• Pillar 5: The 5 Pillars of Effective Writing Instruction – The Writing Cycle
    Jun 14 2026
    In the fifth and final episode of their series, hosts Phil and Sharon are joined once again by De and Danielle, two Year 6 teachers whose approach to writing instruction has quietly transformed what their students believe they are capable of. The conversation centres on the writing cycle — the fifth of De and Danielle's five pillars — and the teachers are quick to challenge the assumption that writing is a neat, linear process. In their classrooms, writing moves forwards and backwards. Students draft, revisit, revise, and return to earlier stages whenever the work demands it. The "one-and-done" habit, deply ingrained across many schools, is something De and Danielle have worked deliberately and persistently to dismantle. The episode moves through the practical architecture that makes this possible. De and Danielle explain their school-wide editing code, which gives students a shared visual language for feedback, and walk through the self-edit, peer-edit, teacher-edit sequence that distributes responsibility across the classroom. Flexible conferencing — conversations that happen before school, between lessons, and in any available gap — is described as a cornerstone of the approach, always beginning with specific, genuine praise before moving to areas for growth. Two powerful student-centred practices take centre stage. "Pinking your win" asks students to highlight, in pink, the moment in their writing where they can see their personal goal being met — making individual progress concrete and owned. The hot task, completed independently at the end of each unit, gives students the chance to perform without scaffolding, while the cold task completed at the start of the unit sits alongside it as a record of how far they have travelled. Two students, Seb and Spenny, share their experience of the cycle from the inside — and what they describe is a process that has changed not just their writing, but how they think about improvement itself. JOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE! Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership. FURTHER INFORMATION Tune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTube Read our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number of 'anytime' online courses.Connect with the latest news and other educators by joining our Teacher's Toolkit Facebook groupExplore upcoming live or online webinar events Have questions or feedback? Reach out to us directly at admin@cuelearning.com.au
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    1 hr and 20 mins
  • Pillar 4: The 5 Pillars of Effective Writing Instruction – Mastery Through High Impact Teaching
    May 31 2026
    In Episode 154 of A Teacher's Toolkit for Literacy, hosts Sharon and Phil sit down with classroom teachers De and Danielle to explore the fourth pillar of effective writing instruction: mastery through high-impact teaching. The conversation digs into the practical strategies that move students beyond basic competence and into genuine craft. De and Danielle introduce the master class as one of their most powerful tools — a short, targeted small-group session that runs alongside whole-class mini lessons. Unlike traditional remediation groups, master classes are open to every student. Stronger writers are extended and challenged while emerging writers receive focused support. Sessions are invitational, allowing students to come and go freely, which creates genuine engagement and builds trust between teachers and learners. Mentor texts sit at the centre of every unit De and Danielle teach. Rather than simply reading books aloud, they pull texts apart with students — examining structure, vocabulary, and authorial choices — and keep them accessible throughout the writing process as living models. Books by authors such as Gary Crew, Philip Bunting, and Tristan Bancks are chosen because they intrigue both teachers and students alike, and because they serve the classroom reading life well beyond the writing unit itself. Access to published authors adds another dimension to the programme. When authors visit — in person or via Zoom — writing becomes tangible and real for students. The class's encounter with Gary Crew is a standout moment, with students surprising even the author himself with the depth of their insight. Explicit instruction ties everything together. De and Danielle move through the I do / We do / You do cycle quickly, ensuring students reach independent practice in every lesson. Student Peyton's interview closes the episode powerfully, describing how being asked to restart a major piece from scratch becomes the turning point that transforms her understanding of planning, word choice, and revision. JOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE! Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership. FURTHER INFORMATION Tune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTube Read our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number of 'anytime' online courses.Connect with the latest news and other educators by joining our Teacher's Toolkit Facebook groupExplore upcoming live or online webinar events Have questions or feedback? Reach out to us directly at admin@cuelearning.com.au
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    1 hr and 12 mins
  • Pillar 3: The 5 Pillars of Effective Writing Instruction – Independence in Learning
    May 10 2026
    Hosts Phil and Sharon return with classroom teachers De and Danielle to explore the third pillar of their writing framework: independence in learning. The conversation cuts straight to something that matters Deply in any writing classroom — the difference between students who follow instructions and students who genuinely own their work. De and Danielle explain that independence is not about removing support. It is the result of teaching so explicitly and consistently, with such clear curriculum alignment, that students eventually internalise the process and begin making real decisions about their writing for themselves. The tools that make this possible — anchor charts built collaboratively with students, shared meta-language, structured learning intentions, success criteria, and a multi-stage editing process — are discussed in generous, practical detail. What makes the episode particularly compelling is the student interviews. Three Year Six students, Jaxson, Lil, and Lucas, speak with striking clarity about their own development as writers. Each one independently identifies editing as the stage that has helped them most, and each can name exactly what they are working on and why. Their ability to articulate their growth — using precise language like cohesion, exposition, sentence structure, and audience — is itself a testament to the teaching they have received. The conversation also surfaces a central insight that runs through the entire episode: structure and creative freedom are not in tension. They are mutually dependent. When students know the writing cycle so well that navigating it requires no conscious effort, their attention is freed for the craft itself — the choices, the risks, the voice. Sharon, Phil, De, and Danielle close the episode reflecting on years of accumulated practice, a standout cohort, and the quiet satisfaction of watching students become writers who understand not just how to write, but why it matters. JOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE! Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership. FURTHER INFORMATION Tune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTube Read our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number of 'anytime' online courses.Connect with the latest news and other educators by joining our Teacher's Toolkit Facebook groupExplore upcoming live or online webinar events Have questions or feedback? Reach out to us directly at admin@cuelearning.com.au
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    57 mins
  • Pillar 2: The 5 Pillars of Effective Writing Instruction – Quality Writing
    Apr 26 2026
    In the second episode of their 2026 series, Phil and Sharon welcome back Danielle Monique and De Ludlum from Fairview Primary School in Collie, Western Australia, to explore the second of their five pillars of effective writing instruction: every student can produce quality writing. De and Danielle open with the belief that underpins everything they do — that every child, regardless of ability or background, is capable of being a writer. This is not an aspiration. It is a daily operational reality, built through careful planning, consistent structures, and a classroom environment designed to support every student at every stage of the writing process. The teachers walk listeners through the practical tools that bring this belief to life. Their word wall, Phrases We Love door display, anchor charts, graded writing samples, and critical features document work together to ensure that no student is ever left without a clear path forward. Plot in a Box provides a structured planning framework that students and teachers build together, with De and Danielle modelling every step before students attempt it independently. Plans are submitted and reviewed before drafting begins, and staged submission points throughout the unit keep every student on track. Editing, the teachers reveal, has undergone the most significant transformation in their practice. Where once Danielle was rewriting student work in the early hours of the morning, editing now belongs to the students themselves — carried out in deliberate stages through a school-wide editing code, with teacher feedback focused on showing students not just what to fix, but how. The episode concludes with interviews from two students, Riley and Kobi, whose candid, articulate reflections on what has helped them grow as writers provide the most compelling evidence of all: that when teachers build the right conditions and hold firm to high expectations, every child genuinely can produce quality writing. RESOURCES WITH THIS PODCAST Quality Writing - Photo and Text Examples from the Classroom RESOURCES MENTIONED ON THIS PODCAST Named Resources Plot in a Box A structured narrative planning framework. Danielle discovered it through a writing course and she and De adapted it for their classroom — adding character adjective boxes and adjusting the original structure. Craft Lessons - Teaching Writing K-8 — Ralph Fletcher Sharon and De both reference this book. De describes it as their early go-to resource when they were changing the way they worked. The full title isn't stated but the author's name — Ralph Fletcher — is confirmed in the transcript. School-Developed Resources School-wide editing code and checklist — a consistent set of symbols used across the school, not a commercial productCritical features document — their own unit planning tool for studentsGraded writing samples — C, B, A exemplars displayed in the classroomModelled texts — written by Danielle and De themselves for each unit Tools and Platforms Teachific — where their units and podcast resources are uploaded (referenced by Sharon and Danielle) READ THE BLOG - Every Student Can Produce Quality Writing JOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE! Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership. FURTHER INFORMATION Tune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTube Read our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number of 'anytime' online courses.Connect with the latest news and other educators by joining our Teacher's Toolkit Facebook groupExplore upcoming live or online webinar events Have questions or feedback? Reach out to us directly at admin@cuelearning.com.au
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    1 hr
  • Pillar 1: The 5 Pillars of Effective Writing Instruction – Purposeful Planning
    Mar 29 2026
    In the first episode of their 2026 series, Phil and Sharon welcome two Year 6 teachers from Fairview Primary School in Collie, Western Australia — Danielle Monique and De Ludlum — to share the first of five pillars underpinning their approach to writing instruction: purposeful planning. Danielle and De describe how every unit begins with the end in mind. Working backwards from a clear goal, they map each learning intention against curriculum expectations, anticipate where students will struggle, and plan day by day across five- to six-week blocks. Front-end loading — a two-week immersion in a mentor text through reading workshops — ensures students enter every writing unit already familiar with the language, style, and structure they are about to produce themselves. To bring the pillar to life, the teachers walk listeners through an actual unit built around Philip Bunting's picture books, in which students mash two animals together to create an entirely new creature. The unit's title — When Animals Collide: The World's Most Bizarre Creatures — signals immediately the spirit of the work: ambitious, joyful, and purposeful. Throughout the conversation, Danielle and De emphasise that planning is never kept in the teachers' heads. Students receive a critical features document that maps the full unit, including staged submission dates, so that every child can see exactly where they are heading and take genuine ownership of the journey. The episode closes on a quietly powerful note. A student named Riley — dyslexic and living with ADHD — writes to his teachers at year's end, saying he never knew he could be creative until they gave him the chance. It is, the teachers agree, exactly why purposeful planning matters: not for the grids and documents, but for what becomes possible when every child is genuinely planned for. RESOURCES MENTIONED ON THIS PODCAST The Five Pillars of Effective Writing Instruction - OverviewWriting Unit 1 - Text InnovationWriting Unit 2 - AutobiographyWriting Unit 3 - Poetry balladsStudent text: Voices Under the Southern Sky: Australian Ballad AnthologyPurposeful Planning - Photo examples from the classroomOther resources coming soon! READ THE BLOG HERE JOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE! Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership. FURTHER INFORMATION Tune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTube Read our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number of 'anytime' online courses.Connect with the latest news and other educators by joining our Teacher's Toolkit Facebook group Have questions or feedback? Reach out to us directly at admin@cuelearning.com.au
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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Part 2: The Wonder of Teaching Vocabulary with Freddy Hiebert
    Jun 29 2025
    Part Two: Practical Implementation and Beyond Building on her foundational principles, Hiebert delves deeper into practical classroom implementation, distinguishing between narrative and informational text vocabulary demands. She explains how stories use varied, sophisticated words for familiar concepts—characters "lumber" rather than simply "walk" or "eavesdrop" instead of "listen"—while informational texts introduce entirely new concepts requiring background knowledge development alongside vocabulary instruction. The conversation takes a modern turn as Hiebert shares her innovative use of artificial intelligence tools like Claude to create sophisticated semantic maps and organise word relationships. She provides specific prompts teachers can use: "Which of these words are really important to generalise to other topics?" and "Can you put them into important categories?" This approach transforms technology from a simple definition-lookup tool into a thinking partner that helps identify patterns and relationships. Hiebert addresses concerns about overwhelming linguistic instruction by emphasising that students don't need to know everything before they can engage meaningfully with texts. She advocates for giving children fundamental insights about how language works rather than exhaustive technical knowledge, comparing effective vocabulary instruction to basketball coaching—providing strategic guidance rather than micromanaging every movement. The discussion reveals alarming trends in American education where interventions promise to teach 150 letter-sound correspondences, which Hiebert warns will "kill a kid's interest" in reading. She advocates for statistical learning through extensive reading rather than explicit instruction of every possible pattern. Throughout both segments, Hiebert consistently emphasises that children are naturally brilliant learners who develop word consciousness through meaningful engagement rather than drill-and-practice methods. Her approach transforms vocabulary instruction from passive memorisation into active investigation, offering educators research-backed alternatives that honour both language complexity and student intelligence. The conversation concludes with her invitation for continued collaboration and her promise to share practical resources including AI prompts, semantic map examples, and implementation guidelines with the Australian teaching community. TEXT PROJECT WEBSITE BY FREDDY HIEBERT Text Project website - free student texts (Plus +) SPECIFIC RESOURCES FROM FREDDY HIEBERT, AS MENTIONED IN THE PODCAST 1. AI Semantic Map Examples You will find an example in this ILA presentation .As well as the presentation, the following paper, which is in review at a journal, gives examples of maps and grids created with AI 2. ILA Website Presentation Fundamentally, the ILA presentation will have a similar structure to the above presentation:See the ILA webinar here on YouTube. 3. AI Prompt Examples The above presentations and the paper (Leveraging AI) should give some examples). 4. 'The Story of English' Picture Visual representation showing bratwurst (German) in baguette (French) with yogurt (Greek)Illustrates how English draws from multiple language traditions 5. Etymology Resources Stories of Words develops students' interest in fascinating words like snickerdoodles and terrapin. Using the TExT model, this 16-volume series explores vocabulary through four word-formation methods: borrowed words, life themes, manipulated words, and technological innovations. 6. Text Models Examples Text Models Examples are here.From Freddy: "This site at TextProject provides illustrations of texts that I have developed with AI assisted. I should emphasise that I do AI-assisted, not simply AI-generated. A text typically goes through numerous iterations and I also analyse the texts to determine its distribution according to word zones (more on word zones)And I’m attaching a blog on Word Zones as well JOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE! Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership. FURTHER INFORMATION Tune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTube Read our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number ...
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    39 mins
  • Part 1: The Wonder of Teaching Vocabulary with Freddy Hiebert
    Jun 22 2025
    Part One: Foundations Dr Freddy Hiebert, President and CEO of Text Project and literacy researcher at UC Santa Cruz, opens her conversation with Australian literacy consultants Sharon and Phil by immediately challenging conventional vocabulary instruction. She declares that lists and flashcards simply don't work, despite being the go-to methods in countless classrooms worldwide. Hiebert introduces her groundbreaking research revealing that 95% of English texts derive from just 2,500 morphological families—interconnected word systems where understanding one member unlocks numerous related words. She demonstrates how "help" generates "helper," "helpful," "unhelpful," and "helpless," transforming vocabulary learning from rote memorisation into systematic understanding that empowers students as independent word solvers. The conversation explores English's fascinating linguistic complexity through Hiebert's memorable culinary metaphor: a German bratwurst in a French baguette with Greek yogurt sprinkled on top represents how English draws from multiple traditions. This understanding helps students recognise why compound words from Anglo-Saxon roots, academic phrases from French influences, and consistent meaning patterns from Greek elements function differently across texts. Hiebert champions semantic maps as powerful alternatives to traditional lists, describing how students build visual connections between related concepts. She illustrates how mapping cats' movements, colours, and features creates meaningful vocabulary networks that expand naturally as students encounter different texts about the same topic. The discussion addresses practical concerns when Hiebert explains that approximately 40-50% of the 2,500 word families never actually require explicit teaching—they're straightforward enough for students to acquire through natural exposure. This revelation reassures teachers worried about covering overwhelming amounts of content. Hiebert emphasises fundamental principles students should understand by third grade: recognising that English draws from different language systems, understanding that certain words perform most of the work in English, and knowing that narrative and informational texts present different vocabulary challenges. These insights prepare students to approach any text with systematic thinking rather than anxiety about unknown words. TEXT PROJECT WEBSITE BY FREDDY HIEBERT Text Project website - free student texts (Plus +) SPECIFIC RESOURCES FROM FREDDY HIEBERT, AS MENTIONED IN THE PODCAST 1. AI Semantic Map Examples You will find an example in this ILA presentation .As well as the presentation, the following paper, which is in review at a journal, gives examples of maps and grids created with AI 2. ILA Website Presentation Fundamentally, the ILA presentation will have a similar structure to the above presentation:See the ILA webinar here on YouTube. 3. AI Prompt Examples The above presentations and the paper (Leveraging AI) should give some examples). 4. 'The Story of English' Picture Visual representation showing bratwurst (German) in baguette (French) with yogurt (Greek)Illustrates how English draws from multiple language traditions 5. Etymology Resources Stories of Words develops students' interest in fascinating words like snickerdoodles and terrapin. Using the TExT model, this 16-volume series explores vocabulary through four word-formation methods: borrowed words, life themes, manipulated words, and technological innovations. 6. Text Models Examples Text Models Examples are here.From Freddy: "This site at TextProject provides illustrations of texts that I have developed with AI assisted. I should emphasise that I do AI-assisted, not simply AI-generated. A text typically goes through numerous iterations and I also analyse the texts to determine its distribution according to word zones (more on word zones)And I’m attaching a blog on Word Zones as well . JOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE! Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership. FURTHER INFORMATION Tune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTube Read our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number of 'anytime' online courses.Connect with ...
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    38 mins
  • Part 2: Proficiencies – The Main Game in Mathematics, with Rob Vingerhoets
    Apr 13 2025
    Continuing their exploration of mathematical proficiencies, Rob and Phil discuss how these elements can transform classroom practice. Rob expresses concern about approaches that block proficiency development, particularly rigid "explicit teaching" models that begin with teacher lectures. He argues that lecturing is an ineffective teaching method that disengages students and fails to acknowledge their existing knowledge.The conversation shifts to implementation strategies for schools wanting to embrace proficiency-based mathematics teaching. Rob acknowledges that change is challenging but notes encouraging developments in South Australia's educational approach. He advises schools to audit their current practices against the proficiencies and seek out quality resources for rich, engaging tasks. Rob emphasises that many excellent materials are readily available online and through publications, offering his own resources as options for teachers seeking alternatives to worksheet-heavy approaches.Rob and Phil discuss how the proficiencies connect to assessment practices, noting that rich tasks naturally generate meaningful evidence of student learning. They contrast this with standardised testing like NAPLAN, which provides limited insight into students' mathematical thinking. Rob suggests that integrating proficiency-focused questions into standardised tests might help raise awareness of their importance.The conversation highlights how mathematical proficiencies prepare students for future employment, where employers value communication, problem-solving, logical thinking, collaboration, and creativity—all skills developed through proficiency-focused mathematics education. Rob notes these capabilities are far more valuable than test scores in the workforce.The podcast concludes with information about Rob's series of webinars focusing on each proficiency, offering teachers practical strategies for implementation. Throughout the conversation, Rob maintains his conviction that mathematical proficiencies should be central to mathematics education rather than peripheral considerations, encouraging teachers to embrace tasks that naturally develop these essential capabilities.RESOURCESRead the blog: Proficiencies: The Main Game in Mathematics TeachingRob Vingerhoet's website: Maths is FunJOIN TEACHIFIC NOW AND SAVE!Join Teachific today. Access thousands of resources and a growing number of 'anytime' courses within your membership.FURTHER INFORMATIONTune in to "Teacher's Tool Kit For Literacy," a free podcast where accomplished literacy educator Sharon Callen and her team share valuable insights and tips. With over 30 years of experience, they provide strategic learning solutions to empower teachers and leaders worldwide. Subscribe on your favourite platform for exclusive literacy learning content. Apple, Spotify, Google, YouTubeRead our insightful blogs, which make valuable connections between resources, podcasts and courses.Visit our Cue Learning website and sign up for the Teacher's Toolkit Weekly newsletter to stay updated on resources, events and discover how Cue can support you and your school.Explore Teachific, our vast collection of PDF resources, to enhance your teaching toolkit. And get even more support from our growing number of 'anytime' online courses.Connect with the latest news and other educators by joining our Teacher's Toolkit Facebook groupExplore upcoming live or online webinar eventsHave questions or feedback? Reach out to us directly at admin@cuelearning.com.au
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    27 mins