Laneshia Boone
Make Math Happen
Make Math Happen (formerly known as PD for the SOUL) is the podcast for educators ready to move with intention and teach with impact. Hosted by math coach and equity-focused educator Laneshia Boone, each episode bridges practice and purpose to help you design instruction that centers students , builds capacity , and makes learning stick —especially for those pushed to the margins. Every week, you’ll get strategies that work in real classrooms, grounded reflections that challenge the status quo, and conversations with educators who are making bold moves in math education. From planning with pur...
Auteur
Laneshia Boone
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Site du podcast
Dernier épisode
1 mars 2026
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Épisodes
Modeling Math: What is a Function 01.03.2026 11:32
Linear functions are major work in middle school mathematics, but before students can graph slope or write equations, they must understand what a function truly represents. In this episode, we trace the vertical development of functional thinking from 6th grade ratio reasoning to 7th grade proportional relationships and into 8th grade functions. You’ll hear how unit rates and the constant of propo...
Connecting Math: Where Relationships Meet Functions 22.02.2026 11:40
How proportional reasoning prepares students for modeling Over the past three months, we’ve built something intentional. Geometry helped students see structure. Number systems helped them understand magnitude. Ratios helped them recognize relationships. In this episode, we bring it all together. Proportional reasoning is not the end goal. It’s the bridge. Before students ever graph a line or write...
Connecting Math: Making Proportional Reasoning Visible 15.02.2026 19:57
Rates, Tables, Tape Diagrams, and the Coordinate Plane Ratios are relationships. But proportional reasoning is what happens when students learn to use those relationships to solve problems. In this episode, we move from identifying ratios to reasoning with them. You’ll explore how tape diagrams, ratio tables, double number lines, and the coordinate plane make proportional relationships visible bef...
Connecting Math: Comparing Quantities 08.02.2026 16:13
Before students can work flexibly with ratios, they must be able to answer a more fundamental question: What exactly are we comparing, and why? In this episode, we zoom in on the core comparison structures that sit beneath ratios, proportions, geometry, and algebra: part-to-part relationships, part-to-whole relationships, and unit reasoning. You’ll hear how these ways of thinking develop over time...
Connecting Math: Understanding Ratios as Relationships, Not Numbers 01.02.2026 16:14
Why ratios are about how quantities move together This episode launches our Connecting Math series by reframing ratios as relationships rather than calculations. Instead of treating ratios as fractions or procedures to memorize, we explore how ratios describe how two quantities vary together and why that way of thinking must be developed over time. Building on December’s focus on Seeing Math and J...
Understanding Math: Number Sense That Transfers 25.01.2026 18:19
How strong number reasoning prepares students for ratios and algebra Throughout January, we’ve explored rational numbers, negative numbers, distance, value, fractions, decimals, and division. On the surface, it may seem like this month was about numbers. But this work didn’t begin in January. In December, we focused on seeing math —using geometry to help students notice structure, reason about spa...
Understanding Math: Fractions, Decimals, and Meaning 18.01.2026 21:53
Building understanding instead of teaching tricks Many students reach middle school able to perform fraction and decimal procedures without truly understanding what those numbers represent. In this episode, we slow down and reconnect fractions, decimals, and division to meaning. We explore why fractions should be understood as division first, how the number line supports flexible movement between...
Understanding Math: Negative Numbers, Distance, and Value 11.01.2026 18:57
Strategies that clarify the number line for every learner Negative numbers are often taught through rules that don’t stick. In this episode, we return to meaning. We explore how students have been reasoning about space, direction, and position on the number line since the earliest grades, and why negative numbers are an extension of that work—not a new concept. By grounding integer operations in m...
Understanding Math: Making Sense of Rational Numbers 04.01.2026 13:05
When students struggle with fractions, decimals, and integers, it’s often assumed they’re missing skills. In reality, they’re missing understanding. This episode opens our Understanding Math series by focusing on how students make sense of rational numbers as quantities that have value, direction, and position—not just symbols to manipulate. We explore how early experiences with counting, comparin...
Seeing Math: Similarity and Scale 28.12.2025 16:42
This episode closes our geometry focus by showing how similarity and scale serve as the bridge into ratios, proportions, and later functions. We explore what makes figures similar, how scale factor represents a preserved relationship rather than a formula, and why students need visual experiences with enlargement and reduction before working with numbers. Along the way, we address real classroom c...
Seeing Math: Area, Surface Area, and Volume 21.12.2025 14:34
This episode continues our Season 4 focus on making connections across mathematical domains and across grade levels. My goal over the coming months is to spark deeper conversations about instruction, sequencing, and sense-making, and to support teachers in taking these ideas back to their professional learning communities. Area, surface area, and volume are often taught as a list of formulas, but...
Seeing Math: Angles, Lines, and Movement 14.12.2025 14:34
Helping students make sense of transformations and symmetry Geometry becomes powerful when students can see how shapes move, change, and relate. In this episode, we explore angles, lines, and the three core transformations—translations, reflections, and rotations—and what students must understand long before they ever touch coordinate rules. You’ll hear how early geometry experiences lay the groun...
Seeing Math: Why Geometry Should Start the Story 07.12.2025 16:00
Spatial reasoning is the heartbeat of middle school mathematics. In this episode, we explore how seeing patterns, shapes, movement, and structure primes students for success across every domain they’ll encounter this year. You’ll learn why geometry is far more than formulas and how it builds the visual foundation students need for ratios, functions, number lines, and equations. This episode opens...
Season Finale: Closing One Chapter, Opening Another 23.11.2025 8:35
This special episode closes out the month and reflects on the entire journey of this podcast. Four years ago, this show launched as PD for the Soul with a simple mission: to give teachers bite-sized, meaningful professional development they could listen to in the middle of real life. Whether it was on the way to work, during planning, or while cleaning the house, the goal was always the same… walk...
The Closure: Bringing the Learning Full Circle 16.11.2025 14:22
The last five minutes of class might be the most powerful. In this final episode of the instructional framework series, Laneshia breaks down the Closure portion of the lesson: the moment where big ideas get consolidated, strategies are named, and learning comes full circle. You’ll hear how teachers can use this time to: Revisit strategies and construct anchor charts that capture the day’s thinking...
The Instruct: Building Thinkers, Not Answer-Getters 09.11.2025 17:37
Last week, we broke down the Instruct phase — how to plan lessons like a chef curating a recipe, balancing tasks, facilitation, and engagement to make learning stick. This week, I’m serving up the next course: what Instruct actually sounds like in action. I’m sharing a real lesson I planned, facilitated, and reflected on using the Thinking Through a Lesson Protocol (TTLP) — a “Build a Pizza” task...
The Recipe for Instruction: Tasks, Facilitation, and Engagement That Stick 02.11.2025 16:40
Every strong math lesson has a recipe — the right balance of tasks, facilitation, and engagement that brings learning to life. In this episode, Laneshia walks you through the Instruct portion of the lesson cycle like a master chef planning a meal. You’ll learn how to: Choose and sequence tasks that align with standards and build coherence across lessons. Facilitate learning through intentional rou...
Pre-Teaching: Zooming Out to Zoom In 26.10.2025 11:30
Before you ever step into a lesson, your planning determines how far students can go. In this episode, Laneshia breaks down what it means to zoom out to zoom in —strategically mapping upcoming units, identifying potential roadblocks, and pre-teaching (or accelerating) just enough to keep every learner in the fast lane. You’ll hear how Suzy Pepper Rollins’ concept of acceleration aligns with resear...
Activate the Lesson: Setting the Stage for High Expectations 19.10.2025 19:04
Before students ever dive into a new concept, the Activate portion of your lesson determines whether they’re truly ready to think. In this episode, Laneshia models what an intentional Activate sounds like—from synthesizing a spiral warm-up to launching a new problem about dividing fractions with and without models. You’ll hear how she uses questioning, routines, and strategic sequencing to make se...
The Weight of our Beliefs 05.10.2025 13:07
Six weeks into the school year, the cracks start to show — the fatigue, the frustration, and the quiet slide into low expectations. In this episode of Make Math Happen , Laneshia gets real about the dangerous drift toward deficit thinking and the power of collective teacher efficacy to turn it around. Drawing from John Hattie’s Visible Learning research — where collective teacher efficacy ranks at...
The Weight of the Work 28.09.2025 20:42
In this episode of Make Math Happen , I get real about the weight of the work we do as educators. From the progress my team has made in planning, to the hard truths about classroom management, to the reflection that leadership demands—I’m unpacking it all. Too often, planning feels like control, but in reality, it’s our power to shape the learning experience for students. Structure and consistency...
Your Educational Landscape 07.09.2025 17:48
What does your educational landscape look like, and what role do you play in it? In this episode, I share what I’ve been noticing in classrooms just three weeks into the school year: disengagement. Students with heads down, hesitant to participate, off-task behaviors — a reality many teachers are facing. But instead of getting stuck in frustration, we need to ask: What can we do about it? I’ll wal...
Math Moves that Matter: Building Capacity One Lesson at a Time 31.08.2025 53:39
In this conversation with Toni Hardy, we dig into what it really means to build capacity in math classrooms—one intentional move at a time. Toni shares how small, purposeful shifts in lesson planning and delivery create long-term impact for students and teachers alike. From structuring lessons for clarity to anticipating misconceptions, she reminds us that the best math instruction isn’t about doi...
Organized for Impact 24.08.2025 25:59
Organization isn’t about perfection—it’s about impact. In this episode of Make Math Happen , Laneshia breaks down three truths every educator needs to hear: don’t put off what can be done today, stop making things harder than they need to be, and watch out for the trap of optimistic bias. From creating a daily power hour to ditching the habit of reinventing the wheel, this episode shows how small,...
Making Thinking Visible with Anchor Charts 17.08.2025 31:42
Anchor charts aren’t just classroom décor—they’re tools for making learning visible, guiding students toward deep understanding, and accelerating achievement. In this episode of Make Math Happen, Laneshia connects anchor chart planning to research-backed strategies like note-taking, summarization, and study skills. Building on ideas from Season 1, Episode 18 (Math Isn’t Magic—It’s Patterns Made Vi...
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