Learn to use AI in your classroom.
Practical guides, tool comparisons, and strategies for educators.
Sharing and Collaborating
Your personal system works. Now extend it. Share templates with your department, build a collective resource folder, and discover why sharing knowledge makes your own practice stronger.
Knowledge Compounding
Each year of teaching makes the next one better — but only if you capture and retrieve what you learned. Year-over-year synthesis turns experience into institutional knowledge.
The Unit Retrospective
Twelve minutes at the end of a unit. Write down what worked, what didn't, and what to change. Next year, you start with answers instead of a blank page.
Connecting Your Knowledge
A pile of unlinked notes is a filing cabinet. A web of connected notes is a thinking partner. One link at a time turns your system into something that thinks with you.
The Weekly Teaching Rhythm
Fifteen minutes on Friday. Process your inbox, reflect on the week, set one priority. That single habit compounds your teaching practice over a semester.
Templates That Build Habits
Blank pages demand decisions you don't have energy for at 4 PM. The right templates turn planning and reflection from a creative act into a fill-in-the-blanks habit.
The Capture Habit
Three minutes after your last class. That is the only habit you need to make this system work. Messy capture beats perfect organization every time.
The Five Folders That Organize a Teaching Life
Inbox, Projects, Areas, Resources, Archive — five folders that mirror how teachers think, adapted for any tool you already use.