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10 Minute Teacher Podcast with Cool Cat Teacher

10 Minute Teacher Podcast with Cool Cat Teacher

Vicki Davis

944 episodesEN

Show overview

10 Minute Teacher Podcast with Cool Cat Teacher has been publishing since 2017, and across the 9 years since has built a catalogue of 944 episodes, alongside 2 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to roughly 190 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence, with the show now in its 17th season.

Episodes typically run ten to twenty minutes — most land between 10 min and 13 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Education show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 1 weeks ago, with 21 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2017, with 222 episodes published. Published by Vicki Davis.

Episodes
944
Running
2017–2026 · 9y
Median length
11 min
Cadence
Several per week

From the publisher

A teacher podcast for busy educators—about 10 minutes, every week. Stay current on artificial intelligence in education (plain English), edtech, and what matters in the classroom: culture, instruction, assessment, digital health and wellness, and more. Simple ideas you can use right away. Hosted by AP Computer Science teacher Vicki Davis (Cool Cat Teacher)—author and longtime edtech blogger—this teaching podcast features best-selling teachers, researchers, and in-the-classroom administrators sharing practical strategies that connect with today's students. Follow the 10 Minute Teacher—the podcast for teachers and school leaders—for weekly, classroom-ready tips. Show notes & resources: https://coolcatteacher.com/podcast

Latest Episodes

View all 944 episodes

How Students Actually Learn: Memory & Attention

Jun 19, 202615 min

Experiential Learning Through Travel That Sticks

Jun 17, 202617 min

AI Art in the Classroom with Tim Needles

Jun 16, 202611 min

Vibe Coding for Teachers: No Coding Skills Needed

Jun 10, 202613 min

AI in the Classroom — Why There Are No Best Practices Yet

Jun 8, 202623 min

Moviemaking in the Classroom: Where Every Student Has a Story

Jun 6, 202612 min

AI as a Creativity Amplifier with Dr. Sarah Thomas

Jun 5, 202610 min

Student STEM Trips That Made Students Say "I Could Do This"

Jun 1, 202610 min

AI Won't Fix Education. People will.

May 21, 202611 min

Brain First, AI Second: Teaching Writing in the AI Era

May 6, 202616 min

Real World STEM: Real Tools, Real Clients, Real Money

May 2, 202645 min

ADHD Misconceptions: What Your Students Need You to Know

Apr 20, 20269 min

Free AI Resources for Teachers: Hour of AI and Beyond

Apr 16, 202611 min

Inquiry Based Learning Made Simple for K-8

Apr 6, 202613 min

S17 Ep 929Brain Friendly Reading Strategies That Actually Work

In this episode, Malia Hollowell shares actionable, science-backed strategies to transform early reading instruction. Learn how to organize sight words by phonics rules, leverage spoken language as your teaching superpower, support dyslexic learners, and use word ladders for real reading growth. You'll also discover why leveled readers fall short and how to find trustworthy literacy resources. In this episode, you'll learn: How to organize sight words by phonics rules instead of random lists Why spoken language and sound tapping beats flashcard drilling How to support the 20% of learners with dyslexia using audio-focused strategies Why word ladders are more effective than traditional leveled readers Where to find trustworthy literacy sources backed by research Free editable sight word games from Playdough to Plato Show Notes: https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e929 About the Sponsor: This episode is sponsored by Van Andel Institute for Education. The Educator's Studio is a resource-packed platform with classroom-tested lessons, hands-on projects, professional development, and a supportive educator community. Get 50% off with promo code COOLCAT at coolcatteacher.com/vai.

Mar 19, 202616 min

S17 Ep 928Phone Addiction in Teens: What Actually Works

Phone addiction in teens is real — and Australian psychologist Dr. Brad Marshall has evidence-based strategies that actually work from treating 2,500+ families. Dr. Brad Marshall, known as the Unplugged Psychologist and Director of Australia's Screen & Gaming Disorder Clinic, joins Vicki Davis to share what two decades of clinical work and university research reveal about helping kids break free from phone addiction — without shame or judgment. In this episode, you'll learn: Why parental control software fails — and the "handbrake rule" that actually works What happened when Australia banned phones in every school Why sleep is the number one thing to protect from screen overuse Why expecting teens to self-regulate phone use is "neurologically ridiculous" How to have a non-judgmental conversation with teens about their phone habits Show notes and resources: https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e928 Love the show? Rate and review on Apple Podcasts — it's the #1 way to help other teachers find us.

Feb 26, 202610 min

S17 Ep 927Executive Function Strategies K through 3rd Grade Teachers Can Use Today

Executive function strategies Kindergarten through 3rd grade teachers can implement today. Dr. Sarah Oberle shares science-backed ways to support working memory, inhibition, and focus in the classroom. Dr. Sarah Oberle is a primary educator and cognitive science expert whose upcoming book, Executive Functions for Every K-3 Classroom, translates learning science into practical classroom strategies. In this episode, she breaks down the six executive functions developing in young children and explains why they matter more than content knowledge for student success. In this episode, you'll learn: The six executive functions and how they develop in K-3 students (core vs. higher-order) Why working memory is more limited than most teachers realize — and how to offload it with visual reminders, brief instruction bursts, and student-created notations How inhibition affects not just behavior but also attention and focus Why your classroom decor and seating arrangement may be taxing executive functions without you realizing it The science behind why music with lyrics creates a barrier to student focus Show notes and resources: https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e927 If you enjoy the 10 Minute Teacher, take 30 seconds to leave a rating! This will help other teachers discover the show. Thank you!

Feb 14, 202614 min

S17 Ep 926Balanced Class Lists: A Principal's Guide to Planning Ahead

Balanced class lists set students and teachers up for success. Principal Carrie Hetzel shares her team approach, time-saving tech tools, and advice for planning ahead. Class Composer is sponsoring this podcast. Sign up now for your free trial of Class Composer. For elementary principals and guidance counselors, this is a must-use. Creating balanced class lists is one of the most important — and labor-intensive — tasks elementary principals tackle each spring. In this episode, Carrie Hetzel, principal of Paradise Canyon Elementary School in California (a National Blue Ribbon School), explains how her team builds balanced class lists using a multi-stage revision process that combines data with deep knowledge of every student. She also shares how Class Composer, a class placement tool, cut hours off their workflow by updating data in real time. In this episode, you'll learn: What a truly balanced elementary class looks like beyond just numbers How a principal, teachers, and counselor collaborate through multiple revision rounds Why starting the class placement process in May — not June — makes all the difference How Class Composer provides real-time data analysis and built-in safety checks Why class placement should be seen as a positive, forward-looking process Show notes and resources: https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e926 Love the show? Rate and review on Apple Podcasts — it's the #1 way to help other teachers find us.

Feb 12, 202610 min

S17 Ep 925How Teachers Can Give High-Potential Students a College Roadmap

Too many bright, high-achieving students hit a wall because they lack access, know-how, and the "network advantage" that makes college applications feel possible. In this episode, I talk with Zak Adams, a junior at Harvard University, about how mentorship can help high-potential, low-opportunity students pursue "dream universities" they might not otherwise consider. We discuss Project Access, an international, UK-registered charity that pairs students with mentors connected to their target universities. If you work with juniors right now, this conversation will help you see practical next steps you can take to support students who need a roadmap. In this episode, you'll learn how to: Recognize when a high-achieving student needs mentorship, not just encouragement Identify "high-potential, low-opportunity" indicators that can signal a need for added support Refer students early and plan ahead for deadlines that often arrive around September Understand why mentor matching connected to a target university can provide "network advantage" Encourage students by helping them build a plan when they don't know where to begin Show notes and resources: https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e925

Jan 31, 202611 min

S17 Ep 924Reaching English Language Learners: Day One

*]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-[calc(var(--header-height)+min(200px,max(70px,20svh)))]" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "request-WEB:fd3935bc-daaa-4aa1-86a8-4490ce5224c2-1" data-testid= "conversation-turn-4" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn= "assistant"> This episode focuses on how teachers can better welcome and support English Language Learners from the very first day of school. Many educators want to help multilingual students thrive but aren't always sure what to ask, how to plan, or how to build connection quickly. Andrea Bitner shares practical, experience-based guidance to help teachers create inclusive classrooms where every student feels seen, valued, and capable. What You'll Learn In this episode, you'll learn how to: Ask students what name they prefer and ensure it is pronounced and used correctly Learn about a student's previous school experience to better understand literacy and learning needs Partner intentionally with English Language Learner teachers to plan supports and accommodations Recognize that limited English does not equal limited intelligence Ask families which language they prefer for school communication instead of making assumptions Maintain a learner's mindset by continuing to grow through collaboration, conferences, and shared practice Show notes and resources: https://www.coolcatteacher.com/e924 Speakable: Today's Sponsor This podcast is sponsored by Speakable. Want to bring daily speaking practice to your classroom without adding prep or grading? Speakable helps language teachers assign speaking tasks, give instant feedback, and leaders can track progress, all with tools aligned to ACTFL and WIDA standards. ✅ Instant AI grading ✅ No setup or training required ✅ Student data and growth insights 👉 Explore how Speakable works, whether you're a teacher or a school leader, you'll find the right place to start. *]:pointer-events-auto scroll-mt-(--header-height)" dir="auto" tabindex="-1" data-turn-id= "fa091f1f-ea9c-4d90-ba77-7e4e68e15539" data-testid= "conversation-turn-5" data-scroll-anchor="false" data-turn="user">

Jan 27, 202611 min
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