTech And Back Again w/ Amy Storer

Innovative Learning Specialist, Amy Storer, shares her journey from classroom teacher to EdTech consultant and back to a school district. Learn what educators should know about career transitions in education.

This episode is sponsored by Teq. One of the biggest challenges in schools right now is capacity. Educators are asked to do more, often with new tools, and very little support. Teq helps by combining classroom technology like SMART Boards and STEM resources with professional learning that respects educators’ time and reality. It’s support that makes technology usable, not overwhelming.

Learn more at Teq.com.


Career paths in education rarely follow a straight line.

Some educators spend decades in the classroom. Others move into instructional coaching, district leadership, or EdTech consulting roles. But occasionally, educators experience all of those roles before finding the work that truly fits.

In this episode, I sit down with Amy Storer, an innovative learning specialist who has experienced nearly every corner of the education ecosystem.

Her story offers valuable insight for teachers who are curious about the many professional pathways available beyond the classroom.


Starting in the Classroom

Like many educators, her journey began in the classroom teaching third and fourth grade math and science.

Early in her career, she discovered something that would eventually shape her path: she loved helping other teachers grow.

While still teaching, she began presenting at local conferences. Those first presentations sparked what many educators call “the presenter bug.”

Presenting allowed her to work with adult learners while still remaining connected to the classroom.

Soon after, her district launched an instructional coaching program, and she became one of the first coaches supporting teachers across elementary campuses.


Discovering a Passion for Professional Development

As an instructional coach, she realized how powerful professional learning could be when it was practical and teacher-focused.

She continued presenting at conferences and building connections with educators across the country.

Eventually, those connections led to an opportunity to work with an EdTech professional development company that partnered with major platforms like:

  • Google
  • Microsoft
  • Canva
  • Adobe

Her role involved traveling to schools nationwide, working with teachers, and helping them integrate technology intentionally into their classrooms.


What It’s Like Working in EdTech

For many educators, working for an EdTech company sounds exciting—and it can be.

The role allowed her to:

  • Travel across the country
  • Present at national conferences
  • Work directly with teachers and students
  • Build a large professional network

One of her favorite experiences involved working with a district in Georgia over an extended period, supporting the same teachers and students each month.

Those long-term relationships reminded her of what she loved most about education: community.


The Moment Everything Changed

Despite enjoying her work in EdTech, there was a moment that made her reconsider her path. While visiting her former school during the holidays, she spent time reconnecting with teachers and administrators. Driving home afterward, she realized how deeply she missed the day-to-day community of working within a school district. That realization sparked a difficult but important question: Was it time to return to public education?

After months of reflection, she decided that if the right opportunity appeared in the district she loved, she would take it. Eventually, that opportunity arrived.


Returning to a School District

Today, she serves as an Innovative Learning Specialist, supporting teachers across multiple campuses.

Her role combines everything she loved from her previous positions:

  • Working with teachers
  • Coaching instructional strategies
  • Integrating technology intentionally
  • Visiting classrooms and modeling lessons

She describes the work simply:

“I wake up happy, and I go to bed happy.”


Advice for Teachers Considering a Career Shift

For teachers thinking about becoming coaches, presenters, or consultants, she shared several key pieces of advice.

1. Say Yes to Opportunities

Many career shifts begin with a small opportunity—leading a training, presenting at a conference, or supporting colleagues.

Trying new experiences can help educators discover strengths they didn’t realize they had.


2. Get Comfortable Being Uncomfortable

Professional growth often requires stepping outside of familiar routines.

Presenting, coaching, or working with adult learners can feel intimidating at first, but those challenges can lead to new possibilities.


3. Find Strong Mentors

Mentors play a critical role in career growth.

Connecting with experienced educators at conferences or within your district can open doors and provide valuable guidance.


Final Thoughts

Education careers evolve in many different directions.

Some educators move into leadership roles. Others explore EdTech, consulting, or instructional coaching.

And sometimes, the journey comes full circle—back to the schools and communities that started it all.

What matters most is finding work that aligns with your purpose and passion for supporting teachers and students.


Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

About Amy Storer

Amy Storer is an Innovative Learning Specialist and respected speaker in Montgomery ISD who is passionate about empowering educators through purposeful technology integration. She thrives on partnering with educators to enhance the great learning already happening in their classrooms and schools by leveraging powerful digital tools. Amy is a certified educator and trainer for Google, Microsoft, Adobe Express, and Canva, and she brings energy, expertise, and heart to every professional learning experience. Her work centers on meaningful PD, authentic classroom connections, and innovative strategies that make learning stick.

Connect With Amy Storer

Ep. 291 | Why AI Checkers Keep Failing Teachers w/ Brittanie Payne

AI detection tools aren’t as reliable as many teachers think. Learn why AI checkers fail and how educators can rethink assignments and assessment.

What happens when a student submits an essay that suddenly sounds like it was written by a 40-year-old lawyer instead of a 15-year-old sophomore?

For many educators, the first instinct is to run the assignment through an AI detection tool. But here’s the uncomfortable reality: most AI checkers still aren’t reliable enough to confidently accuse a student of cheating. False positives happen, advanced writers get flagged, and multilingual students can be unfairly targeted by algorithms that simply don’t understand the complexity of real classrooms.

In this episode, we explore one of the most challenging questions teachers face today: How do you handle AI-generated work when the tools meant to detect it aren’t trustworthy?

Instructional technology coach and former English teacher Brittanie Payne joins the conversation in an episode recorded live at TCEA 2026 to unpack why AI detection tools continue to struggle, what teachers should actually look for when evaluating student work, and why the future of assessment may require a major shift in mindset.

Instead of focusing only on the final product students submit, educators may need to start paying closer attention to the learning process behind the work. When teachers understand how students brainstorm, draft, revise, and reflect, AI suddenly becomes much easier to navigate.

We also discuss practical strategies teachers can use right now, including redesigning assignments, strengthening classroom relationships, and building AI literacy so students understand when and how these tools should be used responsibly.

AI isn’t going away anytime soon. The real question for educators is this: Are we grading the work students submit, or are we paying attention to how they actually learn?

Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

About Brittanie Payne

Brittanie Payne is the Instructional Coach for Technology for El Campo ISD in El Campo, Texas. She is a former high school ELA teacher. When she’s not at work, she likes spending time with her family and watching football. Go Chiefs!

Connect With Brittanie Payne

This 10-Ingredient Salsa Verde Is Better Than Any Restaurant

Learn how to make homemade salsa verde with roasted tomatillos, serrano peppers, garlic, and cilantro. This easy Mexican salsa recipe is fresh, bold, and ready in 15 minutes.

If you think salsa verde tastes too tart or too bland, you probably just have not had the right one yet. A good homemade salsa verde should be bright, flavorful, and have just the right amount of heat. Once you make it fresh, it is hard to go back to anything from a jar.

In this video, I walk through how to make a simple salsa verde that is packed with flavor and is incredibly easy to prepare. The key is roasting and broiling the vegetables before blending them. That extra step brings out a deeper flavor that makes this salsa perfect for tacos, chips, grilled meats, and just about anything else on the table.

Let’s break down how to make it.


What Is Salsa Verde?

Salsa verde is a classic Mexican green salsa made primarily with tomatillos and peppers. Tomatillos look similar to small green tomatoes but they have a slightly tangy flavor that gives salsa verde its signature taste.

Unlike many red salsas, salsa verde often has a brighter flavor profile. When the vegetables are charred or roasted first, the salsa develops a deeper smoky flavor that takes it to another level.

This recipe uses serrano peppers for heat, fresh cilantro for brightness, and a few simple ingredients that bring everything together.


Ingredients for Homemade Salsa Verde

You only need a handful of ingredients to make this authentic salsa verde recipe.

  • 8 to 10 tomatillos (husks removed and rinsed)
  • 4 to 5 serrano peppers
  • 1/4 onion, chopped
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 1 cup fresh cilantro
  • Juice of half a lemon
  • 1 tbsp chicken bouillon powder (I use the Knorr brand)
  • 1 tbsp oregano
  • 1 tbsp cooking oil

The beauty of homemade salsa is that you can adjust the heat. Serrano peppers pack a punch, so if you prefer a milder salsa you can remove some of the seeds or use fewer peppers.


Step 1: Char the Vegetables

Start by heating a pan with a little oil.

Add the tomatillos, onion, garlic, and serrano peppers. Let them cook until they begin to char slightly. This step adds flavor and helps soften the vegetables before blending.

You do not need to cook them all the way through in the pan. Just get some color on them. And whatever you do, DO NOT remove the stems from the tomatillos. This will cause them to burst open and burn in the pan.


Step 2: Broil for Extra Flavor

After charring the vegetables, transfer them to a baking sheet and place them under the broiler.

Let them broil for about 3 to 4 minutes. This gives them a deeper roasted flavor and enhances the natural sweetness of the tomatillos and onions. I personally like to char mine in the broiler a little longer than necessary. Honestly, I char them until I get a nervous. I freak out and think that I burned them but trust me, the char gives the salsa so much depth of flavor.

Keep an eye on them because they can quickly go from roasted to burnt in the blink of an eye under the broiler.


Step 3: Blend the Salsa Verde

Once the vegetables are roasted, add everything to a blender.

Include the juices from the pan along with:

  • Fresh cilantro
  • Lemon juice
  • Oregano
  • Chicken bouillon

Blend until smooth. The salsa should have a vibrant green color and a slightly thick consistency.

Give it a taste before adding anything else. Because of the bouillon, it often already has enough salt and seasoning.


Step 4: Serve and Enjoy

Pour the salsa into a glass container or bowl and it is ready to serve.

This salsa verde is perfect for:

  • Tortilla chips
  • Tacos
  • Breakfast eggs
  • Grilled chicken or steak
  • Burritos and quesadillas
  • S’mores
  • Coffee
  • Cheesecake

The flavor is bright, fresh, and just spicy enough to keep things interesting. Just kidding about the S’mores, coffee, and cheesecake… please don’t do that.


Why Homemade Salsa Verde Is Worth It

Once you make salsa verde at home, it is hard to go back to store bought versions. Fresh ingredients, roasted vegetables, and the ability to control the spice level make a huge difference.

Plus, it only takes about 15 minutes from start to finish.

If you want to see the full process step by step, check out the video above where I walk through the entire recipe and show you exactly how I make it.

Make a batch, grab some chips, and enjoy. Buen provecho!

Ep. 290 | The 3 Ingredients of Authentic Assessment w/ Rachel Lemansky

Authentic assessment isn’t about flashy projects. It’s about process, accessibility, and reflection. Discover practical classroom strategies that make student thinking visible and learning truly meaningful in the age of AI.

3 Big Lies About Authentic Assessment (And What Actually Works in Real Classrooms)

If you’ve ever searched for authentic assessment examples or creative assessment ideas for teachers, you’ve probably seen the same suggestions over and over again:

  • “Do a project.”
  • “Have students make a video.”
  • “Try project-based learning.”

But here’s the real question:

Is it truly authentic… or just a worksheet with better lighting?

After unpacking this topic with Rachel Lemansky, it became clear that authentic assessment isn’t about flashy tools or creative formats. It’s about three critical ingredients that many classrooms are missing.


1. Authentic Assessment Is About Process — Not Just Product

Traditional assessments focus on the final grade. But the final product is only a data point.

Real learning happens in:

  • Drafts
  • Revisions
  • Student thinking
  • Feedback cycles
  • The “messy middle”

If teachers can’t see student process, they can’t fully assess understanding.

Practical classroom idea:
Require students to submit thinking artifacts such as voice notes, revision reflections, or rough drafts — alongside final work. This makes student learning visible and authentic for the student.


2. Accessibility Is Not Optional (UDL Matters)

If students struggle to access the format of your assessment, you’re not measuring mastery, you’re measuring barriers.

Authentic assessment should include:

  • Written options
  • Audio recording options
  • Video responses
  • Visual representations
  • Translation or read-to-me support when needed

When teachers apply Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles, assessment becomes more equitable and more accurate.

Practical classroom idea:
Offer at least two response formats for major assessments. Let students choose how they demonstrate learning.


3. Reflection Is the Growth Engine

Here’s the hard truth: reflection is often the first thing teachers cut when time runs short.

But metacognition — students thinking about their thinking — is what transforms learning from compliance to growth.

Without reflection:

  • Students repeat mistakes.
  • Feedback goes unused.
  • Growth stalls.

With reflection:

  • Students identify strengths.
  • Students correct misunderstandings.
  • Students build transferable skills.

Simple reflection prompts teachers can use tomorrow:

  1. What did I learn?
  2. What challenged me?
  3. What would I improve next time?

That’s authentic assessment in action.


Authentic Assessment in the Age of AI

With AI tools becoming more common in schools, the need for visible process is greater than ever.

When teachers:

  • Require process artifacts
  • Incorporate student voice
  • Include reflection
  • Design multimodal assessments

They make learning human again.

Authentic assessment isn’t about being trendy. It’s about designing tasks that reveal real thinking.


Final Thought for Teachers

Before giving your next assessment, ask:

  • Does this show student process?
  • Is it accessible to all learners?
  • Does it require reflection?

If not, you may be serving fast food instead of farm-to-table learning.

And our students deserve better ingredients. Oh and after recording this conversation with Rachel, there will be a beef stew recipe video coming soon. Buen provecho!

Ep. 289 | Will AI Kill Critical Thinking? Carl Hooker’s 6 Predictions For 2026

Will AI kill critical thinking? Explore six of Carl Hooker’s 2026 edtech predictions about artificial intelligence in schools, digital literacy, student data, and the future of learning management systems.

Want to bring your whole district together with one simple tool? ClassDojo for Districts makes it easy to engage families and strengthen school communities—at every level. It’s the number one communication app trusted by millions of K-12 teachers, now with district-wide oversight and controls. From Pre-K to high school, ClassDojo connects your schools and families in one seamless place. Learn more at classdojo.com/districts.

In this episode, Carl Hooker and I unpack six of his bold 2026 edtech predictions, including students becoming the product in the AI economy, the rise of AI generated “pink slime” misinformation, the threat to critical thinking, and the emergence of a unified Teacher Operating System. We also explore wearable tech, social media trust, and the fine line between innovation and surveillance. If you want clarity and practical insight on leading responsibly in an AI saturated world, this conversation is for you.

Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

About Carl Hooker

Carl Hooker has spent the past 27 years in education as a teacher and administrator focused on the thoughtful integration of technology and innovation in schools. He consults for multiple districts across the country and is a frequent keynote speaker at state and national events. He’s also a 10-time author, 5-time podcast host, advisor to multiple ed tech companies, and National Faculty Emeritus for Future Ready Schools. Carl is also the co-founder of K12Leaders.com – A social media platform made by educators for educators. Check out his website https://CarlHooker.com and his blog at HookedOnInnovation.com

Connect With Carl Hooker


Ep. 288| How To Go From Stuck to Unstoppable With Barbara Bray

Feeling stuck as an educator? In this episode, Barbara Bray shares powerful strategies to rediscover your purpose and grow your why, one personal story at a time.

This episode is sponsored by Teq. One of the biggest challenges in schools right now is capacity. Educators are asked to do more, often with new tools, and very little support. Teq helps by combining classroom technology like SMART Boards and STEM resources with professional learning that respects educators’ time and reality. It’s support that makes technology usable, not overwhelming.

Learn more at Teq.com.

Do you ever feel like you’ve lost your “why” as an educator? In this episode, I have a heartfelt conversation with Barbara Bray, author, podcaster, and empowerment coach. She shares how burnout, system overload, and personal challenges can dim your spark… and how to get it blazing again. We discuss the process of rebranding your role in education to redefining purpose after life-altering events. Barbara offers empowering strategies to help you grow, heal, and teach with intention. If you feel like you’ve lost that spark, this episode will leave you ready to rise.

Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

About Barbara Bray

Barbara Bray is an award-winning author, podcast host, and international keynote speaker with over 30 years of expertise empowering women, educators, and thought leaders to navigate meaningful life transitions with clarity and confidence. As a cancer survivor and Story Weaver, she is known for listening deeply and helping people uncover purpose and possibility within their lived experiences. Through her Grow Your Why Collective and signature Purpose Shift: Values Framework, Barbara guides people to reclaim their voice, self-advocate, and become unstoppable—amplifying their influence, impact, and income, even in uncertain times.

Connect With Barbara Bray


Ep. 287 | Why AI Fails The Sniff Test Every Time w/ Scott Nunes

AI can plan, grade, and analyze but it can’t replace intuition. This episode explores why human relationships remain the most powerful tool in education, no matter how advanced AI becomes.

Want to bring your whole district together with one simple tool? ClassDojo for Districts makes it easy to engage families and strengthen school communities—at every level. It’s the number one communication app trusted by millions of K-12 teachers, now with district-wide oversight and controls. From Pre-K to high school, ClassDojo connects your schools and families in one seamless place. Learn more at classdojo.com/districts.


AI is everywhere in education. It’s embedded into our lesson planning, grading, parent communication, and decision-making. But what happens when the data says “yes” and your gut says “no”?

In this episode, I sit down with a longtime educator, former tech coach, district advisor, and good friend Scott Nunes to unpack the one human superpower AI simply can’t replicate: intuition built through real relationships. We unpack hallway conversations, coffee chats, high-stakes gut decisions that protect students and families, and why schools can’t automate trust, empathy, or human judgment.

We also tackle equity in AI adoption, how under-resourced communities can scale responsibly, and why technology should support human intelligence, not replace it.

Plus… grilling talk, tortillas, Costco intuition, and why AI might know the recipe…but it’s never cooked in the kitchen a day in it’s life! This is a great conversation that is sure to get your human intuition and relationship-building skills up and ready for another day. Buen provecho!

Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

About Scott Nunes

Scott Nunes is a founding member of the Human Intelligence Movement and an ISTE-certified AI educator who helps education and technology leaders translate emerging tech into measurable outcomes. Through Scott Nunes LLC, he partners with tech companies on go-to-market, community, and partner strategies—building the messaging, playbooks, and enablement needed to drive adoption at scale. He also works directly with school districts to evaluate and rationalize their application ecosystem, strengthen special programs like CTE, P-tech, and virtual schools, and align tools to instructional priorities. Known for connecting strategy to execution, Scott helps districts secure non-traditional funding to protect educator roles and ensure teams have the resources they need to succeed.

Connect With Scott Nunes


Ep. 286 | The Fix Your School Culture Needs With Mandy Froehlich

Why are so many teachers burning out and what can actually fix it? Discover how healing spaces can transform toxic school cultures in this powerful episode with my good friend Mandy Froehlich.

This episode is sponsored by Teq. One of the biggest challenges in schools right now is capacity. Educators are asked to do more, often with new tools, and very little support. Teq helps by combining classroom technology like SMART Boards and STEM resources with professional learning that respects educators’ time and reality. It’s support that makes technology usable, not overwhelming.

Learn more at Teq.com.


In this powerful episode, I welcome back Mandy Froehlich—longtime friend of the podcast and a leading voice in educator mental health. Mandy introduces us to the concept of healing spaces. These are not just quiet rooms or meditation music, but deep cultural shifts that support teacher recovery, emotional well-being, and long-term sustainability in education.

We unpack the difference between burnout and demoralization, how leadership can unintentionally miss the mark, and what educators truly need to feel supported. If you feel like you’re trying to stay afloat or you’re an administrator ready to build a better culture, this episode is your blueprint for creating change.

Connect With Gabriel Carrillo

Connect With Mandy Froehlich


Exit mobile version
%%footer%%