Category: K12Readers

  • 🚀Unlocking Innovative Change in Schools: It Starts with THIS. 🚀

    🚀Unlocking Innovative Change in Schools: It Starts with THIS. 🚀

    School leaders: Are you facing resistance, apathy, or conflicting opinions when trying to implement new initiatives?

    Imagine a school where:
    ✅ Teachers are energized and invested in change.
    ✅ Every voice is heard and valued.
    ✅ Difficult conversations lead to creative solutions.

    These resources helped me develop a proven framework for facilitating change that empowers school leaders to:
    ➡️ Build consensus and get buy-in from ALL stakeholders.
    ➡️ Transform meetings from complaints sessions into collaborative problem-solving.
    ➡️ Create a school culture where everyone feels ownership and a sense of purpose.

    Game Storming – by Gray, Brown, and Macanufo
    Facilitators Guide to Participatory Decision Making – Kaner
    The Surprising Power of Liberating Structures – Lipmanowicz, McCandless
    Iterate – Reich
    Sprint – Knapp

    There’s lots of great ideas for building stronger school communities in these books.  Almost too much.

    I’ve created my own free guide, “7 Best Meeting Exercises for School Leaders.”  I’ve collected what I think are 7 essential meeting exercises and framed them specifically for school leaders.  You may find yourself coming back to the exercises time and again.  Download it here:

    https://meetingmastery.pioneeredstrategies.com/7-best-meeting-exercises-lm

  • Why Is US Public Schooling Designed This Way? Or Why Prussia, Mann, the Committee of Ten, and Sloan Continue to Influence Education More than Dewey and the Science of Learning  

    Why Is US Public Schooling Designed This Way? Or Why Prussia, Mann, the Committee of Ten, and Sloan Continue to Influence Education More than Dewey and the Science of Learning  

    This is Part 3 of Jim Flanagan’s summer project exploring instructional design.

    As a child, I watched too much TV, so “sit right back and you’ll hear a tale.” US public schooling, like Gilligan’s Island, seems trapped in the limitations of its design despite readily available means of improving. This quote is attributed to Winston Churchill: “Americans will always do the right thing, only after they have tried everything else.” Whether he said it or not, let’s hope that we are ready to do the right things to improve education. But the early signs of the post-pandemic response are not promising as we continue to feed more resources into the same, old coal furnace hoping for greater output. To understand the present, it is necessary to explore the past. So this blog is inspired by David Byrne’s prompt – “You may ask yourself, “Well, how did we get here?” ”

    Seat time, courses, summative tests, and schedules drive the current traditional design of K-20 schooling. We move the students based on time instead of allowing the instructional content to move to meet each student. In grades 6-20, there is a curriculum of courses in approximately 15-week semesters. Teachers develop lesson plans, deliver lectures based on curriculum, and grade students based on coursework and summative tests. Students access static textbooks, other reading, and increasingly digital materials based on a standardized scope and sequence. The institution, not the student, determines the pace of learning. The school building and classrooms are the predominant place of learning. I refer to this as the factory model because the students essentially move on schedule-based conveyor belts through instruction with little regard for their readiness. The traditional model contrasts with a personalized, competency-based model – based on the science of learning – in which students can learn at any path, any pace, any time, any place. In this blog, I outline some significant influences that formed our traditional system and drive our unyielding, nostalgic acceptance of it.

    Education is as old as humankind. On the savannah, our ancestors had to teach their young to survive. With the advent of societies and religious beliefs, norms, and doctrine were added to expected knowledge. Teaching was primarily spoken along with some gestures and imagery – PowerPoint in the dirt or on a cave wall. Stories emerged as a primary way to retain and share wisdom. Then came the technologies of symbols (~100,000 years ago), alphabets, and writing (~ 1900 BC) to store and transmit knowledge.

    Let’s pause our sprint to recognize Socrates – of the method and dramatic exit fame. His contributions to teaching and learning are well-trodden. Did you know that he also opposed learning from reading? He believed that reading – instead of memorizing the spoken word – could lead to forgetfulness, intellectual laziness, and misinterpretation. So an aversion to change is as old as learning itself.

    Back to the drive-thru history lesson. The concept of schooling emerged around the time of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle (470 BCish.) They believed that learning should be compulsory, designed to help people develop their minds and souls, and based on inquiry, dialogue, and civic education principles. Socrates preferred to teach on the move, interacting with society. Plato created “the Academy,” so school as a place emerges. Aristotle added ideas about practical knowledge and personalized learning that is lifelong.

    In the last three paragraphs, I summarized 300,000 years of homo sapien education for my fellow short attention spanners. As of 1 AD, we have a concept of school with a place, time, expectations, methods, and curriculum. Before moving on, I recognize this blog has a Western bias. That is because Western influences overwhelmingly inform the US system of schooling. I do not mean to convey that these models are all-encompassing or better than those from other cultures. And most of the people I reference are white males. Unfortunately, most readily accessible history is biased. I recognize that they are not solely responsible for how our systems have succeeded or are increasingly failing. Our understanding of education history can use a healthy exploration of hidden figures.

    Skipping forward to 1452, Johannes Gutenberg used the first mass-produced movable metal type to print Bibles – a game-changing learning technology. For the next 350 years, formal education was elite, private, heavily influenced by the Protestant religion, and primarily reserved for white males.

    The founding of the US had a significant influence on education. Founded in 1635, Boston Latin School is the first public school and oldest existing school in the United States. There was an emerging belief in universal education to provide all citizens with the knowledge and skills they needed to participate in civic life and support this new democracy thing. English grammar schools served as a template. English educational methods were used to teach reading, writing, and arithmetic; reinforce family, church, community, and apprenticeship; and assess progress based on standardized tests. And even the English “six hours” school day influenced our six-period structure. Noah Webster introduced the Blue-Backed Speller in 1793 – a school staple for years with spelling and reading exercises, moral lessons, religious content, and a pro-American perspective. Thomas Jefferson promoted “universal” access to education – with some glaring exceptions to the universal concept. But formal education still remained mostly elite, private, male, and white until Horace Mann entered the picture.

    Why are over 50 public schools in the US named after Horace Mann? Well, he was kind of a big deal. In 1837, he was appointed Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education and took that job seriously. He visited over 100 schools by horseback and chronicled issues in detail. He founded and edited The Common School Journal promoting publicly funded and controlled, non-sectarian education to serve children with various backgrounds provided by well-trained, professional teachers. In 1843, a visit to Prussia led him to conclude that their system was:

    – “assiduously cultivated it in all its branches. The result has been that the Prussian people are the best informed in Europe.”

    – “highly centralized, with the government exercising a great deal of control over the schools.”

    – “very successful. The Prussian people are well-educated, and the country has a high level of literacy. The Prussian system of public instruction is also a model for other countries.”

    The Prussian system also emphasized obedience, duty to country, and general ethics. Mann’s national influence led to the Common School Movement – also championed by the first US Commissioner of Education, Henry Barnard. And the McGuffey Reader emerged to supplant the Blue-backed Speller. Mann (and others) had an incredibly positive impact on most Americans’ lives. And yet the system was still segregated, biased, inequitable, and designed for a time with limited understanding of human cognition and no digital technology.

    Education reform is a small world, as evidenced by Catharine Beecher, who advocated for women’s education along with Emma Willard and Mary Lyon in the early to mid-19th century. Catharine was the sister of author-abolitionist Harriet Beecher Stowe, whose husband was Prussian education advocate Calvin Stowe. In the early 19th century, men made up the majority of teachers in the US. Catharine believed that women were naturally more nurturing and patient than men and that they were better equipped to handle the challenges of teaching young children. So she championed Normal Schools to professionalize the teaching profession and train female teachers – particularly in the expanding West. By the late 19th century, women made up the majority of teachers in the US and have remained the majority ever since.

    Immigration and religion were two other significant education influencers in the latter half of the 19th century – especially battles related to Protestant versus Catholic doctrines. And the civil war should have eliminated all racial barriers to education, but we know it did not. We cannot ignore the racial and nationalistic exceptionalism that led to horrific phrases like “Kill the Indian, save the man,” first used by Richard Henry Pratt, the founder of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School. (I recommend the book Path Lit by Lightening: The Life of Jim Thorpe, who attended Carlisle.) This thread runs through the history of US education and continues to impede our progress toward high-quality education for all based on inquiry, evidence, and critical thinking instead of doctrine and cultural bias.

    Participation in public education was increasing but still not meeting the demands of the growing US industrial economy. So the National Education Association (NEA) created the Committee of Ten to study the state of secondary education. The members were all white males, and the majority were university presidents. In 1893, the Committee recommended that all high schools:

    – offer a common core curriculum that included English, mathematics, science, history, and foreign languages.

    – focus on college preparation, and offer courses that would prepare students for college-level work.

    – use standardized tests to assess student achievement and to compare the performance of schools.

    The Committee also recommended that teachers be better trained with opportunities to learn about new teaching methods, including the use of textbooks, lectures, recitations, labs, and libraries.

    Around that time, Gary, Indiana school superintendent William A. Wirt developed a “platoon” system in which schools were open eight hours a day, alternating groups of students between classrooms and recreational or vocational activities so that every facility was in constant use.

    In the late 19th century, John Dewey – philosopher, psychologist, educational reformer, and founder of the Chicago Lab School – authored The School and Society. He called his philosophy “progressive education” and argued for education based on the child’s experience, learning by doing, exploration, and experimentation. He also promoted social learning and cooperative work. Maria Montessori and later Loris Malaguzzi (from Reggio Emilia, Italy) had similar ideas – and differences.

    In 1906, the Carnegie Foundation developed the Carnegie unit to measure how much time students must spend in class to complete a course. It was based on seat time and determined that 14 units would translate into four years of high school education. (Note that the Foundation recently announced a project promoting competency-based assessment.)

    At this juncture, the powers that be convened and committed to redesigning teaching and learning based on a balanced, research-based evaluation of progressive and traditional models with a global perspective and appreciation for all cultures. Fake news alert! Of course that never happened. Instead, people like Dewey became both the most quoted and most ignored in favor of the status quo. More on that later.

    The first half of the 20th century saw steady increases in school participation driven by expanded compulsory attendance. And increased use of testing – including IQ tests – and academic tracking to sort kids into college-prep or vocational courses. The explicit and implicit bias against groups other than white males went largely unabated.

    Alfred P. Sloan Jr., President of GM and founder of the Sloan Foundation in 1934, significantly influenced public education. Scientific Management Theory, which emphasizes efficiency and productivity, was used to develop standardized tests, curriculum frameworks, and the departmentalization of schools. The Sloan Foundation also supported the Advanced Placement Program and the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP.)

    In the latter half of the 20th century, we finally started to chip away at the inequity with court decisions or legislation, including but not limited to Brown vs. Board of Education (1954); Civil Rights Act of 1964; Bilingual Education Act of 1968; Title IX (1972); and Lau v. Nichols (1974.) But our education system is a reflection of our society so equity is a work in progress and the ideal of a high-quality, personalized, education – freely available to every child – remains an aspiration.

    While I have generally described US education nationally, public education is controlled primarily at the state and local levels. Everyone tells me that their state is the most local control. It is close enough, so I just agree with them all. Unfortunately, governance, funding, and accountability differ by state and zip code, but local control has yet to drive instructional design innovation at scale.

    The last 50 years feel like No Acronym/Catch Phrase Left Behind. It started with the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) of 1965 and the eight subsequent reauthorizations with hollow names like No Child Left Behind and Every Student Succeeds Act. And targeted programs and policies like IDEA and Title I. And funding booms like Race to the Top and ESSER. And requirements like IEPs and MTSS. They were all important with positive intentions. Unfortunately, they all reinforce rigid instructional designs meant for a different time and purpose other than human fulfillment. And few political or educational leaders are calling that out. This inertia is on a collision course with advances in our understanding of cognition and the Science of Learning in areas such as plasticity, differentiation, context, feedback, encoding, retrieval, etc. Grab some popcorn because The Science of Reading is just a short before the full-length feature reckoning of the largely ignored Science of Learning.

    Admittedly, I missed a lot – especially technology and the pandemic. Unfortunately, technology has yet to effectively personalize learning without breaking the human connections critical to learning and human development. To date, edtech has just tweaked or reinforced the status quo. Consider data analytics and dashboards. How much time is wasted analyzing inputs like attendance and performance gaps created by the traditional system instead of redesigning it? And artificial intelligence won’t have an impact without the required instructional redesign that recognizes the importance of maintaining the instructional core of student, teacher, and content relationships. And the pandemic exposed how dated and rigid our system is more than it caused the problem. The cracks were all there.

    For another perspective on the history of US education, check out this brief video from 2012 by Khan Academy’s Salman Khan and Forbes’ Michael Noer. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqTwDDTjb6g

    In my next blog, I will address the barriers to improvement and why the obvious is so darn hard to realize.

  • My Summer to Explore Instructional Design

    My Summer to Explore Instructional Design

    I am reflecting and writing about my K-12 public education experience and perspective this summer. After starting my career in finance and management consulting, I have spent 30+ years serving public education in many roles for many types of organizations – as you can see from my LinkedIn profile – linkedin.com/in/jimdflanagan, I also consumed it as a student for 16 years, including public university. And I am a parent of twin boys entering their 14th year of public schooling, including pre-K. Finally, I am the proud son of an elementary teacher and took a year off to volunteer in elementary, middle, and high school classrooms to inform my work. But I am certainly not a teacher, so I continuously cycle my ideas through educators for a much-needed reality check. For all the public education I directly or indirectly consumed and all of the educators I cherish, I’ve always viewed the industry with some skepticism – more as a critical friend than an advocate or cheerleader.

    I’ve observed that we overwhelmingly address change at the state, district, or school level. We change variables such as funding, school size, construction, school choice, governance, standards, course offerings, and staffing. But we spend little effort pursuing changes in instructional redesign based on the science of learning. (The delayed recognition of the science of reading is just one example.) Therefore, school improvements, reforms, and transformations all regress to the mean – if successful. So instructional redesign will be my focus. Along the way, I‘ll reference topics like personalization, differentiation, blended learning, student ownership, and Universal Design for Learning (UDL.) And I’ll explore the potential of edtech, but only as it advances the human relationships fundamental to effective learning. I’ll go deepest on the science of learning, cognition, bias, and critical thinking. How can we design effective teaching and learning without that basic understanding of how the brain works?

    I’ll use two models to ground my inquiry as I explore topics. First, The Instructional Core developed by Dr. Richard Elmore. I’ll ask how any change impacts the student-teacher relationship to each other and content. Early in my career, I did not fully appreciate how social and relational learning is, so I advocated for technological solutions that isolated more than connected. Most failures I’ve seen – especially in edtech – disrupt the relationships between and among humans – teachers, students, parents, mentors, tutors, etc. – instead of strengthening the social bonds. Second, I’ll consider how the proposed instructional practice impacts the lifelong love of learning. Does it degrade or support our innate curiosity and hunger for knowledge and understanding? Too many adults feel defeated by learning and are even skeptical of thinking because of their experience with “schooling.” According to a recent Gallup survey, on average, students give their school a C+ rating in making them feel excited about learning – and ratings decrease as students advance.

    I use K12Leaders as a platform because I believe in the mission and value the community. I welcome any feedback. If you agree, that is fine. But I prize a challenge or a different perspective – especially when accompanied by evidence or research. And additional reading or research recommendations are golden.

  • Are You a K12Leader Author?

    Are You a K12Leader Author?

    Here at K12Leaders, we are excitedly working to launch a new feature on our site — K12Readers, where the atmosphere of sharing and learning among those who support education will support writers and readers in all corners of the schoolhouse.

    As part of our launch, we are reaching out to authors who are members here on K12Leaders. We love how K12Leaders is a space for those in all realms of K12 education, and our writers (and readers) are no exception! Our new K12Readers collection of groups will allow readers to connect with others who enjoy reading, and for writers to connect as well! Below is a small sampling of K12Leader members who are published authors.


    Author: Ilene Winokur

    Finding Your Pathway to Belonging in Education is a companion book to Ilene’s first book, Journey to Belonging: Pathways to Well-being, and a guide for teachers to support their students’ self-belonging and personal belonging while supporting their own self-belonging and professional belonging. Her first book, Journey to Belonging, explores how Ilene discovered a sense of belonging by sharing her story about life in two very different places she calls home: Buffalo, NY, and Yarmouk, Kuwait. Finding Your Pathway is filled with lessons, activities, and personal stories by educators to help you start on your journey to belonging. https://www.ilenewinokur.com/

    Author: Rachelle Dené Poth

    Rachelle Dené Poth is an edtech consultant, presenter, attorney, author, and teacher. Rachelle is the author of seven books. Her most recent book “Things I Wish […] Knew” includes the voices of 50 educators from around the world. Another favorite is True Story: Lessons That One Kid Taught Us, shares true stories from Rachelle’s own experiences as a teacher and as a student, as well as stories from 37 other educators about “That One Kid” who made an impact on them. https://rdene915.com/

    Author: Carl Hooker

    Join the Ready, Set, FAIL group on K12Readers!

    Carl Hooker has spent the past 24 years in education as a teacher and administrator focused on the thoughtful integration of technology and innovation in schools. He consults for multiple districts across the country and is a frequent speaker at state and national events. He’s also a 7-time author, 5-time podcast host, advisor to multiple ed tech companies, and National Faculty Emeritus for Future Ready Schools. Carl is also the co-founder of K12Leaders.com – A social media platform made by educators for educators. Check out his latest book Ready, Set, FAIL! which focuses on unlocking creativity and innovation in schools. Follow him on twitter @mrhooker and check out his blog at https://HookedOnInnovation.com

    Author: Shawn McCusker

    Join the Becoming Active Citizens Group on K12Readers!

    Shawn McCusker is Senior Director of Professional Learning at EdTechTeacher. He has 25 years experience as a teacher and leader in public, private and alternative schools. Shawn is the author of Becoming Active Citizens , published by Solution Tree Press and his column “The Tech Savvy Classroom” appeared in Digital Learning magazine. As an expert in technology integration his lessons and student products have been featured in the Journal, Educational Leadership and the Huffington Post. In 2006, he was recognized as a finalist for the Golden Apple Award for Excellence in Teaching. In 2016 he was named a Top Trailblazing Educator on Twitter by eSchoolNews. He has been a keynote and featured speaker at conferences across the US. https://gowhereyougrow.wordpress.com/

    Author: Laurie Guyon

    Laurie Guyon is the Coordinator for Model Schools at WSWHE BOCES and the Capital Region Director and trainer with NYSCATE. Laurie is an adjunct Professor teaching Digital Age Learning at SUNY Plattsburgh in the CAS, SBL program. Laurie is the author of SMILE Learning: Leveraging the Power of Educational Technology. This book looks at all the moving parts of educational technology to find a way forward. By embracing your SMILE, you can leverage educational technology to meet your goals and ensure our students have the skills and confidence to achieve their dreams. In 2022 Laurie has won Tech & Learning’s Best Overall Implementation of Technology award, and the Global Impactor Award with the Digital Citizenship Institute. She was name one of CoSN’s NextGen: Emerging EdTech Leaders in 2020 and won the BOCES Spotlight award. Laurie was on the authoring committee for NYSED’s Computer Science and Digital Fluency standards and offers training statewide to support its rollout. https://smilelearningedu.com/

    Author: Bruce Cabell

    Bruce Cabell was a classroom educator for 27+ years. Following his retirement in 2012, Bruce discovered a passion for writing beyond the classroom setting.

    This led to his first creation, Writing Organizer Fold-Outs, published by Creative Teaching Press. The publication provided Bruce opportunities to facilitate training workshops at the International Reading Association Conference in San Antonio, 2013 and New Orleans, 2014. However, in 2020, the fold-outs were repurposed into a series of two books – The Writing Resource Handbook for grades 2-3 and 4 and up. Each resource is a how-to-book filled with practical ideas, strategies, and graphic organizers for teaching students narrative, informative, and opinion piece writing. Presently, Bruce composes poetry and lessons targeting social-emotional learning and emotional intelligence. Numerous poems and lessons were developed for Respectful Ways, an online SEL platform for educators. Check Bruce’s Writing Resource Handbooks at…
    https://www.creativeteaching.com/search?type=product&q=Writing+resource+handbook

    Are you an author? Feel free to create a group on K12Readers where you can share new releases, chat about topics relevant to your work, interact with readers, promote your book. Reach out to us if you’d like to take your group up a notch, where we can help you with branding, hosting live events and amplifying your authorship through social media and advertising.

    Are you a reader? Be sure to join the K12Readers group, and be on the look out for new and favorite authors as they create their space here. Members can also create book study groups for professional learning, or book clubs for those endless reading lists we all have.

    Do you have any suggestions? Reach out to Suzy Brooks or Cathy Collins and we’ll be happy to help!


    What makes writing worth reading?

    Join K12Readers on K12Leaders.com to find out!!