March 3, 2026

Designing for Impact

Before You Design the Defense: Start with Purpose

 

Across Kentucky, Defenses of Learning are gaining momentum. The benefits of these powerful opportunities for our learners are vast. However, before designing slides, rubrics, or schedules, there’s an important question to answer: 

 

What is our PURPOSE for asking students to do a Defense?

 

The most powerful defenses don’t start with a template; they start with clarity of purpose. That purpose becomes the compass for every design decision that follows.


Is the purpose…

 

To move the Portrait of a Learner from wall décor to lived experience by asking students to demonstrate how competencies show up in their actual work and growth?

 

To give students authentic opportunities to articulate thinking, tell their learning stories, and respond to questions from a real audience?

 

To assess competencies not just through artifacts, but through how students present, reason, adapt, and respond in the moment?

 

To help students synthesize evidence from multiple subjects and experiences rather than viewing learning as siloed?

 

To create transparency and shared understanding of what the district values, and what learning looks like beyond grades?

 

To ensure every learner has structured opportunities to be seen, heard, and recognized for growth — especially in competencies that traditional grading may overlook?

 

To provide formative insight that shapes future instruction, supports, and personalized pathways?

 

To normalize reflection, revision, and growth over time?

 

Designing with Purpose

 

All of these are worthwhile options - and there are others. Identifying and communicating the purpose of these powerful learning moments is not optional, however.

It is foundational. 

 

Without clarity of purpose, defenses can quickly become compliance-driven events. 

 

With clarity, they become transformative experiences.


Finding the Purpose | A Collection of Tools


We are excited to share our collection of’ practical (and FREE!) tools designed to help teams surface, refine, and align around their purpose, ensuring that every Defense of Learning is intentional, coherent, and learner-centered. 

 

FOR LEADERSHIP TEAMS

Purpose setting Protocol (Getting Started with Defenses) | This protocol will take you through the identification of a clear purpose for your Defenses and the design implications that naturally follow.

 

Purpose Refining Protocol (Existing Defenses) | Use this protocol if your team needs a structured way to revisit the purpose of your current Defense structure and make intentional decisions about what to keep, refine, or redesign for greater coherence and equity.

 

FOR LEARNERS

Build Your Own Defense: A Tool for Learners | A simple, student-friendly process that helps learners reflect on meaningful moments, find patterns, and identify a clear purpose for their Defense.

 

Powerful Defense Question Library | Designing a Defense with a strong, reflective question helps learners make sense of their experiences rather than simply recounting tasks. This library provides a set of meaningful, purpose-driven questions that help students grow, develop agency, connect to purpose, and understand who they are becoming.


✈️  The Communication & Collaboration Playbook


April 29 | OVEC Middleton | 9:00–3:00

The two skills most commonly included in Portraits of a Learner AND on job descriptions: communication and collaboration. But, what does it really mean to bring those skills to life in classrooms? This session explores practical strategies and simple shifts found in our Profile Playbook that help make these skills daily habits. With or without a learner profile, participants will leave with tools that empower students to take ownership and collaborate with purpose.
🔗 
sign up here


✈️ Learning Opportunity with Our Friends at NGLC


April 9–10, 2026 | Portland, Maine
Next Generation Learning Challenges invites educators to a 
Learning Excursion to Casco Bay High School, focused on rigor, relevance, and relationships in innovative instruction and proficiency-based grading. Participants will experience student-led, community-connected learning in action and take home bold yet practical ideas. Early bird pricing is available through February 1, with additional discounts through March 1.
🔗 Learn more & register: 
https://nglc-2026.eventbrite.com


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 February 17, 2026
Explore vibrant learning in action with classroom stories, practical transformation tools, and upcoming professional development events designed to help educators turn vision into daily practice.
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 February 17, 2026
Explore vibrant learning in action with classroom stories, practical transformation tools, and upcoming professional development events designed to help educators turn vision into daily practice.
Show More


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