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Angela Watson's Truth for Teachers

Angela Watson's Truth for Teachers

Angela Watson 371 episodes Latest May 31, 2026

Truth for Teachers is designed to speak life, encouragement, and truth into the minds and hearts of educators and get you energized for the week ahead.

Episodes

EP349: "They know the peach emoji but not real peaches": Re-awakening kids' curiosity and connection to real food through sensory learning (with Bee Wilson) May 31, 2026 35:27 Food writer Bee Wilson has been in classrooms across the UK, and what she's discovered is startling: many children have completely lost their sensory connection to real food. They know the peach emoji but not the fuzzy feel of actual peach skin. They recognize mint from shampoo but have never smelled a fresh mint leaf. When asked where food comes from, kids used to say "the supermarket." Now they
Join me for The Reset: a free at-home retreat for teachers (June 26-28) May 24, 2026 06:15 You've been holding it together with caffeine and adrenaline, but your nervous system has been white-knuckling it for ten months and hit a breaking point. It's time for The Reset. This is something brand new I'm offering for the first time: an at-home restorative retreat for teachers happening June 26-28th.  It's intended to be like a real retreat experience, just held somewhere you don't have to
EP348 Stuck in survival mode? Here's how to calm your nervous system. May 17, 2026 18:33 Most of us are walking around in a low-grade state of fight-or-flight all the time, and we don't even realize it. It looks like the tight jaw in the morning, the exhaustion that doesn't lead to sleep, or the feeling of being on edge even on a good day.  These are signs of a nervous system that never got the signal that it's safe to come down. In this episode, I'm sharing a lesson from my new free
EP347 An artful approach to exploring identity and fostering belonging (w/ Rebecca Bellingham & Veronica Scott) May 3, 2026 49:07 When the world feels this heavy, this broken, it can feel almost frivolous to make space for art. And in the classroom with so much content to cover, can we really slow down enough to create and take an artful approach to learning with students? Who has time to write poems or pause over a beautiful image when we're al barely keeping our heads above water? But think about what we're left with if we
EP346 Feeling tied to your phone? These 3 habits can help you take control. Apr 19, 2026 36:00 I picked up my phone to check the weather the other day, and twenty minutes later I was still standing in my kitchen, having bounced from app to app through a chain of perfectly legitimate tasks that I never actually chose to do in that moment. I wasn't scrolling mindlessly. I was checking my steps, signing up for a yoga class, responding to my husband's text, following up on a bank alert. And I s
EP345 The brain isn't separate from the body–here's what that means for learning (with Caroline Williams) Apr 5, 2026 36:53 We've been taught to think of the brain as the control center, the part of us that really matters for learning. But the body isn't just along for the ride, carrying our brains from place to place. Caroline Williams, science journalist and three-time author (including of the book Inner Sense) has spent years digging into the research on how our brains and bodies actually work together. Turns out th
EP344 So what are we doing here? Expanding into retreats, video essays, mindfulness, and more Mar 15, 2026 54:33 After 20+ years of creating exclusively for educators, I'm expanding into some new creative spaces. In this podcast episode, I share the "why" behind my new YouTube channel ("So What Are We Doing Here?"), my Substack publication, my free guided meditations on Insight Timer, and some other fun new places to find me. I also talk about how my own work has shifted more toward adults, and why so much o
EP343 The truth about AI's environmental impact: Finding your ethical stance as an educator Mar 1, 2026 55:51 Is AI using a bottle of water every time you make a query? Are you a bad person if you use it in your classroom? Should schools ban it entirely—or go all-in? If you've felt confused or conflicted about AI ethics, this conversation is for you. I sit down with Dr. Karen Boyd, an AI ethics consultant who works with schools and nonprofits, to get real answers about the environmental impact of AI—and t
EP342 The hidden curriculum: getting real about the values we teach Feb 15, 2026 23:50 Each time we decide which history gets a full unit and which gets a mini-lesson… Each time we choose whose stories to showcase in classroom libraries while others gather dust on shelves … Each time we select which family structures and cultures to represent in class and which we quietly pretend don't exist … We're teaching whose voices matter, what counts as normal, and how power works. That's the
EP341 Everything all at once: what it's like to be a teacher with ADHD (with Andrew Gardner) Feb 1, 2026 47:58 When he got his ADHD diagnosis at age 30, the first thought Andrew Gardner (https://www.agardner.com/about) had was, "Okay, now what? I'm still an idiot." That negative voice had been with him his entire teaching career, driving him to work 80-90 hour weeks trying to prove he wasn't failing at the basics everyone else seemed to handle easily. In this conversation, Andrew walks us through what it's
EP340 Stay human: Teaching students to protect their brain power in an AI world Jan 18, 2026 26:45 "If AI can write my essay in 30 seconds, why should I spend 30 minutes doing it myself?" I believe students asking this question deserve a thoughtful response ... or even better, an invitation to think critically about their own values and personal philosophy around artificial intelligence. In this episode, I'm offering some tools to help you facilitate these conversations with students, breaking
EP339 It took me years to realize I'm not lazy. I'm neurodivergent. Jan 4, 2026 21:54 Growing up, every report card comment and parent conference involved my teachers expressing some version of the following: "Angela is smart, but not working to her potential." "Angela needs to focus and apply herself." "Angela is a capable student but does not put forth effort." "Angela could do the work if she wanted to but she appears lazy and unmotivated." I shared a little of this story a fe

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