One Simple Step to Start

19 Mar 2026 · By One Simple Step to Start
AI homeworkSystem
One Simple Step to Start

Let’s face it—no one plans to wake up at 3 a.m. with a fever or get a mid-day call from daycare saying your little one needs you immediately. Life happens. And as a teacher, your unexpected absence shouldn’t throw your students—or your team—into instructional chaos.

If you’re thinking, “I’ll just deal with it when it happens,” let me gently stop you there. As a former academic coach and current behavior specialist, I’ve seen too many classrooms spiral when a teacher is out without leaving anything meaningful behind. Kids pick up on the stress, and behaviors escalate fast. The result? A frazzled sub, frustrated teammates, lost instructional time, and sometimes even office discipline referrals.

That’s why prepping your emergency sub plans before you need them is a teacher move you’ll never regret.

The Real Cost of Skipping Sub Plans

When teachers leave nothing for subs, their teammates often scramble to find filler work. Usually, it’s whatever is easiest to print and copy—which rarely aligns with instruction. Students know when the day lacks structure, and they tend to respond with off-task behavior, testing boundaries, or simply shutting down.

It’s not just a matter of academic loss. Behavior issues tend to skyrocket on these unplanned days, especially when subs are left with no guidance or meaningful materials. These are the days that can quickly turn into office referrals and emergency calls from the sub to the principal or worse from the principal to you. No one wants that—especially not when you’re already home sick or dealing with a family emergency. This is where teaching smarter, not harder, is so helpful!

What to Include in Emergency Sub Plans

Emergency plans don’t need to be fancy or exhaustive. But they do need to exist. A basic folder or bin with printed materials and notes can prevent most of the chaos and confusion that comes with unplanned absences.

At a minimum, your folder should include:

  • A simple daily schedule and class list

  • Seating chart and transition routines

  • A note about key student needs or helpful peers

  • Contact info for a trusted teammate

  • Independent, skill-based activities your students can complete with little guidance

Once this is prepped, let your teaching team know where to find it. If they can grab it and make quick copies without any extra explanation, you’re golden.

Meaningful Phonics Practice That Keeps Kids Engaged

Let’s be honest—lots of sub plan worksheets are either way too hard for students to complete on their own, or they’re so repetitive that engagement drops off fast. That’s why I recommend choosing independent activities that are both purposeful and varied.

In my Phonics Mega Bundle, every activity is designed to support real skill development without relying on the teacher’s constant presence. The best part? The pages aren’t all the same.

Instead of page after page of matching or circling, you’ll find a wide mix of hands-on phonics tasks. For example, students might work through a secret sentence puzzle where they decode letters to construct a mystery sentence. It feels like a game, but they’re practicing decoding and letter-sound relationships AND writing the entire time.

Short E Phonics Activities for Emergency Sub Plans for Teachers

You’ll also find decodable stories paired with comprehension questions—a powerful way to give students authentic reading practice, even with a substitute. These stories are short enough to be completed in one sitting and include scaffolded support for early readers.

Silent E Comprehension Story Emergency Sub Plan

Other activities include phonics mazes, color-by-code pages, and picture-word matching tasks, all of which keep kids focused and on-task without needing a teacher to constantly redirect or clarify.

First Sounds Worksheets

For students ready to extend their learning, the bundle includes open-ended writing prompts and word ladders that challenge them to manipulate sounds and build fluency.

And of course, foundational skills like sound sorts and word family challenges are woven throughout, reinforcing the patterns students need most while still feeling fresh and interactive.

Each of these activity types can stand alone—and when you include them in your emergency sub plans, you’re providing work that’s actually worth doing.

Does Your Behavior System Work Without You?

This is an area many teachers overlook. You may have a fantastic classroom management system, but if it depends on apps like Class Dojo, behavior logs only you can access, or reward systems that live inside your brain—it may collapse the moment you’re not there.

Subs need something simple, visual, and easy to explain. Some teachers create a paper behavior tracker just for sub days. I’ve seen ideas like a cupcake drawing where students “earn sprinkles” for compliments, or a flower where the sub adds a petal each time the class shows kindness or teamwork. When the tracker is full, the class earns a reward when you return. It’s easy, effective, and gives students a clear goal.

You can even display the visual on your whiteboard before you’re out so students already know what to expect when there’s a guest teacher. A consistent system like this helps reduce behavior surprises and keeps your classroom culture intact, even in your absence.

Planning Ahead Saves More Than Time

Emergency sub plans aren’t just about you—they’re about protecting your classroom community. With a little summer prep, you can create a system that keeps your instruction moving, your students learning, and your teammates from panic-printing coloring sheets.

Think of it as a small investment with a huge return. You’ll stress less when life inevitably throws you a curveball, and your students will stay on track no matter who’s in front of the class.

Emergency Sub Plans Support More Than Just Your Students

Let me share something personal.

One year, I asked to move from first grade to an open fourth grade math position. I wanted to challenge myself professionally with mastering new content and teaching older kiddos. I started packing up my classroom during the last week of school, getting things ready for the move during post-planning. But I came down with something serious—so serious that I ended up hospitalized during all three days of post-planning, and then some.

I couldn’t finish packing, I couldn’t move my things, and I couldn’t even be there to ask for help. But you know what happened? My amazing first grade team stepped in without hesitation. They finished packing my classroom and moved everything for me—every last tub, crate, and chart. I never asked them to. They just did it.

Why? Because we took care of each other. We were a team in the truest sense.

It was an incredible act of kindness I’ll never forget, and it reminded me of something every teacher should know: Your teaching team matters. You don’t want to leave them in a bind because you didn’t plan ahead. Whether it’s a sub day or a real-life emergency, your systems—or lack thereof—can either support your team or burden them.

So when you’re prepping your emergency sub folder, don’t just do it for your students. Do it for your team. Be the kind of colleague who makes life easier for everyone—even when you can’t be there yourself.

One Simple Step to Start

If you’re not sure what to include for meaningful work, grab a handful of pages from the Phonics Mega Bundle and slide them into a labeled folder. That’s it. You’ll have independent practice ready to go for a variety of phonics skills—and your sub will thank you.

No one wants to plan when they’re sick. So plan now. Then forget about it until the moment you need it most.

Coming Up Next…

In the next post in the Reflect, Reset, and Recharge series, we’ll explore how to build systems for celebrating positive behavior automatically—even when you’re running on caffeine and held together with flair pens and sticky notes.

Basic Data Table with Column Headings

Table caption (name and description of table)


You can describe your table here or in the context of your page. This table is read using the first row as the header for each column. (Replace this caption with your own description of the table)

Description

Date

Location

Academic Senate Meeting

May 25, 2205

Building 99 Room 1

Commencement Meeting

December 15, 2205

Building 42 Room 10

Dean's Council

February 1, 2206

Building 35 Room 5

Committee on Committees

March 3, 2206

Building 1 Room 201

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Sed lacus arcu, porta posuere, varius et.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Sed lacus arcu, porta posuere, varius et.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Sed lacus arcu, porta posuere, varius et.

Lorem ipsum dolor

Lorem ipsum dolor

Lorem ipsum dolor

Directory Listing Table - Roll Cursor Over an Item

Directory Listing (Table caption - name and description of table)


Apply the "directory" style to the
<table> tag to remove the borders and add roll-over styling to rows. You can describe your table here or in the context of your page.  This table is read using the first row as the header for each column. (Replace this caption with your own description of the table)

Name

Telephone

Email

Office

Dr. Sally

555-1234

sally@calpoly.edu

12-34

Dr. Steve

555-5678

steve@calpoly.edu

56-78

Dr. Kathy

555-9012

kathy@calpoly.edu

90-123

Column and Row Headings Example

Table caption (name and description of table)


This table is read using the first row as a column header and then the first item of the first column as a row header. (Replace this caption with your own description of the table)

Instructor

Class

Location

Dr. Sally

Surgery 101

Building 2 Room 3

Dr. Steve

Radiology 101

Building 2 Room 5

Dr. Kathy

Orthopedics 101

Building 2 Room 20

Table Data Alignment Styles - Left, Middle, Right

Table caption (name and description of table)


This table uses classes center and right to align text or images within a table cell. Default alignment is left. You can describe your table here or in the context of your page. This table is read using the first row as the header for each column. (Replace this caption with your own description of the table)

Aligned Left

Aligned Center

Aligned Right

Academic Senate Meeting

May 25, 2205

Building 99 Room 1

Commencement Meeting

December 15, 2205

Building 42 Room 10

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Sed lacus arcu, porta posuere, varius et.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Sed lacus arcu, porta posuere, varius et.

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Sed lacus arcu, porta posuere, varius et.

Lorem ipsum dolor

Lorem ipsum dolor

Lorem ipsum dolor

Table No Outline - H2

No Style Table Listing (Table caption - name and description of table)


Apply the "table_noStyle" style to the
<table> tag to remove the borders . You can describe your table here or in the context of your page.  This table is read using the first row as the header for each column. (Replace this caption with your own description of the table)

Day

Time

Location

Wednesday

3-6 pm

Cal Poly Campus (follow U-Pick Signs)

Thursday

2:30-5pm

Morro Bay Farmer's Market

Thursday

6:10-9pm

Downtown SLO Farmer's Market

Saturday

8-10:30am

Farmer's Market new Embassy Suites

Saturday

11am-2pm

Cal Poly Campus (follow U-Pick signs)

Complex Data Table

Table caption (name and description of table)


This is an example of a Complex Data table that associates column headers with row headers that span multiple rows. The underlying HTML code of this table belies the necessary associations that make the table readable using a screen reading technology (Replace this caption with your own description of the table)

NAME OF SYSTEM OR PORTAL CHANNEL

NAME OF SYSTEM OR ACTIVITY

STATUS DURING OUTAGE

DATA FROZEN AS OF

EXPECTED UP TIME

Personal Information

Addresses

View Only

1/18/2008

Go live date

Names

View Only

1/18/2008

Go live date

Phone Numbers

View Only

1/18/2008

Go live date

Emergency Contacts

View Only

1/18/2008

Go live date

Group Leave Balance

Group Leave Balances

View Only

12/31/2007

3/1/2008

Leave/CTO Balances

Leave and CTO Balances

View Only

12/31/2007

3/1/2008

Faculty Course Info

Class Search/Browse Catalog

 

 

 

Record Grades

 

 

 

Access Class Roster

 

 

 

Student Data

 

 

 

View My Class Schedule

 

 

 

View My Weekly Schedule

 

 

 

Enrollment Planning

View Course Catalog and Schedule of Classes

 

 

 

Student Pay

Timekeeper Access

Unavailable

1/18/2008

 

PolyData

????

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PolyProfile