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Teachers After Spring Break: 3 Simple Ways to Keep Your Classroom Running Smoothly

a teacher pulling her hair out by words that read "teachers after spring break: why this part of the year feels so hard"

After Spring Break is the time of year when teaching isn’t the hard part… it’s everything around it.

The schedule is weird.
The energy is weird.
And somehow your brain is more tired than it was in December.

Here are a few spring teacher problems no one really talks about — and some simple ways to make them easier.

Prefer to watch instead of read? You can watch the full video here.

Students Are Restless, but Structure Still Matters

By spring, students are wiggly, chatty, and dreaming about summer. (aren’t we all)

It’s tempting to loosen everything up, but when routines disappear, behavior usually follows.

Keep the Structure, Change the Theme

Keep your core routines the same, but add small novelties.

Use the same procedures, just with a spring twist.
New themes, same structure.

It keeps students engaged without reteaching expectations.

Same countdown timers.  Spring theme.

a computer with 4 frogs sitting on a log and 1 frog jumping in the air with the time of 2:39 counting down

After Spring Break Decision Fatigue Is Real

By now you’ve made thousands of decisions this year.

Your brain is tired.

And spring adds extra little things — appreciation days, events, end-of-year moments. Every tiny choice starts to feel BIG.

Create Go-To Defaults

Instead of deciding from scratch every time, use repeatable options.

One Simple Example

For staff appreciation days, keep it simple with a ready-to-go set of cards for each staff member you plan to appreciate.

6 cards showing, the front card says Happy School Nurse Day

Students don’t have to learn a new craft or routine.
Staff still feel genuinely appreciated.
And you’re not scrambling to plan something new each time.

Simple, repeatable, done.

Time Feels Fast and Slow at the Same Time

Some days drag.
Some weeks disappear.

It’s a strange mix of burnout and countdown mode.

Anchor the Week with Something Predictable

Create small highlights students can count on each week.

A Fun Friday routine.
A read-aloud students love.
A new quick class tradition.

It gives everyone something steady to look forward to.

Final Thoughts on Teaching After Spring Break

Spring doesn’t need more big ideas, more things.

It needs simple systems that save your energy.

If it makes your day easier and your students feel successful, it’s doing its job.  You can do this!  The end is near.

Before you pack away your classroom for Summer, you’ll want to make sure you make one of these First Week of School Boxes.

Save These Spring Teacher Tips

Save this post so you can revisit these simple spring classroom strategies anytime you need them. Pin it to one of your favorite teaching boards on Pinterest so it’s right there when you’re looking for easy ways to keep your classroom calm and focused this time of year.

a beach that say "spring break" written in the sand by words that say "Teachers After Spring Break: Simple Classroom Systems That Save Your Energy"