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6 Teacher Books to Read This Spring

March 4, 2026 by Kasey Bell

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6 Teacher Books to Read This SpringSpring break is one of those rare pockets of breathing room in the school year.

Not the “get everything done” kind of breathing room (because…let’s be real).

The kind where you can step back, clear your head, and come back with a little more clarity—and maybe even a spark.

If reading helps you reset, I’ve pulled together a short list of books that are teacher-relevant, practical, and worth your limited time.

These aren’t “one more thing” books. They’re the kind that help you think differently, work smarter, and support your students (and yourself) with less stress.


6 Teacher Books to Read This Spring

1) The Anxious Generation

Anxious Generation book cover

If you’ve noticed students struggling more with anxiety, attention, motivation, and overall resilience, this book is an important read. It gives you a clearer picture of the forces shaping students’ mental health and focus, so you can make intentional choices that better support them at school. (A must-read for any parent or educator!)

Want to read it with support?

We have a book study for The Anxious Generation (3 Hours Credit) that you can start anytime (no waiting for a “cohort” date). It’s designed to help educators process the big ideas, talk through the classroom implications, and leave with realistic next steps.

Teacher-friendly promise: This isn’t homework. It’s structured support and practical reflection—made for busy educators.

➡️ Join our The Anxious Generation book study (start anytime)!

*Related: The Anxious Generation: Understanding Students’ Mental Health


2) Atomic Habits

Atomic HabitsThis is my go-to recommendation when you feel like you will never reach your goals.

Atomic Habits is all about small changes that actually stick—especially helpful for teachers who are juggling a thousand decisions a day. It’s not about becoming a “perfect” person. It’s about building simple systems that make your life easier.

Try this when you get back:
Pick one tiny habit that solves a daily pain point (like Monday planning, grading, or morning routines). Make it so easy you can’t talk yourself out of it.

We just wrapped up a book study on this one for our members! We will announce another one soon.

*Related: Forget About Goals, Focus on Systems Instead


3) Uncommon Sense Teaching

uncommon sense teachingIf you like practical teaching advice grounded in how learning actually works, this one is a great spring break read. It helps you rethink instruction through the lens of cognition, memory, and attention—without making it feel like a textbook.

I cannot say enough about how much I learned from this book and our book study!

Try this when you get back:
Choose one idea related to retrieval practice, attention, or memory, and apply it to one unit. Small changes can make a big difference.

Summer book study starts in June!

*Related: Uncommon Sense Teaching: The Brain-Based Strategies Every Teacher Needs


4) 50 Strategies to Boost Cognitive Engagement

50 strategies to boost cognitive engagementRebecca Stobaugh shares how to build a culture of thinking that emphasizes essential 21st-century skills — from critical thinking and problem-solving to teamwork and creativity.

This is the kind of book you can open, grab a strategy, and use it right away. If your students are going through the motions—or you’re getting a lot of “done” work that doesn’t show real thinking—this book helps.

Try this when you get back:
Pick one strategy that increases thinking (not just activity) and use it three times in one week. Repetition is what turns strategies into habits.


5) I Wish My Teacher Knew

i wish my teacher knewThis one hits the heart in the best way.

It’s a reminder that every student walks in with a story—and sometimes the smallest moments of connection are what change everything. If you’ve felt discouraged, disconnected, or emotionally exhausted, this book can be a gentle reset.

Try this when you get back:
Use a simple check-in routine or a low-pressure writing prompt that invites students to share (only what they want to share). Small trust-builders matter.


6) EdTech for the K–12 Classroom

edtech for the k12 classrromThis one is from ISTE  and ASCD!

If you want tech ideas that are realistic—especially during the back half of the year—this is a solid pick. The goal isn’t “more tools.” The goal is to use what you have more effectively to support learning and save time.

Try this when you get back:
Choose one tool you already use and upgrade the task by adding student choice, collaboration, creation, or more meaningful feedback.


How to Pick Your Spring Break Book (Without Overthinking It)

Choose what you need most right now:

  • If student behavior, attention, or motivation feels off → start with The Anxious Generation
  • If you’re overwhelmed and want better systems → Atomic Habits
  • If you want strategies grounded in how learning works → Uncommon Sense Teaching
  • If you need lesson moves you can use immediately → 50 Strategies to Boost Cognitive Engagement
  • If you want a heart-reset and stronger relationships → I Wish My Teacher Knew
  • If you want practical classroom edtech ideas → EdTech for the K–12 Classroom

And here’s your permission slip: you don’t need to read all six. Pick one that fits your season.


Ready to Start with The Anxious Generation?

The Anxious Generation Book Study

If that book is calling your name (and it’s a big one for what teachers are seeing right now), don’t do it alone.

✅ Join our The Anxious Generation Book Study HERE. (It’s self-paced and you get 3 hours of credit!)

 

 

 

 

 

This post includes affiliate links. If you buy through my links, I may earn a small commission (at no extra cost to you). It helps support the free Shake Up Learning resources you see here—thank you!

© Shake Up Learning 2025. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Kasey Bell and Shake Up Learning with appropriate and specific direction to the original content on ShakeUpLearning.com. See: Copyright Policy.

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