Stay sharp through six periods instead of crashing by fourth
Teaching is physically and mentally draining. Most productivity advice focuses on time, but your problem is energy — you have the hours, you just don't have the fuel. This recipe maps your energy patterns and builds a daily routine that protects your ability to actually teach well.
Build a Teacher Energy Management Routine for a high school teacher. Ask for full daily schedule (periods, prep, lunch, duties), teaching load (number of preps, class sizes), typical energy patterns throughout the day (when they feel sharpest, when they crash), and current coping strategies. Output an energy map of their day, a restructured daily plan with strategic micro-breaks, lesson intensity recommendations matched to their energy curve, a protected recovery block, and a decision fatigue reduction checklist with routines that eliminate unnecessary daily choices.
You share your daily schedule, teaching load, and when you typically
hit your energy walls. Your Claw identifies dips, places micro-breaks
strategically, matches lesson intensity to your energy curve, and
protects at least one recovery block. The result is a daily plan
designed around sustainability, not just clock time.
Beat crit week without self-destruction
A student-focused workflow that counters all-nighter culture. Timeboxing, deliverable prioritization, critique capture templates, and recovery scheduling — built around the reality that studio norms normalize unhealthy workloads.
Handle paperwork without it eating your whole week
IEP paperwork, attendance reports, discipline referrals, department forms. Admin tasks expand to fill every free moment if you let them. This recipe batches all of it into controlled time blocks so you stop context-switching between teaching and paperwork.
A reading plan that adapts to your pace and interests
Build a personalized scripture study plan across any tradition. Your Claw tracks your pace, adjusts when life gets busy, connects readings to your ongoing questions, and makes sure you're building understanding — not just checking boxes.
Monday morning reports that write themselves
Automates the entire weekly/monthly reporting pipeline — runs the queries, populates the template, generates a narrative summary, flags anomalies, and emails/Slacks the finished report. You review it instead of building it.