October 28, 2025

Coaching for Vibrant Learning

This article has been written by Lacey Eckels

Coaching for Vibrant Learning

Vibrant learning doesn’t stop at the classroom door. It grows in the spaces where teachers gather, plan, and learn together. If we want students to experience curiosity, creativity, and agency, then our educators, and the coaches who support them need those same sparks in their own learning. This week, we’re spotlighting districts who are turning coaching into a living model of what we want for every learner.

 

Bullitt County Public Schools is building a culture where coaching thrives. Each month, instructional coaches gather not just for logistics, but for learning- diving into authentic practices aligned to their Graduate Profile while cultivating genuine community. From exploring design for real-world learning to keeping joyful traditions alive (like embedding holiday celebrations into meetings), Bullitt’s coaches model what it means to blend purpose, connection, and culture.

 

Allen County Schools is investing in leadership that learns together. Across the year, school and district leaders, including coaches and principals partnered with our team to strengthen the conditions for vibrant learning. Together, they experienced immersive lessons, unpacked the Transformations framework, and used protocols like the Bullseye Idea to explore how system-level supports empower teachers to “hit the mark.” Through this process, teams mapped the unique conditions, structures, and supports surrounding their instructional model, ensuring that what happens across the system mirrors the vibrant, learner-centered experiences they want in every classroom.

 

By investing in the learning of our leaders, we’re not just strengthening instruction, we’re nurturing a culture where curiosity, reflection, and growth flow in every direction. That’s what parallel pedagogy looks like in action: when the way we teach, learn, and lead all move together toward something more vibrant.



Bullseye Idea: 

A strategy to help systems and schools align what they value with what they do.


In Allen County, leaders didn’t just study their instructional model, they stepped inside it. During their partnership sessions, they used the Bullseye Idea to explore how system-level supports empower educators to “hit the mark.” Together, they mapped the unique conditions, teacher supports, and district structures that bring vibrant learning to life, revealing where alignment was strong and where new possibilities could grow.

 

The Bullseye Idea helps teams see how the system itself can model the very Transformations we want for students: coherence, creativity, and agency. It’s a simple visual strategy that sparks deep conversations about how we teach, lead, and learn together.

 

✈️ Explore the Bullseye Tool Here

 

Want to experience this kind of alignment firsthand? Join us November 5 for Coaching for Vibrant Learning (9am–3pm) a day designed to refill your cup and reimagine what coaching can do when it’s rooted in vibrancy.


Your Fall Learning Flight Plan

 ✈️ November 5 – COACHING FOR VIBRANT LEARNING (9am–3pm)


COACHES + BUILDING & DISTRICT LEADERS: 


You spend your days feeding others…but who’s feeding you? This session is your refill. We will spend the day exploring: 

  • What’s fueling, and draining, your current coaching cycles
  • What kind of nourishment those you serve might need
  • How to create low-lift, high-impact moves that energize both you and your team

🔗 sign up here

 

 ✈️ 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 and UK Next Gen, 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 December 2, 2025
The Prichard Committee's newest work on the Meaningful Diploma lifts up a challenge many districts feel: seniors often spend their final year in courses that feel disconnected from the futures they're stepping into. Fleming County High School saw that firsthand. Many seniors—especially those heading straight into work or technical programs—were sitting in traditional English classes that didn't match their goals, while their CTE pathways were buzzing with real-world learning, certifications, and purpose. That tension sparked a simple but powerful question: What if senior English lived where students already felt meaning? Fleming County's answer: allow seniors to earn their English credit inside their CTE pathway, where reading, writing, and communication flow from the authentic work they're already doing. The results are alive in classrooms. Instead of Beowulf, welding students analyze OSHA manuals tied directly to the safety skills they're building in the shop. Early childhood students write narratives grounded in their fieldwork with local preschoolers. Ag seniors craft informational pieces connected to the certifications they're earning. Family & Consumer Sciences students develop business concepts from the ground up: researching requirements, outlining processes, and writing the accompanying plans. It's still English—every priority standard intact—but suddenly relevant, embodied, and connected to a future students can see. CTE teachers teach English 12 themselves, using Schools PLP as the spine and collaborating with ELA colleagues to ensure rigor stays high—an approach that shows how staffing, standards, and pathways can work together instead of competing for time. The benefits are already visible: stronger writing across the building, clearer purpose for seniors, and a staff that sees itself less as “departments” and more as a unified team designing for student futures. Fleming County is illustrating how aligned, purposeful design of the student experience can strengthen both engagement and the quality of student work.
By Lacey Eckels November 18, 2025
Discover how Kentucky districts are leading the charge in local accountability — real stories from Fleming and Shelby Counties, a practical Alumni + Employer Roundtable tool, and your Fall Learning Flight Plan to design learner-centered Defenses of Learning.
By Lacey Eckels November 10, 2025
Discover how vibrant coaching fuels vibrant learning—explore the five-shift Coaching Transformations framework, access a free sample Coaching Cards deck, and join upcoming interactive sessions to design human-centered educator experiences.
Show More
By Lacey Eckels December 2, 2025
The Prichard Committee's newest work on the Meaningful Diploma lifts up a challenge many districts feel: seniors often spend their final year in courses that feel disconnected from the futures they're stepping into. Fleming County High School saw that firsthand. Many seniors—especially those heading straight into work or technical programs—were sitting in traditional English classes that didn't match their goals, while their CTE pathways were buzzing with real-world learning, certifications, and purpose. That tension sparked a simple but powerful question: What if senior English lived where students already felt meaning? Fleming County's answer: allow seniors to earn their English credit inside their CTE pathway, where reading, writing, and communication flow from the authentic work they're already doing. The results are alive in classrooms. Instead of Beowulf, welding students analyze OSHA manuals tied directly to the safety skills they're building in the shop. Early childhood students write narratives grounded in their fieldwork with local preschoolers. Ag seniors craft informational pieces connected to the certifications they're earning. Family & Consumer Sciences students develop business concepts from the ground up: researching requirements, outlining processes, and writing the accompanying plans. It's still English—every priority standard intact—but suddenly relevant, embodied, and connected to a future students can see. CTE teachers teach English 12 themselves, using Schools PLP as the spine and collaborating with ELA colleagues to ensure rigor stays high—an approach that shows how staffing, standards, and pathways can work together instead of competing for time. The benefits are already visible: stronger writing across the building, clearer purpose for seniors, and a staff that sees itself less as “departments” and more as a unified team designing for student futures. Fleming County is illustrating how aligned, purposeful design of the student experience can strengthen both engagement and the quality of student work.
By Lacey Eckels November 18, 2025
Discover how Kentucky districts are leading the charge in local accountability — real stories from Fleming and Shelby Counties, a practical Alumni + Employer Roundtable tool, and your Fall Learning Flight Plan to design learner-centered Defenses of Learning.
By Lacey Eckels November 10, 2025
Discover how vibrant coaching fuels vibrant learning—explore the five-shift Coaching Transformations framework, access a free sample Coaching Cards deck, and join upcoming interactive sessions to design human-centered educator experiences.
Show More


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