The TechEd Clubhouse
Schools spend a lot of time talking about creativity, problem-solving, communication, engagement, and career readiness. Shop teachers have been building those skills for decades. In this episode, I’m joined by Bobby Miller, better known online as Mr. Miller’s Woodshop, to talk about what hands-on learning gets right—and what the rest of education can learn from CTE, technology education, and the skilled trades. Bobby shares how his classroom uses real tools, real materials, real standards, and real accountability. We discuss why students who struggle in traditional classrooms often thrive when the work has a visible purpose, how finished projects create ownership, and why relationships become stronger when teachers work alongside students. We also dig into cell phone policies, teacher autonomy, industry partnerships, safety, project-based assessment, and Bobby’s use of short instructional videos and QR codes to help students work more independently. This conversation is not just about wood shop. It is about creating classrooms where students make decisions, solve actual problems, build something that matters, and leave with skills they can use beyond school. * Why hands-on classes often reach students who feel disconnected from school * What authentic engagement looks like in a working classroom * How shop classes naturally develop accountability, perseverance, and problem-solving * Why students take greater ownership when they build something they can bring home * The value of teacher autonomy and professional judgment * How QR codes and short videos can support differentiation and student independence * The tension between schoolwide cell phone policies and classroom-specific uses * Why industry partners are often eager to support CTE programs * How volunteers can strengthen shop programs and reduce the maintenance burden on teachers * What every teacher can borrow from the structure of a shop classroom Identify one explanation, demonstration, or question you repeat constantly. Record a short video showing the process, make it available to students, and let them revisit it when they need it. The video does not need to be polished. It needs to be clear, useful, and available at the moment students need it. Bobby Miller is a technology education and CTE teacher licensed in construction, manufacturing, and communications. Through Mr. Miller’s Woodshop, he shares practical ideas about woodshop instruction, classroom systems, career readiness, safety, industry partnerships, and the future of skilled trades education. Find Mr. Miller’s Woodshop on: * LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/mrmillerswoodshop/] * Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/mrmillerswoodshop] * Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61563799341620] * X [https://x.com/millerswoodshop] * YouTube [https://youtube.com/@mrmillerswoodshop?si=P1oWcsABeLswqS4W] Email: mrmillerswoodshop@gmail.com Follow the TechEd Clubhouse for more conversations about practical learning, project-based education, CTE, technology, creativity, and the work schools should be doing next. Tools support the work. Humans lead it.
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