Explore every episode of the podcast Commas in the Chaos
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
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| 00. Welcome to Commas in the Chaos | 15 Jul 2025 | 00:02:02 | |
Welcome to Commas in the Chaos! Iâm Rachel, owner of Uniquely Upper, and this is your official invitation to take a deep breath, grab your coffee (reheated, of course), and join a space designed just for you â the grammar teacher juggling lesson plans, piles of ungraded assignments, and those never-ending to-do lists. Each week, youâll get:
Whether grammar is your jam or your nemesis, this podcast will help you:
Hit that follow button so you never miss an episode! Want more? Connect with me here:
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| 07. Teaching Subjects and Predicates | 09 Sep 2025 | 00:11:19 | |
Episode 7: Teaching Subjects and PredicatesEpisode Summary Fragments and run-ons â the bane of every teacherâs grading stack. By the time back-to-school writing assignments roll in, youâve probably already seen sentences like âWent to the parkâ or âThe dog with a long tail and spots.â Thatâs why this episode is all about teaching subjects and predicates. Far from being too âbasic,â subjects and predicates are the LEGO blocks of grammar. Without them, everything else â punctuation, clauses, and complex writing â collapses. In this episode of Commas in the Chaos, I share four tried-and-true strategies for teaching subjects and predicates in upper elementary. Youâll learn why they matter, how to introduce them step by step, and how to make the practice hands-on and engaging so your students donât just memorize rules, but actually write stronger sentences. What Youâll Learn
Why Subjects and Predicates Matter Students may think theyâre writing complete sentences, but without a clear subject and predicate, their writing quickly becomes a jumble of fragments and run-ons. In grades 3â5, the work expands beyond simply âfind the subjectâ into:
Mastering these is the foundation for building sentences that are strong, clear, and ready for more advanced grammar. 4 Tips for Teaching Subjects and PredicatesTip #1: Split the Sentence at the Verb Teach students to find the verb first, then split the sentence in two. Everything before the verb is the complete subject, and everything after is the complete predicate.
Pro tip: Give students anchor words (is, are, was, were) and let them act out verbs to help them identify the predicate. Tip #2: Start with Complete Before Simple Jumping straight into simple subjects and predicates overwhelms students. Start with the complete subject and predicate first to give them the big picture. Once they see the full âchunk,â itâs easier to zoom in later. Tip #3: Shrink It Down to Simple After students master complete sentences, introduce the two guiding questions:
This repeatable process gives them confidence and consistency. Tip #4: Make It Hands-On Grammar sticks when itâs interactive:
Common Pitfalls (and Fixes) Even with a staircase approach, students will struggle. Some of the most common challenges include:
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| 06. Spiraling Grammar: 2 Effective Review Strategies for Making Grammar Stick | 02 Sep 2025 | 00:05:57 | |
đ§ Grammar Teaching Strategies: 2 Effective Ways for Spiraling GrammarEpisode Summary Have you ever taught a grammar skill on Monday, given the quiz on Friday, and by the next week your students act like theyâve never heard the word predicate before? đââď¸ Yep, been there. Thatâs why todayâs episode is all about spiraling grammarâand why itâs one of the most powerful ways to help your students actually remember what youâve taught. In this episode of Commas in the Chaos, Iâm sharing two quick, low-prep strategies for spiraling grammar that fit seamlessly into what youâre already doing. No extra stack of worksheets, no binder full of âreview pages,â and no hours of prep. Just practical ways to revisit skills so they move from short-term memory into long-term mastery. Whether you keep it basic with parts of speech or take a deeper dive into sentence structure, these methods will help you strengthen student retention and reduce those âweâve never seen this before!â moments. Bonus: Iâve also created two short videos to walk you through each approach so you can see exactly what spiraling looks like in action. What Youâll Learn
Two Approaches to Spiraling Grammar 1. Keep It Basic The easiest way to start spiraling grammar is to use a sentence your students already have in front of themâon a worksheet, a warm-up, or even in their own writing. Pause for just five minutes and:
The âkeep it basicâ method is perfect for informal assessment. You can quickly see what students remember while giving them another meaningful touchpoint with a skill. 2. Take a Deep Dive Ready to step it up? The second approach focuses on sentence structure and types of sentences. Using that same sentence, you can:
This deep dive helps students see the architecture of language. Instead of memorizing disconnected rules, they start to notice how grammar works together to build meaning. Want to see these in action? Scroll down to watch the two short videos where I walk you through each spiraling grammar approach step by step. These clips give you a peek into how quick, simple, and powerful spiral review can be. Teacher TakeawaysHereâs how to make spiraling grammar part of your weekly rhythm:
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| 05. Grammar Teaching Strategies That Actually Work in Upper Elementary - Mini Challenge | 26 Aug 2025 | 00:09:25 | |
Grammar Teaching Strategies That Actually Work in Upper ElementaryEpisode Summary Teacher friend, we made it! đ Welcome to Day 5 of the Grammar Confidence Kickstart Challenge. Youâve put in the work, carved out time, and committed to building something better for your grammar blockâand thatâs huge. In this episode, Iâm pulling everything together with grammar teaching strategies you can use to plan your first four to five weeks of instruction. If your pacing guide is vague (or missing completely đ), donât panic. Iâll walk you through a grade-by-grade roadmap, plus practical tips for planning grammar lessons that flow and weekly structures that keep you sane. By the end, youâll have a clear plan for upper elementary grammar instruction that feels doable, consistent, and fun. What Youâll LearnInside this episode, weâll cover:
Teacher Takeaways Hereâs how you can put todayâs strategies into action:
Resources Mentioned:
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| 04: How to Teach Grammar in Fun Ways - Mini Series Challenge | 19 Aug 2025 | 00:08:28 | |
đ§ Episode 4: Teaching Grammar in Fun WaysEpisode Summary You can teach the perfect grammar lesson, have the best anchor chart, and even crush the exit ticket⌠but what happens when that skill disappears the moment you move on to the next one? Thatâs where todayâs episode comes in. In Day 4 of the Grammar Confidence Kickstart Challenge, weâre talking about how to teach grammar in fun ways that keep it alive long after the quiz is done. Iâll share how to connect grammar to the real world, how to weave it naturally into writing, and how to spiral skills without losing your sanity. These practical strategies will help your students actually use grammar instead of memorizing rules and forgetting them by next week. In this episode, youâll learn:
Teaching Grammar in Fun Ways: 3 Core Strategies 1. Grammar Lives Everywhere Grammar isnât just for worksheets â itâs in books, mentor texts, ads, TikTok captions, and your studentsâ own writing. Training students to notice grammar âin the wildâ makes learning authentic. Try creating a âGrammar in the Wildâ anchor chart where you and your students collect examples all year long. 2. Writing as Your Secret Weapon Students use grammar every time they write â so letâs leverage that. Instead of turning writing into grammar boot camp, sprinkle in small tasks: revise a sentence with adjectives, turn one into a compound, or add a line of dialogue using quotation marks. These quick add-ins help students see grammar as a writerâs tool, not just a subject. 3. Spiraling Without Stress Revisiting skills doesnât have to be overwhelming. Use warm-ups, color coding, or quick checks to spiral older concepts while you teach new ones. Add in task cards, centers, or monthly spiral review games like grammar bingo, riddles, or Jeopardy-style quizzes. The key: spiral with intention, not overload. Pro Tip: Spiral as a Bridge to New SkillsWant your students to feel prepared before you introduce a tricky concept? Use spiral reviews as sneak previews. Before teaching comparative adjectives, spiral in descriptive adjectives. Before verb tense, review action verbs. Before pronoun-antecedent agreement, revisit pronouns. These quick reviews give students the background they need and save you from blank stares later. Resources Mentioned:
Related Episodes & Blog Posts:
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| 03. Building Daily Grammar Routines - Mini Series Challenge | 12 Aug 2025 | 00:11:44 | |
Episode 3: Building Daily Grammar RoutinesEpisode Summary If youâve ever felt like grammar gets lost in the shuffle of your busy day, youâre not alone. The truth is, when it comes to building grammar confidenceâfor both you and your studentsâconsistency is everything. And thatâs where a daily grammar routine comes in. In this episode of the Grammar Confidence Kickstart Challenge, weâre diving into how to create a simple, repeatable daily grammar routine that makes instruction feel easy, effective, and totally doable in 15 minutes or less. Iâm walking you through exactly how to set up a predictable routine so you know what to teach each day, how to keep your students engaged, and how to make grammar an integrated, hands-on part of your classroom. Weâll break it down day by day, so you can plug any grammar skill into the framework without spending hours planning. By the end of this episode, youâll have the tools to make grammar a seamless part of your daily scheduleâso itâs not just âanother thingâ on your teacher plate, but a habit that sticks for you and your students. In this episode, youâll learn:
A Week of Daily Grammar in Action Hereâs the 5-day framework I share in the episode: Day 1 â Introduce the Skill Lay the foundation for the weekâs focus with a strong introduction. Use guided notes, anchor charts, and clear modeling to help students understand the skill from the start. Days 2â4 â Practice with Purpose Provide short, targeted activities to help students identify, explain, and apply the skill in context. Mix individual work with collaborative practice. Day 5 â Assess for Mastery Wrap up with a quick check for understandingâlike a quiz, exit slip, or fun review game. Keep it simple but effective. This cycle removes the âWhat do I teach tomorrow?â stress and gives students a predictable structure that builds mastery over time. Ideas for Keeping Daily Grammar EngagingA daily grammar routine doesnât have to feel repetitive. In this episode, I share creative ways to keep things fresh, including:
These small tweaks turn routine practice into engaging, hands-on learning experiences that your students will actually look forward to. Resources Mentioned:
Related Episodes & Blog Posts:
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| 02. How to Sequence Grammar in Upper Elementary - Mini Series Challenge | 05 Aug 2025 | 00:08:49 | |
Welcome back to Day 2 of the Grammar Confidence Kickstart Challenge! In this episode, weâre digging into one of the most powerful shifts you can make as a grammar teacher: sequencing grammar in upper elementary in a way that actually makes sense. If youâve ever felt like you were jumping from nouns to conjunctions without a clear path, or that your grammar instruction was more of a âcheck-the-boxâ than a connected flow, youâre not aloneâand this episode is going to help learn how to sequence grammar. Today, I walk you through how to create a meaningful, intentional sequence that builds from foundational concepts to more advanced skillsâso your grammar lessons stop feeling like chaos and start feeling cohesive. In this episode, youâll learn:
Recommended Grammar Sequence by Grade Level 3rd Grade
4th Grade
5th Grade
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More About Commas in the Chaos Commas in the Chaos is the podcast for upper elementary teachers who are juggling lesson plans, classroom chaos, and trying to remember what a preposition is â all before lunch. Whether grammar feels like your jam or your nemesis, this show is here to help you make it a little easier, a little clearer, and a lot more doable. Hosted by Rachel, a former upper elementary teacher. Each week brings short, actionable episodes filled with ideas that actually work â from quick grammar routines and sentence strategies to mindset shifts and snack drawer survival tips.... | |||
| 01. Why Grammar Matters - Mini Series Challenge | 29 Jul 2025 | 00:09:47 | |
Episode 1: Why Grammar Matters More Than You ThinkEpisode Summary: Letâs start with the big question: Why does grammar matterâand why should we care about it more than we already do? Welcome to Day 1 of the Grammar Confidence Kickstart Challenge, where weâre kicking things off with a dose of truth, a little myth-busting, and a whole lot of reassurance. In this episode, Iâm sharing my personal journey from grammar uncertainty to grammar confidenceâand how that turning point shaped everything I do now to support teachers just like you. Because the truth is, grammar matters. Itâs not just about commas and clausesâitâs about giving students the power to express themselves clearly and confidently in writing and in life. So if youâve ever wondered whether youâre âqualifiedâ enough to teach grammar (đââď¸), if grammar through writing is enough (itâs not), or whether you even have time to do it well (you do)âthis episode is for you. In This Episode Youâll Learn:
Resources Mentioned:
Related Episodes & Blog Posts:
Connect with Rachel:
More About Commas in the Chaos Commas in the Chaos is the podcast for upper elementary teachers who are juggling lesson plans, classroom chaos, and trying to remember what a preposition is â all before lunch. Whether grammar feels like your jam or your nemesis, this show is here to help you make it a little easier, a little clearer, and a lot more doable. Hosted by Rachel, a former upper elementary teacher. Each week brings short, actionable episodes filled with ideas that actually work â from quick grammar routines and sentence strategies to mindset shifts and snack drawer survival tips. Itâs all served with just enough sarcasm to get you through the week. đ§ New episodes drop weekly. | |||