Teaching is a science. Let’s study it together.
Evidence-based insights for educators who want to do more than survive—from a biologist, curriculum designer, and lifelong learner in the trenches of high school science.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Hi, I’m Carolyn Rhoney, Ed.D.
I’ve spent my career in the high school science classroom—teaching biology, designing curricula, and studying what actually works for real students in real schools. My four degrees aren’t trophies on a shelf; they’re lenses I use every single day to ask better questions about teaching and learning.
My faith is the foundation beneath everything I do. I believe every student is made in the image of God, and that conviction shapes how I design lessons, how I lead, and how I treat the people in my classroom. Teaching isn’t just a profession to me—it’s a calling.
This blog exists because I kept noticing the same gap: classroom teachers hungry for research-based strategies, and educational research written for no one who actually teaches. I translate between those worlds—guided by both scholarship and scripture.
Whether you’re a first-year teacher trying to survive, a curriculum coordinator looking to sharpen your program, or a school leader rethinking professional development—you’re in the right place.
LATEST POSTS
From the Lab Notebook
Practical strategies, honest reflections, and research made readable.
Why Backward Design Changed My Unit Plans Forever
Starting with the end in mind isn’t just a catchphrase—it’s the difference between covering content and creating understanding.
Formative Assessment That Doesn’t Feel Like Another Quiz
Five low-stakes strategies I actually use—exit tickets evolved, and why some of them surprised even me.
Teaching the Central Dogma to Students Who Don’t Care About DNA
An honest account of every approach I’ve tried, and the analogy that finally made a room full of 10th graders actually ask questions.
What Teachers Actually Need from Professional Development
Spoiler: it’s not another Saturday workshop. Research on what moves the needle—and why most PD doesn’t.
The Case for Letting Students Fail the Lab (On Purpose)
Productive struggle isn’t chaos management—it’s the science of learning applied to the science classroom.
Reading the NGSS Like a Teacher, Not a Bureaucrat
A practical breakdown of the Next Generation Science Standards for teachers who need to actually build lessons from them.
Called to Teach: How My Faith Shapes My Classroom
Teaching as a vocation, not just a job. How Christian values like grace, dignity, and servant leadership show up in lesson plans.
BROWSE BY TOPIC
Find What You Need
Every post is tagged so you can go straight to what matters for your classroom or role.
RESOURCES & OFFERINGS
Ways to Go Deeper
Beyond the blog—tools, courses, and consulting for educators ready to level up.
Teacher Resource Shop
Done-for-you unit plans, rubrics, lab guides, and curriculum maps aligned to NGSS. Download and teach tomorrow.
Online Courses
Deep-dive workshops on curriculum design, assessment literacy, and science pedagogy—on your own schedule.
Consulting & Coaching
One-on-one coaching for teachers and curriculum coordinators, plus school-based professional development.
THE FOUNDATION
Faith-Grounded Teaching
These aren’t just principles I write about — they’re the convictions I carry into every classroom, every curriculum, and every conversation.
Every Student Has Dignity
I design curriculum that honors the whole person — not just the student who performs well. Every child in a classroom is created with purpose and worth.
“So God created mankind in his own image.” — Genesis 1:27
Teaching as a Calling
I didn’t end up in education by accident. I believe God places teachers where they’re needed, and that means showing up fully — for the hard classes and the hard students.
“For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works.” — Ephesians 2:10
Wisdom Over Information
Facts fill a lesson plan. Wisdom shapes a life. I aim to help teachers go beyond content delivery toward the kind of instruction that changes how students think.
“The beginning of wisdom is this: Get wisdom.” — Proverbs 4:7
Servant Leadership
Whether I’m in the classroom or coaching a school leader, my model is the same: lead by serving. The best educators I’ve known put their students and colleagues first.
“Whoever wants to become great among you must be your servant.” — Matthew 20:26
Grace in the Hard Days
Teaching is exhausting. Curriculum work is grinding. I write honestly about struggle, because grace — for our students and for ourselves — is how we keep going.
“My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9
Truth & Integrity
I won’t tell you what sounds good if I don’t believe it works. I share what the research actually says, and I’m honest about the places where I got it wrong first.
“The truth will set you free.” — John 8:32