Free Workshop for Elementary Music Teachers

Streamline and Strengthen Your Lesson Planning & Instruction

(Without Working at Home)

I WANT TO SAVE MY SEAT

 

In This Free Workshop You'll Learn How To:

1

Create a Collection of High-Quality Repertoire

Learn my process of collecting and organizing repertoire by classroom use, activity, and pedagogical concept to make your lesson planning a breeze.

2

Develop Extension Activities to Increase Student Understanding

Make the most of the repertoire in your classroom by ensuring that the activities you use go beyond surface level and allow students to experience many musical elements.

3

Plan and Implement High-Quality Assessments

(Without Creating Stress for You or Your Students)

We all know that data is important, but sometimes it can be hard to make sure that we are actually using data and assessment in a meaningful way!

4

How to Simplify Your Lesson Planning

(Without Sacrificing Student Success)

Apply the Repertoire-Based Curriculum Framework to simplify your lesson planning, increase student engagement, and reduce overwhelm in the elementary music classroom.

You don't have to work outside of your contract hours to create high-quality musical experiences...

 

Your time outside of the classroom should be just that: yours.

Reclaim the time (you aren't being paid for) by developing systems and strategies for your classroom to increase student engagement all while streamlining your lesson planning and protecting your time outside of the school day.

You Know There Has to Be a Better Way.

 

In this free workshop I'll share how applying the Repertoire-Based Curriculum Framework can allow you to create higher quality lessons for your students while also creating sustainable systems for lesson planning and curriculum development so you can truly leave work at work.

SAVE MY SPOT

The experiences your students receive in your classroom are important... 


But so is your ability to balance your career with the rest of your busy life!

The idea that teachers who don't work at home are lazy is outdated, and quite frankly only goes to support the narrative that teachers need to always put our students first - even at our own expense.

I love my students and I love what I do, which is why I developed systems and strategies that allow me to lesson plan only at school.

Because when it comes down to it, if we're work ourselves into the ground our students suffer.