October 13, 2025

Michelle Gross, KY Teacher of the Year

This article has been written by Lacey Eckels

Michelle Gross, KY Teacher of the Year

If you’ve ever met Michelle Gross, you know: her brilliance shows up quietly, in the deep relationships she builds, the authentic learning experiences she designs, and the humility she carries into every room. Now named Kentucky Teacher of the Year, Michelle still does what she’s always done, use math to empower, connect, and inspire.

 

Her 7th graders don’t just calculate square footage, they design dream homes. They research floor plans, draw to scale, estimate mortgage payments, and present their blueprints to real architects and designers. In her Ratios Recipe Project, they scale recipes to feed a crowd (or just one) and bring their math to life in the kitchen. Every unit in Michelle’s classroom is a chance to do something meaningful with math, and that meaning sticks. As one student shared, “I’ll look back at this when I build my actual house.” That’s what happens when learning is personal, real-world, and learner-owned.

 

Michelle, one of our longtime Teacher Navigators, is a master of the quiet shift. Her classroom hums with the kind of learning we want more of: joyful, rigorous, relevant, and real. She reminds us that when we trust students with the good stuff, work that matters to them, the math (and everything else) lands deeper.

 

Want to learn more about Michelle’s Dream House Project?

📎 Read the full story here.



Strategy Spotlight: Make it Real (literally)

Michelle’s Dream House project didn’t end with a test, it ended with blueprints, physical models, and presentations to real architects. That’s the Real-World Transformation in action.

This week, we’re pulling two go-to strategies from the Real-World section of our Transformation Strategy Deck to help you bring that same energy into your own classroom:


These are just two of the 60+ vibrant learning strategies in our deck.

Want a deeper look? Let’s talk.

We partner with schools to bring these moves to life, in PLCs, faculty meetings, co-teaching cycles, and custom PD sessions. If you’re ready to make learning more real, we’re here for it.

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

 

 

✈️ 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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