
The Last Weeks of School Don’t Have to Be Chaos in the Classroom Episode 293
May 4, 2026 - 21:53
Radio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
Send us Fan Mail The school year restarts, the weather turns wild, and our schedules fill faster than a radar screen during a storm. We’re leaning into a smarter way to teach: integrating reading and science through a fo...
Integrating Reading And Science With Severe Weather is an episode from One Tired Teacher by Trina Deboree. Send us Fan Mail The school year restarts, the weather turns wild, and our schedules fill faster than a radar screen during a storm....
This episode belongs to One Tired Teacher.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jan 12, 2026, 11:41 long, audio available.
Send us Fan Mail The school year restarts, the weather turns wild, and our schedules fill faster than a radar screen during a storm. We’re leaning into a smarter way to teach: integrating reading and science through a focused study on severe weather so every minute pulls double duty. From thunderstorms to hurricanes, we use clear, kid-friendly texts to teach main idea, text features, vocabulary in context, and questioning—while giving students concrete safety steps that lessen anxiety and build confidence. We walk through how to structure a short severe weather reader so it aligns with standards and still feels human. That means building sections on watches vs warnings, lightning safety, tornado tips, and flood awareness, then layering close reads and partner talk for evidence gathering. Along the way, we open space for feelings: drills can be scary, and kids need words for fear, routines for safety, and practice showing empathy to communities facing storms different from their own. We also tackle author’s purpose and bias, using real passages to show how word choice and structure shape understanding and influence. If your region sees snow and ice, we turn that gap into inquiry with a simple research blueprint students can follow—definition, formation, risks, safety—so they practice nonfiction skills while expanding the class weather map. And because flu season and admin pop-ins are real, we share how to build reliable sub plans that keep learning moving: a tight reading sequence, a text-feature hunt, scaffolded questions, and a quick-write on safety tips. It’s all about intentional routines that reduce stress and make room for the conversations that matter. Want the materials we mention? We’re linking the Severe Weather Reader, plus ready-to-use January and February sub plans that blend literacy and science. If this approach helps you breathe easier on stormy days, follow the show, share it with a teammate, and leave a quick review so more teachers can find calm in the chaos. Links Mentioned in the Show: Severe Weather Reader Support the show 🌿 Teachers, you can’t pour from an empty cup — but with the Sub Survival System for teachers in the classroom, you’ll never have to panic when you need a day off from school. Ready-to-go sub plans designed by a teacher who’s been there. Because rest isn’t a luxury — it’s part of the job. 👉 [Explore the Sub Survival System on TpT]
You can listen to Integrating Reading And Science With Severe Weather online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Integrating Reading And Science With Severe Weather is an episode from One Tired Teacher by Trina Deboree.
This episode is 11:41 long.
This episode was published on Jan 12, 2026.
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Yes. This page shows related episodes from One Tired Teacher when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.
You can listen to Integrating Reading And Science With Severe Weather on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Integrating Reading And Science With Severe Weather is from One Tired Teacher by Trina Deboree.
Published Jan 12, 2026 and 11:41 long