
Show overview
Secondary Teacher Podcast has been publishing since 2023, and across the 3 years since has built a catalogue of 219 episodes. That works out to roughly 35 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run ten to twenty minutes — most land between 8 min and 12 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. 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 4 days ago, with 33 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Khristen Massic | Classroom Routines, Secondary Teacher Strategies, Workload Management.
From the publisher
This show will deliver strategies for multiple prep middle school and high school teachers about how to manage time, plan, and thrive as a secondary teacher. If you are looking for strategies and support from a former multiple prep career and technical education teacher, former administrator, and current instructional coach, you are in the right place. This show will provide answers to questions like: How do I manage the workload of teaching multiple preps? How do I plan for multiple preps? How do I keep up to date with best practices while juggling multiple preps?
Latest Episodes
View all 219 episodesEp 347: Classroom Management Routines for a Smoother Start to Class
Ep 346: Classroom Routines and Procedures Teacher Prep Didn't Cover
Ep 345: Unit Planning for Next Year Starts Before You Pick Activities
Ep 344: Summer Planning for Teachers Who Are Teaching Something New
Ep 343: CTE Teachers Need More Than "Build Relationships"
Ep 342: Teacher Strategies for a 10-Minute End-of-Year Reset
Ep 341: Teacher Planning Starts Here When You Have Multiple Courses
Ep 340: Teacher Work Life Balance Without Giving Up Your Summer
Ep 339: Teacher Planning With the Introduce, Practice, Produce Framework
Ep 338: Secondary Teacher Strategies for Building Courses From Scratch
Ep 337: Multiple Prep Teacher Planning: Stop Collecting Resources
Ep 336: Elective Teachers With Standards But No Curriculum
Ep 335: Teacher Tips for Choosing the First Unit to Plan
Ep 334: Teacher Planning That Reduces Your Summer Workload
Ep 333: Lesson Plans Without Technology When Canvas Is Down
Ep 332: CTE Teacher Tips: End of Year Activities When Students Check Out
Ep 331: Teacher Burnout Prevention- The Hidden Loneliness of Multi-Prep Teaching
Ep 330: Differentiated Instruction for Multiple Prep Teachers: Plan Once, Not Three Times
Ep 329: Test Prep Strategies for Secondary Teachers: Teaching Students How to Take Tests

Ep 328Ep 328: You Don't Need More Ideas—You Need a Go-To Plan
Teachers spend hours collecting ideas for classroom routines—bookmarking activities, screenshotting games, saving posts “for someday.” The truth is, someday rarely arrives. Host Khristen Massic has been there, just like you, juggling multiple preps and thinking the solution is more fresh inspiration. But in this episode of The Secondary Teacher Podcast, Khristen gets real: more ideas aren’t the answer. What you actually need is one go-to plan you can count on, every time your brain is tired or the class vibe shifts.Too many choices, too much decision fatigue. If you’re walking into your secondary classroom with a Pinterest board full of options, you still end up stuck choosing from scratch every time the lesson runs short or students finish early. That scramble is exhausting, and it’s stealing your energy. Host Khristen Massic reveals why collecting feels productive—but it’s really just another hidden drain on your work-life balance.Khristen’s breakthrough came during a year when her time was maxed out: teaching at a magnet center with students from five high schools, finishing a second master’s degree, and being pregnant with her third child. Survival mode wasn’t an option—she needed a strategy that actually worked in real life, with repeatable structure and zero extra prep at home. That’s when “Would You Rather” became her anchor: a simple, teen-ready game that turned from icebreaker to essential routine. It filled time, built community in a room full of strangers, and kept things steady. No more last-minute reinvention.Here’s the better way: choose one predictable, whole-class routine—something age-appropriate, no prep, capped and easy to transition out of. Decide when you’ll use it: students finish early, the room drifts, or you’re underplanned. Then teach it like a routine, not just a fun occasional treat. Same directions, same time limit, same transition phrase. This kind of default anchors your classroom and protects your energy, especially when everything else feels unpredictable.And don’t make the classic mistake of overcomplicating it. Your go-to plan shouldn’t live in your head, where you’ll forget it under stress. Make it visible—a sticky note, clipboard, reminder on your phone—so when your brain wants relief, you have something concrete to grab. Stressed brains don’t remember, they recognize. Simplify for sanity.Once your routine is solid, add one more—but only when the first is truly automatic. This is how you build a bank of classroom routines without turning it into yet another project. Default first, grow slowly. Steady classrooms aren’t about novelty; they’re about structure that you—and your students—can rely on. Doesn’t matter if you feel pressure to entertain; your students appreciate knowing what to expect and how to participate.This episode is for middle and high school teachers feeling stretched thin, especially the multi-prep crowd. If you’ve ever felt guilty for not being creative enough or wished you had magical classroom management tricks up your sleeve, host Khristen Massic has your back. You don’t need to be more prepared or engaging—you just need one anchoring routine that protects you and brings stability to your classroom.She wraps things up by pointing out that the most sustainable classrooms—and the best work-life balance—are built on repeatable routines, not endless novelty. Whether you want to try a ready-to-go bundle of student engagement activities or start with a free toolkit, Khristen reminds you to commit to your plan, make it visible, and trust it to show up for you when you need it most.So stop collecting and start committing—ditch the overwhelm and build your go-to plan. Share this episode with a friend, and keep building systems that work for your reality.Be brave enough to choose structure—don’t let chaos win.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