November 10, 2025

Coaching for Vibrant Learning: Stirring Up Parallel Pedagogy

Coaching for Vibrant Learning: Stirring Up Parallel Pedagogy

Last week, coaches and leaders from across Kentucky gathered for a full-day learning feast: Coaching for Vibrant Learning. Our kitchen was buzzing with conversation, curiosity, and creativity. With a cooking theme and the sweet aroma of collaboration in the air, we explored what happens when coaching becomes as vibrant as the learning we want for students.

 

The day centered on a simple but powerful truth: if we want vibrant learning for learners, we must create it for educators, too. Through rich discussion and hands-on exploration, participants unpacked common hurdles to more vibrant coaching, like time, overwhelm, and compliance, and experimented with low-lift, high-impact ways to shift everyday practices in PLCs, professional learning, and 1:1 coaching.

 

In parallel to our Transformations for Learners, we unveiled a new companion framework: Coaching Transformations. These five shifts—Relational, Educator-Driven, Contextualized, Growth-Minded, and Collective—invite us to reimagine coaching as a living, learning process that honors educator identity, agency, and community.

 

Just as vibrant classrooms are built on curiosity and connection, so, too, are vibrant coaching cycles. Coaches left the day not with recipes to follow, but with ingredients to remix the way educators themselves are challenged and inspired to grow. 



Free Tool: Coaching Cards Sample Deck

Want to bring more vibrant educator experiences to your district? This free         💡Coaching Cards Sample Deck💡 offers a slice of one of the activities from our Coaching for Vibrant Learning design studio.

 

In the session, coaches used our full Coaching Card Deck to explore what makes coaching feel affirming, authentic, and growth-filled through the eyes of a teacher. Using real coaching moments captured on the cards, they reflected on what “feels really good” in coaching and where small shifts could spark deeper trust, agency, and curiosity. Those discoveries led naturally into the Coaching Transformations Framework—five design elements that move coaching from transactional to transformational.

 

The sample deck includes instructions for trying this conversation with your own team. Just remember: as you explore each card, keep your teacher hat on. Viewing coaching through the learner’s lens is what turns reflection into transformation.

 

Transformation doesn’t have to start with an overhaul: it starts with curiosity. If you’re ready to test simple shifts that make coaching more human, joyful, and connected, we’d love to partner with you.


Your Fall Learning Flight Plan

 ✈️ November 12 – KDE: Designing Local Accountability Systems (9am–12pm)



DISTRICT + SCHOOL LEADERS, TEACHERS, AND COACHES:


Ready to reimagine what accountability can look like when it’s locally designed and learning-centered? Join us to explore:

  • What “success” truly means for your students, schools, and district
  • How to design vibrant learning experiences that demonstrate growth
  • Ways to build a community-owned system that reflects your local story

This interactive session co-hosted by the KDE Division of Innovation, UK Next Gen, and elevatED studios features the new KDE Local Accountability Design Guide & Toolkit.

🔗 sign up here.             

🔗 Flyer

 

 

✈️ December 9 – Designing Defenses of Learning (9am–3pm)


COACHES + BUILDING & DISTRICT LEADERS: 


Whether you’re launching defenses for the first time or ready to reimagine the ones you have, this session is your design lab. We’ll spend the day exploring:

  • What makes a defense truly learner-centered
  • How to design prompts, artifacts, and reflection arcs that spotlight growth
  • Ways to bring students, staff, and the community into the experience

You’ll leave with a defense model that’s bold, doable, and ready to showcase the strengths and journeys of your learners.

🔗 sign up here


By Lacey Eckels April 2, 2026
Schools have named durable skills like communication and collaboration, but struggle to teach them intentionally. Schools that succeed make skills visible, embed them into daily learning, and apply them in real-world contexts. The core message is clear: durable skills are built through intentional, everyday design.
By Lacey Eckels March 17, 2026
What does it look like when a student’s Defense of Learning truly embodies a district’s Profile of a Learner? This 11-year-old’s compelling TED-style talk offers a powerful example. The format might not be what many of us expect in a traditional defense, yet the Portrait competencies are unmistakably present. Communication is evident in his pacing, tone, eye contact, and ability to connect with the audience. Collaboration surfaces as he references mentors and teammates who shaped his journey. Critical thinking appears in the way he interprets experiences and draws lessons from them. Problem-solving emerges through stories of obstacles, setbacks, and growth. The competencies aren’t listed on a slide. They are visible in the delivery. From Sorting Evidence to Synthesizing Growth Many student defenses are structured competency by competency: “Here is my artifact. Here is how it shows I am an effective communicator.” This approach provides clarity and helpful scaffolding, especially as districts begin Portrait work. Over time, however, the structure can unintentionally shift the focus from growth to compliance. The TED-style defense offers a different approach. Instead of sorting artifacts into categories, the student synthesized experiences into a cohesive narrative. He reflected on meaningful moments, described growth over time, connected experiences to identity, and communicated his story clearly to an authentic audience. Rather than organizing artifacts, he was articulating who he is becoming. A Design Question for Leaders What if the defense itself became the demonstration of Profile competencies?  In other words, what if the most powerful defenses were those in which students embody communication, critical thinking, collaboration, and problem-solving through the way they share their learning—making the competencies visible in action, not just in explanation?
By Lacey Eckels March 3, 2026
Start with purpose when designing Defenses of Learning. Discover how clarity transforms these experiences from compliance-driven tasks into meaningful opportunities for student reflection, growth, and authentic demonstration of learning.
Show More
By Lacey Eckels April 2, 2026
Schools have named durable skills like communication and collaboration, but struggle to teach them intentionally. Schools that succeed make skills visible, embed them into daily learning, and apply them in real-world contexts. The core message is clear: durable skills are built through intentional, everyday design.
By Lacey Eckels March 17, 2026
What does it look like when a student’s Defense of Learning truly embodies a district’s Profile of a Learner? This 11-year-old’s compelling TED-style talk offers a powerful example. The format might not be what many of us expect in a traditional defense, yet the Portrait competencies are unmistakably present. Communication is evident in his pacing, tone, eye contact, and ability to connect with the audience. Collaboration surfaces as he references mentors and teammates who shaped his journey. Critical thinking appears in the way he interprets experiences and draws lessons from them. Problem-solving emerges through stories of obstacles, setbacks, and growth. The competencies aren’t listed on a slide. They are visible in the delivery. From Sorting Evidence to Synthesizing Growth Many student defenses are structured competency by competency: “Here is my artifact. Here is how it shows I am an effective communicator.” This approach provides clarity and helpful scaffolding, especially as districts begin Portrait work. Over time, however, the structure can unintentionally shift the focus from growth to compliance. The TED-style defense offers a different approach. Instead of sorting artifacts into categories, the student synthesized experiences into a cohesive narrative. He reflected on meaningful moments, described growth over time, connected experiences to identity, and communicated his story clearly to an authentic audience. Rather than organizing artifacts, he was articulating who he is becoming. A Design Question for Leaders What if the defense itself became the demonstration of Profile competencies?  In other words, what if the most powerful defenses were those in which students embody communication, critical thinking, collaboration, and problem-solving through the way they share their learning—making the competencies visible in action, not just in explanation?
By Lacey Eckels March 3, 2026
Start with purpose when designing Defenses of Learning. Discover how clarity transforms these experiences from compliance-driven tasks into meaningful opportunities for student reflection, growth, and authentic demonstration of learning.
Show More


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