Joined October 2013
1,418 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
May 14
I taught middle school science for 17 years. I didn't realize I was burnt out until I'd been gone for a couple months. Here are 5 I lived: 1. You’re mentally checked out months before the school year ends. 2. The library gets turned into an ISS room and you just shrug because nothing surprises you anymore. 3. You sit through CYA meetings where the eval was already written before the admin walked in...and it doesn't even bother you. 4. You are losing friends to teaching jobs in "better" districts (or other careers) and you are happy that they got out. 5. You don’t hate teaching or the kids… you just can’t picture doing 20 more years of it. Anything you'd add from your experiences?
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Jun 13
I know I’ve been out of the loop here but Donovan has hair again?! 🤣🤣🤣
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Jun 13
Gio with a screw you showboat goal to end it❤️
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May 21
The pace of work in corporate ID/PM is steady year-round but much slower than the classroom. There’s no giant exhale at the end of May with two months to recover. I was worried that I would miss that summer reset badly but the stress is so much less that I haven’t. I actually prefer the consistent rhythm — no more crashing hard in June and scrambling in August. Just steady work with actual vacation time I can plan around. Teachers thinking about leaving: how do you feel about giving up the traditional school calendar?
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May 20
Going to a storytelling workshop last week for my education team role made one thing crystal clear: The best instructional design (and PM work) isn’t about fancy tools. It’s about telling a story in a clear, compelling way. Spent years doing exactly that with middle schoolers who didn’t want to be there. Turns out the same skill works even better with adults that are motivated to learn. Teachers moving into ID — how much do you lean on storytelling in your work?
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May 20
Was able to work in a Bob Ross ice breaker activity too. So that was a bonus. Being able to spend a bit of money to make activities go well is another difference between the corporate world and the classroom.
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May 19
Here's a career path almost nobody talks about: Teacher → Instructional Designer → Project Manager. ID was the perfect bridge — it let me use my lesson planning skills for adults who are motivated (usually) learners. Six months later I was running real projects as a PM. Same skills (deadlines, stakeholders, clear communication), but better pay and way less drama. If you’re a teacher in (or considering) instructional design right now — this is a career path to consider.
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May 18
Similarities between Instructional Design and Teaching (my experience) • Details matter: The difference between a science lab or corporate interactive learning module that you have put time into and proofread 17 times is glaringly obvious • Learning Objectives: This isn't my favorite thing, but higher ups in both fields want them...get used to using that list of Bloom's verbs • Humor works: If you can make people chuckle (or feel any emotion really) the learning you create will stand out There's more, but I'll stop here. Other suggestions?
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May 15
So I landed a remote Instructional Design job in Feb of 2022. My favorite non-work things about the change: 1. Two seasons: mesh shorts and sweat pants 2. Taking my kids to school in the morning 3. Going to parent-teacher conferences/school events for my own children 4. Lunch dates with my wife/lunch with kids during the summer 5. More energy and patience at home with everyone Others?
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May 15
Totally off topic. I just started the Malazan Book of the Fallen fantasy series. I’m on book #2. It’s fantastic. 👍
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May 13
I wouldn't have said I was "burned out" when I was at the end of my time teaching, but looking back on it...I think I was. I wonder if that's a common thing. You just do what you need to do to get through the days but never sit and reflect on where you are. We need good teachers and I hope many stay, but there's a right time to move on as well. Take the time to think about it - go for a walk and pray about it. The kids need you, but maybe your family needs a less stressed version of you.
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May 12
How I Passed the PMP Exam ~ Short practice quizzes - the PMI Pocket Prep app is like $20 per month but it makes studying in small chunks convenient, 10 ?s at a time whenever you have a spare few minutes ~ Mock exams - Anywhere from 30 questions all the way up to full 180 questions, you can find these several places (I used Percipio) That's kinda it. I bought a couple study books, but did use them a lot. Doing tons of practice questions did it for me and I passed above target in all three domains.
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May 12
This is the app I used the most apps.apple.com/us/app/pocket…

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May 11
Good morning, X. The school year is winding down and if you're feeling burned out maybe it's time to polish up the ol' resume. Best piece of CV advice I received when I transitioned out of the classroom was to be specific. You need to decide on the role you're targeting and make sure your resume matches. If you aren't sure and are applying to different types of positions you'll need to create multiple resumes. AI makes that a lot easier now, but you still need to make sure you review and clean it up. "Human in the loop" and all.
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May 8
Four years ago I was designing instruction for the first time in a corporate setting. Today I’m a healthcare PM helping lead multimillion-dollar projects. The transition wasn’t a huge leap — it was the natural next step. ID taught me how to make complex things simple and measurable. PM let me own the outcome end-to-end. 17 years of managing 30 kids, chaotic admins, and impossible deadlines prepared me better than any certification ever could. ID-to-PM is a viable career path if you're wondering what might be next.
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May 7
When I was transitioning from teaching to instructional design AI wasn't as pervasive as it is now, but it was there. I'd still recommend getting a human to help you review your resume, but cover letters... Have AI write the cover letters. Copy/paste the job description and tell it to write your cover letter based on that. There were a couple very helpful people on LinkedIn that helped with my resume. Erin Lewber (don't think she has an X account) was super helpful with polishing up my CV.
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Teacher appreciation week! 🎉 You know where I’ll be in early May! 😉
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May 6
I left teaching in 2022 for corporate instructional design in part because there are no paths to growth for teachers unless you want to be an admin…I did not. In ~4 years I have been promoted from ID to project management and there are multiple paths for me to go further. For a person with a family to support, college for kids on the horizon, etc…that’s a big deal.
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