Hi, I’m Jessica.

You may know me as the face behind Tech and Teachability, where I’ve shared teacher tech tips and classroom tools for years. But what you might not know is that my journey hasn’t just been about tech; it’s been about learning how to take care of myself while taking care of everyone else.

This is the real story behind the posts, the plans, and the projects and how I got here.


👩‍👧 Early Days: Single Mom at 18

I had my daughter, Carly, when I was just 18. I found out I was pregnant while working my first retail job in Alexandria, LA (after fainting on my first day 🙃). 

At the time, I thought my life was over. I was scared I’d be stuck in a dead-end town, with no future.

But life had other plans. I graduated in the top 10% of my high school class, had Carly in October 2000, and started college that same year while still pregnant.


🍜 Struggles & Small Wins

Life was messy: ramen dinners, moving apartments, surviving paycheck to paycheck. But I kept going.








I switched from nursing to general studies and earned my bachelor’s in 2005.
Got my teaching certificate in 2010.
Earned my master’s in Educational Technology and Leadership in 2013.

I taught everything from first grade to middle school, all while being a single mom. Carly and I really grew up together. But for a long time, my health and self-care were on the back burner.


🚗 The Big Move

In 2013, I moved us to Baton Rouge because I wanted Carly to have opportunities I didn’t. She was in middle school and not thrilled about leaving, but now, she’s grateful I made that leap.
Today, she’s 25, working on her own master’s degree. I couldn’t be prouder.


⚖️ Hitting My Breaking Point

By 2017, I had reached my highest weight ever: 165 lbs. I was uncomfortable in my own skin. Doctor visits came with blood pressure warnings and “we need to talk about your numbers.”

I tried every diet - Whole30, keto, low-carb, you name it - but nothing stuck.

Then the pandemic hit, and for the first time, I decided to focus on small, sustainable habits instead of extremes.


💪 The Shift

I started moving my body regularly. I started short home workouts, took walks, worked on stretching, anything that made me feel better.
I learned about nutrition and balance instead of chasing quick fixes.
I drank more water, made peace with my body, and gave myself permission to rest.

My weight came down, but more importantly, my energy, mood, and confidence came up.


And while I’ve had my ups and downs since then (because life happens), I’ve learned that wellness doesn’t have to be expensive or complicated. It can be simple, doable, and dare I say, even fun.


💕 Why It Matters

My family history includes breast cancer in my mom, grandmother, aunt, and cousin. I’ve personally had atypical ductal hyperplasia removed and now do yearly mammograms and MRI mammograms.

For me, taking care of my health isn’t optional. I want to be mobile, happy, and present at 80 — not just existing, but living.



🏡 Life Now

Life still throws curveballs: washing machines break, AC units leak, and my house is rarely perfectly organized. But I’ve learned that thriving isn’t about perfection; it’s about progress.

That’s why I share things like:

  • Tech tips that save time and sanity

  • Simple wellness routines that anyone can afford (think: walking, meal prep, breathing breaks, better sleep)

  • Real-life moments like Disney trips, foster pups, cookie baking, and messy grace in between


💬 Why I’m Sharing This

Because teachers (and moms, and humans in general) don’t need perfect plans or expensive systems; we need small resets that help us feel human again.

Tech helps us save time.
Wellness helps us make the most of it.
Put those together, and you’ve got a life that’s not just full but fulfilling.

My hope is that by sharing my story the messy parts and the meaningful ones plus the tools and habits that help me stay afloat, you’ll find something here that helps you, too.

👉 Stick around for practical tech hacks, wellness routines that don’t cost a fortune, and plenty of real-life moments along the way.

And I’d love to know: what’s one small thing that helps you feel more like yourself right now?

Teachers are some of the most resourceful people on the planet. We can troubleshoot a projector, calm chaos, and eat lunch in seven minutes flat. But when it comes to everyday tech, we sometimes miss out on little features that could save us hours.

These aren’t fancy tools or new platforms; they’re simple tech tricks hiding in plain sight. Let’s fix that 👇


🎙 Voice Notes on Your Apple Watch

Raise your wrist and say:

“Hey Siri, record a voice memo.”

Boom - idea saved. 💡

Whether it’s a reminder for tomorrow’s lesson, a grocery list, or a spark of inspiration during bus duty, this is one of those underrated features that keeps your brain from buffering.

📱 Bonus: You can listen or organize your memos later in the Voice Memos app on your phone or Mac.


🕹 Version History in Google Docs

Stop making 87 copies of the same document labeled “FINAL,” “FINAL2,” and “FINAL-FINAL.” 😅

Go to File → Version History → See version history.
You can name each version, restore old ones, or see who changed what.

Perfect for:

  • Group projects

  • Collaborating on shared lesson plans

  • Avoiding the “who deleted this section?” mystery



📌 Pinning Tabs in Chrome

Right-click any tab and select Pin.

Pinned tabs shrink down and stick to the left — perfect for keeping your gradebook, email, or LMS open all day without losing them in a sea of open windows.

Tiny trick, big sanity saver.


🌈 Chrome Tab Groups

If your Chrome window looks like a game of Tab Jenga, this one’s for you.

Right-click → Add Tab to New Group → give it a name + color.

You can group all your grading tools, PD resources, or student work links — and collapse the group when you don’t need it.

Pro tip: Create a “Morning Setup” group that opens your daily must-haves in one click.


📋 OneTab Extension

This one deserves a teacher medal 🥇

When you’ve got 47 tabs open and your computer sounds like it’s about to lift off, click the OneTab icon.

It instantly collapses everything into a tidy, clickable list — saving memory and letting you focus again.

You can restore tabs one by one, or all at once. Perfect for the “end of day reset.”


📸 Quick Screenshot Shortcuts

Because sometimes you just need to capture what’s on your screen fast.

Mac: Shift + Command + 4 → select an area to screenshot.
PC: Windows + Shift + S → select an area to screenshot (it’ll copy to your clipboard).

Perfect for grabbing snippets of slides, online examples, or the one student answer that made your day.


⚡ Why These Simple Tips Matter

These tricks aren’t glamorous — but they work.
They’re the tiny resets that save you seconds that eventually add up to hours.

And the best part? You already have everything you need to start using them.


💬 Ready to Try One?

Start small:
👉 Pin your tabs.
👉 Group your Chrome links.
👉 Or just whisper “Hey Siri…” before you forget that idea.

Little tech wins = less chaos.
And that’s something every teacher deserves.


💡 More shortcuts coming soon! Sign up for the newsletter for weekly time-savers, classroom tech hacks, and real-life resets that actually stick.

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