
The Last Weeks of School Don’t Have to Be Chaos in the Classroom Episode 293
May 4, 2026 - 21:53
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Send us Fan Mail Looking for Super Bowl reading activities that actually build skills—not just hype? This episode shares practical, low-prep ways to use football culture to strengthen informational text comprehension, me...
Super Bowl Reading Lessons: Engaging Informational Text Without Busywork is an episode from One Tired Teacher by Trina Deboree. Send us Fan Mail Looking for Super Bowl reading activities that actually build skills—not just hype? This episod...
This episode belongs to One Tired Teacher.
Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.
Published Jan 19, 2026, 7:21 long, audio available.
Send us Fan Mail Looking for Super Bowl reading activities that actually build skills—not just hype? This episode shares practical, low-prep ways to use football culture to strengthen informational text comprehension, media literacy, and engagement for elementary readers. Big-game buzz is already in the air, and we’re turning that energy into real reading growth. Rather than fighting for attention, we tap into what students are already hearing at home and seeing on TV—Super Bowl storylines, halftime ads, and player talk—to build relevance, stamina, and mastery of informational text skills without adding busywork. We walk through a practical playbook for teachers who want engagement with substance. You’ll hear how a streamlined Super Bowl reader can anchor close reading, vocabulary in context, sequencing, and author’s purpose, while text features like timelines and fast-fact boxes make complex information easier to digest. We share why updating facts each year becomes a mini-lesson in source reliability and current events, and how quick wins—main idea exit tickets, sequencing card sorts, and short evidence-based responses—create momentum for reluctant readers. From there, we bring in writing and media literacy that students actually enjoy: player profiles, team predictions backed by evidence, and halftime ad analysis focused on audience, persuasive techniques, and claims. We make space for every learner with choice-driven stations—history of the game, commercial critique, or pop culture angles—so football superfans and non-fans both find an entry point. Along the way, we connect the dots to broader teaching: once you see how to channel this cultural moment, you can replicate the strategy for award shows, local events, or space missions to keep reading instruction timely and alive. If this approach helps, follow the show, share it with a teacher friend who needs a fresh spark, and leave a quick review telling us which activity your students would try first. Links Mentioned in the Show: Super Bowl 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 Super Bowl Reading Lessons: Engaging Informational Text Without Busywork online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
Super Bowl Reading Lessons: Engaging Informational Text Without Busywork is an episode from One Tired Teacher by Trina Deboree.
This episode is 7:21 long.
This episode was published on Jan 19, 2026.
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You can listen to Super Bowl Reading Lessons: Engaging Informational Text Without Busywork on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.
Super Bowl Reading Lessons: Engaging Informational Text Without Busywork is from One Tired Teacher by Trina Deboree.
Published Jan 19, 2026 and 7:21 long