How to bounce back from teaching disasters? Snafu Edu might just have the answer
November 2025
Recommended by Anabel Livengood, Senior Educational Developer
Picture this: you, a dynamic college professor, lecturing animatedly and effortlessly in a lecture hall filled with students who are on the edge of their seats and in absolute awe of every word that comes out of your mouth. Does that sound like a regular Monday in the classroom to you? Jessamyn Neuhaus finds this persisting stereotype of what an effective college learning experience “should” look like, troublesome, and the reality is far from that. Instead, Neuhaus’ newest book, Snafu Edu, starts with the premise that – by nature – we are going to make mistakes in the classroom, and that we should instead of trying to live up to impossible standards of an “ideal professor,” humanize the college educator, learn from mistakes, and continue growing as instructors.
Neuhaus, J. (2025). Snafu Edu. Teaching and Learning When Things Go Wrong in the College Classroom. The University of Oklahoma Press.
As she reminds us: “Teaching effectively is an ongoing process of accruing new knowledge, trying new things, assessing the result, reflecting on what worked well and what didn’t, revising your pedagogical practice, and repeat.” (p. 83) Snafu Edu helps you to do exactly that – it encourages you to reflect on your teaching practice and to build onto your own already existing teaching strategies. In her book, Neuhaus identifies five major root causes of classroom snafus (inequity, disconnection, distrust, failure, and fear), analyzes why and how they might negatively impact both our teaching experience as well as the learning experience of our students, and provides repair strategies for each of these areas.
I want to leave you with two mini pieces of advice from her book. First: Surround yourself with fellow educators who you can have those conversations with when things don’t go as planned. Why? Teaching is not, contrary to popular belief, a solitary undertaking, and building our own village of instructors we can confide in and seek advice from is crucial for our own well-being and professional development. And secondly, remember to STIR – Stop, Think, Identify, Repair when you find yourself in an unpleasant teaching situation (no worries, she explains this strategy in detail). So, I hope you will find Snafu Edu helpful for when (not if!) it becomes necessary to pull in additional advice and it will help you to continue creating classrooms in which equity, connections, trust, success, and agency are thriving.
To access the full collection of teaching-related recommendations, visit CFC’s We Recommend.
