
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


🎧 Simple Systems That Stop the Overwhelm
Assessment often feels overwhelming not because teachers lack skill, but because systems are introduced too late.
In this episode, I explore how assessment and evidence can feel lighter when they are planned with intention from the start, rather than added on once learning is already underway.
Most teachers don’t struggle with assessment because they lack care or capability.
It becomes overwhelming when evidence lives everywhere, assessment feels reactive, and reporting pressure builds.
This conversation focuses on:
The key message is simple.
Assessment is not extra work. Disorganised evidence is.
When systems are clear, reporting becomes retrieval rather than panic, and assessment supports both learning and teacher wellbeing.
📥 Free Resource:
If you’re not sure where to start with assessment and evidence, I’ve created a one-page Assessment Starter you can use during your weekly reset. Included: Step by step guide for Generating a Rubric on Canva.
There’s no one right system. If you’re figuring out what works for you, you’re welcome to ask questions in the comments or email me at [email protected]
🎧 Listen now and follow Term Talk for short, thoughtful conversations that support sustainable teaching and wellbeing.
🎙️ Next episode: Parents and proactive communication, and how addressing concerns early can prevent problems from growing.
Links referenced in this episode;
🎧 Listen now and follow Term Talk for weekly conversations on teaching, professional growth, and the human side of education.
✨ Connect with me:
Keywords: assessment and evidence, teacher assessment systems, assessment planning, tracking student progress, evidence for reporting, teacher workload, primary teaching, sustainable teaching, education podcast Australia, Term Talk
By Nicola Di🎧 Simple Systems That Stop the Overwhelm
Assessment often feels overwhelming not because teachers lack skill, but because systems are introduced too late.
In this episode, I explore how assessment and evidence can feel lighter when they are planned with intention from the start, rather than added on once learning is already underway.
Most teachers don’t struggle with assessment because they lack care or capability.
It becomes overwhelming when evidence lives everywhere, assessment feels reactive, and reporting pressure builds.
This conversation focuses on:
The key message is simple.
Assessment is not extra work. Disorganised evidence is.
When systems are clear, reporting becomes retrieval rather than panic, and assessment supports both learning and teacher wellbeing.
📥 Free Resource:
If you’re not sure where to start with assessment and evidence, I’ve created a one-page Assessment Starter you can use during your weekly reset. Included: Step by step guide for Generating a Rubric on Canva.
There’s no one right system. If you’re figuring out what works for you, you’re welcome to ask questions in the comments or email me at [email protected]
🎧 Listen now and follow Term Talk for short, thoughtful conversations that support sustainable teaching and wellbeing.
🎙️ Next episode: Parents and proactive communication, and how addressing concerns early can prevent problems from growing.
Links referenced in this episode;
🎧 Listen now and follow Term Talk for weekly conversations on teaching, professional growth, and the human side of education.
✨ Connect with me:
Keywords: assessment and evidence, teacher assessment systems, assessment planning, tracking student progress, evidence for reporting, teacher workload, primary teaching, sustainable teaching, education podcast Australia, Term Talk