Cult of Pedagogy Search

The Art of Classroom Timing: 10 Ways to Fit It All In

Close

Can't find what you are looking for? Contact Us


Listen to this post as a podcast:

Sponsored by Renaissance and Erikson Institute


This page contains Bookshop.org links. When you make a purchase through these links, Cult of Pedagogy gets a small percentage of the sale at no extra cost to you. What’s the difference between Amazon and Bookshop.org?


We talk a lot about all the things that make teaching a challenging job 一 insufficient funding, lack of support staff, student behavior, meeting parent demands, and the ever-present crush of testing pressures. And that’s just a short list. 

But there’s another struggle that doesn’t get nearly enough attention, something that can ruin even the most beautifully designed lesson plans: Making our planned instruction fit precisely into the time we have allotted for it. Any experienced teacher will tell you that lesson plans rarely take the exact amount of time you have set aside for them. Unless you already have great systems in place, you’ve probably experienced one or more of these scenarios: 

Finding yourself in any of these situations is kind of awful. It is for me, anyway. When I have too much extra time left to fill, I panic. I feel a responsibility for giving my students something of quality to do, but when I’m pressed for time, I’m a terrible improviser. And when I’m in the middle of an activity and I see that it’s going over time, I start to rush, skipping over some of the most carefully designed parts of my lesson or not giving my students enough time to process. It’s not good. 

But over the years, I’ve built a few habits into my classroom routine that usually prevent these problems from happening or help me deal with them much more effectively when they do. Some I figured out on my own, others I borrowed. If you think you could get better at managing your classroom time, these are worth a try.

By the way, I am writing this from recent experience! Although I left full-time teaching many years ago, in January 2026 I started teaching English classes to adult learners three mornings a week. I will share more later about what an incredible experience this has been; for now, it has given me fresh ideas for skills and strategies to share here. This is just the first of what I hope are many other articles that come from this new role.

OK. So here’s what I do to make the most of my class time. When I stick to these habits, I often end class feeling like I’ve made good use of the class period. On top of that, I feel like I have my act together, which is a nice bonus.

1. Always Plan to End 5 Minutes Early

Creating plans that fill up every last second of your allotted teaching time is a recipe for disaster. You’ll find yourself scrambling at the end and often running over time, which makes students late for their next class and creates problems for other teachers.

Instead, shoot for an end time that’s five minutes before your class officially ends. This creates a nice buffer so that if you do run “over,” you still have a little extra time to cover it. And if you really do finish with five minutes to spare, do a sponge activity, a task that can expand to fill up almost any amount of time. Usually these are whole-class activities you all do together when you find yourself with an extra chunk of time at the end of a class period, during a standardized testing window when many schools discourage teachers from doing anything academic, or on days when your lesson is cut short by a fire drill or assembly. This article from Edutopia will give you some ideas to start with. 

What I’ve been doing lately with my English learners is playing Simon Says to reinforce the names of body parts. They can play from their seats with all their things packed up and ready to go, so we play until it’s exactly time to go and they just walk out, nice and relaxed. Other games like Pictionary, charades, or hangman are perfect for this little bit of time if and when you have it.

2. Set Hard Stops Mid-Lesson

Rather than looking at your entire lesson plan as one blob of time with one stop at the end of the class period, treat it as a collection of distinct chunks that have firm start and stop times.

Let’s look at a sample two-hour class with my English students:

The lesson on Wh- Questions at 11:00 is new material for my students, and I want a full half hour for it; I don’t want to rush this lesson. I also don’t want to give it right at the beginning of class, because many of my students often come late, so I have learned to move the newest learning to later in the class session, when I feel more confident that more students will be in the room. 

With that in mind, I have to make sure I’m finished with the first three activities, which are not based on new material, by 11:00 so I have plenty of time for the new stuff. The vocabulary game that comes before that new lecture can go longer or shorter, depending on how much time I have, but I’m planning on stopping right before 11:00 no matter what, so I have plenty of time for the new material.

It helps to always look at your lesson plans this way: Note which activities you really need to have a certain amount of time for, and figure out what time you absolutely must start them to make sure you get it 一 write that in your lesson plans and stick to it as closely as you can.

The next tip will help you do that.

3. Plan for Expansion or Contraction

Many activities can either be expanded to fit longer stretches of time or contracted to take up less time. As you look at each day’s plans, note where you might be able to do that. In the example English class I just described, I know from experience that the vocabulary game can take up exactly the designated 15 minutes, it can go longer if needed, or I can make it very quick or skip it altogether if the activity before it happens to take too long. 

Although some activities like videos consume a fixed length of time, and others have a fixed amount of content you really want to expose students to (like in a reading or lecture), certain activity types are much more fluid, and can be shortened or lengthened if the need arises:

4. Set “Cut Lines” in Advance

This works along with the previous strategy: If you make tentative plans to shorten an activity if needed, physically mark exactly where in the lesson you’re going to do that if things start taking too long. 

If you’re working from a slide deck, put an icon on the slide or write in the speaker notes which slides can be skipped for time if necessary. If you want to get more techy, you can create a link at your cut line that will let you jump from one slide to a later point (here’s how to do it in Google Slides and PowerPoint).

5. Normalize Stopping Mid-Task

This is more of a mindset than a habit, but it’s one that will make the last two strategies work even better, especially if you have a perfectionistic streak. 

The idea of stopping a task “in the middle” might make you or some of your students feel unsettled, as if plans were poorly designed or someone has dropped the ball. Neutralize that feeling by having a conversation with your class ahead of time, and let them know that some activities will be designed with completion in mind, while others will be cut short at times when it might feel like things are just getting going. Try to think of certain activities as flowing over the course of a week or several weeks, rather than discrete events that have to be completed in one class session.

6. Prepare Anchor Activities

So far, we’ve only talked about the kinds of activities that you pace yourself and how to resize them to fit the often unpredictable flow of a class period. But the other factor that has a huge impact on classroom pacing is what differentiation expert Carol Ann Tomlinson calls “ragged time,” when students finish tasks at different times, leaving you with the job of finding something else for the early finishers to do (Tomlinson, 66).

A solution to this is establishing a set of what Tomlinson refers to as anchor activities, tasks students can work on independently after the assigned work has been completed at a high level (66-67). These can be chosen to supplement your existing coursework and can include reading, journal writing, creating a portfolio of work samples, and practicing skills like spelling, computation, vocabulary, writing, art techniques, or skills in a sport.

For these to work seamlessly, Tomlinson recommends doing them first as a whole class, where students simply work independently and quietly on the anchor activity. Once they seem comfortable and confident with the activity, move to a half-and-half setup, where half the class is doing a content-based activity aligned to their needs and the other works on the anchor activity. Eventually the anchor activities can primarily be used as an option for early finishers, an automatic go-to whenever students find themselves with nothing to do.  

7. Pre-Stage Materials

Far too many classroom minutes can be wasted finding, pulling out, organizing, and distributing materials for activities. The more of this work you can do beforehand, the less time you’ll waste in class. Here are some things you can do to prepare:

8. Create an Opening and Closing Routine 

My first draft of this section started with this sentence: “We can lose hours of learning time every year if we don’t give the start and end of class some structure.”

Later I realized I didn’t love that message. The concept of “downtime” has been unnecessarily demonized by a lot of people in education. And I think this idea that students should be academically engaged from bell to bell is unrealistic and unhealthy. Humans need breaks, we need a little boredom, and we need to socialize; this is true not only for our students, but for ourselves. So I’m putting in this strategy as a suggestion to make the start and end of your classes more intentional and predictable — not necessarily academically rigorous, but intentional and predictable — so students know what to expect. Here are some thoughts on what that could look like:

9. Clean as You Go

When I’m teaching a class, I have a fear of “dead air,” time when students are just kind of waiting around for something to happen. It’s my natural tendency to want to move from one activity to the next quickly and seamlessly, ensuring that as much as possible, our time is spent doing something enriching.

One way that plays out is that I often don’t take time to clean up materials after an activity is over. If I distribute a handout, I end up with a few leftovers sitting on whatever surface I’m using for materials. Then twenty minutes later, I throw something else on top of that, and ten minutes later maybe a third thing. If I have my students doing something hands-on, like flashcards or mini-whiteboards, I can forget to gather them up when we’re done, or I’ll do it in a rush, piling things up at the front of the room without organizing them and properly putting them away. Mentally, I tell myself I’ll straighten it all out later, but this leaves me with a mess at the end that I have to then take time to straighten out.

On the days when I’m more on top of things, I take the time in between activities to put things away as I go. This may mean students have to wait an extra minute for me, and I’ve decided that’s worth it. Other times, I squeeze in the clean-up while they are working on something that doesn’t require my presence. Either way, building this habit is a good way to save me time after class so I can have more of my free time to myself.

10. Leave Notes for Next Time 

Taking just a minute after a lesson to write yourself a note for future use can be a huge help when it’s time to teach the lesson again. Some ways to do it are putting a post-it note on paper plans or handouts (“This only took 5 minutes!” or “Part 4 confused many students”) or typing notes on digital plans in a large, brightly colored font (“Add a few extra minutes to set up laptops for this”). Even if you think you’ll remember next time around, you’re better off capturing your exact thoughts now while they’re fresh.


What Helps You Make the Most of Class Time?

I’ve only shared ten strategies here, but I know there’s a whole lot more out there. I would love to hear what you do to make classroom time work for you. Please share these in the comments!


References

Tomlinson, Carol Ann. How to Differentiate Instruction in Academically Diverse Classrooms. 3rd ed., Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2017.


Come back for more.
Join our mailing list and get weekly tips, tools, and inspiration that will make your teaching more effective and fun. You’ll get access to our members-only library of free downloads, including 20 Ways to Cut Your Grading Time in Half, the e-booklet that has helped thousands of teachers save time on grading. Over 50,000 teachers have already joined—come on in.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.