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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 that pushed students to reason about relationships, not race toward answers.
You’ll hear how purposeful planning and lesson study gave me the space to pause instead of rescue, to question instead of tell, and to help students uncover structure on their own. I also reflect on how these moments connect directly to the Standards for Mathematical Practice and the Effective Teaching Practices that develop confident, independent thinkers.
🎧 Listen in to learn how to:
This episode brings last week’s Instruct framework to life — a behind-the-scenes look at what it means to teach math through curiosity, connection, and care.
Send us a text
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of the Make Math Happen podcast! If you enjoyed today’s conversation, subscribe on your favorite listening platform, leave a review, and share this episode with your fellow educators.
You can also join the discussion and connect with me directly by clicking the link to join the Math Collective. Together, we’ll keep exploring practical strategies to transform classrooms and inspire students.
Remember, new episodes drop every Sunday at 9:00 am, so mark your calendars! Until next time, keep making math happen, and I’ll catch you in the next episode.
If you like math videos, let's connect:
By Laneshia Boone5
1212 ratings
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 that pushed students to reason about relationships, not race toward answers.
You’ll hear how purposeful planning and lesson study gave me the space to pause instead of rescue, to question instead of tell, and to help students uncover structure on their own. I also reflect on how these moments connect directly to the Standards for Mathematical Practice and the Effective Teaching Practices that develop confident, independent thinkers.
🎧 Listen in to learn how to:
This episode brings last week’s Instruct framework to life — a behind-the-scenes look at what it means to teach math through curiosity, connection, and care.
Send us a text
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of the Make Math Happen podcast! If you enjoyed today’s conversation, subscribe on your favorite listening platform, leave a review, and share this episode with your fellow educators.
You can also join the discussion and connect with me directly by clicking the link to join the Math Collective. Together, we’ll keep exploring practical strategies to transform classrooms and inspire students.
Remember, new episodes drop every Sunday at 9:00 am, so mark your calendars! Until next time, keep making math happen, and I’ll catch you in the next episode.
If you like math videos, let's connect:

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