You’re invited (and it’s totally free!) 🎉


Hey friend,

We’ve talked about saving time. About doing less, better.

And now—it’s finally here.

Teacher’s AI-de starts June 9, and it’s my free 5-day training to help you use AI like a pro without losing your patience.

When you click to join, you’ll get:
✅ 13 done-for-you AI frameworks
✅ 28 email prompts you can copy and paste
✅ Video trainings you can watch on your own time
Daily giveaways at 8 PM (just for commenting on a video!)

👇 Click here to save your seat now. It takes 2 seconds.


P.S. Got a teacher bestie who needs a little more time and a little less stress too?

Forward this email and invite them in. I’d love to help them on their journey too.

Let’s make this the summer you get your time (and joy) back.

You in?

—Sarah

Simply STEAM

I craft self-checking STEAM, math, and literacy games for 2nd-4th graders. All digital downloads, all impactful. Teachers save time; kids master skills.

Read more from Simply STEAM

Hi friend, Straight to it: TPT is down, but Teaching Ideas Made Easy is wide open, and for the next 24 hours, you can lock in your membership for $9.99/month for as long as you keep it. No games. No gotchas. Just a real price drop when you need it most. Grab your $9.99 membership now → Join Teaching Ideas Made Easy What you’ll get inside (immediately): Low-prep, self-checking games (math, grammar, reading) that run themselves in centers Standards-aligned K–5 resources with built-in...

Hey friend, Let’s be honest… Halloween in the classroom is bananas. The costumes. The candy. The nonstop questions about when the party starts. This year, my school is dedicating an entire day to Halloween. Costumes, parades, and all. And I already know… after that parade, nobody’s focusing on long division. So instead of fighting the chaos, I’m rolling with it. I plan on surviving with these six Halloween Games and Activities that keep little hands busy, brains kind of learning, and you from...

Hey Reader, Confession time: the first time I taught odd and even numbers, I reached for toilet paper… to count the squares. (Yes, really. 💀) Because no matter how “easy” it seemed, I had no idea how to explain it. It felt intuitive, but I couldn’t break it down. I thought TP would be a great way, but boy oh boy, in a matter of minutes all my students looked like toilet paper brides. So I built a better way—hands-on, visual, and rooted in number sense (not just lucky guesses). 🎥 In today’s...