021. Meaningful Minimum Mindset

Do Less. Teach Better. Focus on What Matters Most.

Feeling overwhelmed by everything you’re supposed to be doing in your classroom? In this episode of Teaching Made Simple, we’re talking about the Meaningful Minimum Mindset—a way of approaching instruction that helps you cut through the noise and focus on the few practices that make the biggest impact for students.

This isn’t about doing the bare minimum or lowering expectations. It’s about identifying the smallest set of intentional actions that lead to the greatest results—and protecting them.

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • What the meaningful minimum actually means (and what it doesn’t)
  • How the 80/20 rule applies to teaching and instruction
  • Why doing less can lead to better student outcomes
  • The three non-negotiables of upper elementary literacy instruction
  • How simplifying your approach supports consistency, clarity, and sustainability

The Meaningful Minimum for Upper Elementary Literacy:

In this episode, I break down the core practices that deserve your time and energy every single day:

  • Explicit instruction that clearly models and guides learning
  • Writing about reading as a tool for deeper thinking and comprehension
  • Active engagement so students are doing the cognitive work—not just listening

These aren’t add-ons or trends. They’re the foundation.

Why this matters:

Teachers are exhausted—not because they don’t care, but because they’re trying to do everything. The meaningful minimum helps you:

  • Reduce decision fatigue
  • Protect your instructional energy
  • Create more consistent learning experiences for students

When you focus on what truly matters, instruction becomes clearer, more effective, and more sustainable.

Takeaway:

You don’t need more strategies.
You need clarity around the right ones.

Ready to take action?

  • Subscribe to Teaching Made Simple so you never miss an episode
  • Share this episode with a colleague who’s feeling overwhelmed
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Your support helps this podcast reach more classrooms—and I’m so grateful you’re here.