September 2, 2025

Reimagining Writing at Williamsburg

This article has been written by Lacey Eckels

Reimagining Writing at Williamsburg

How do we design writing experiences that feel relevant, human, and joyful for today’s learners? At Williamsburg Independent School’s Jacketpalooza, educators took on this challenge in our session, Not Your Grandma’s 5 Paragraph Essay, exploring how simple shifts can bring new life to writing.

 

The session began with educators reflecting on their own most meaningful writing moments. From there, they surfaced the five Transformations that spark vibrant learning and considered how small design changes can move writing beyond the page and into the real world. One example: instead of a generic “how-to” essay, learners might ask, “How can we make our littlest learners feel welcome?” After empathy interviews with current kindergartners, they create guides—videos, pamphlets, or infographics—for incoming families at Kindergarten Camp. These shifts deepen critical thinking while positioning students as creators with a genuine audience.

 

Educators also dug into shifts in the writing process itself:

  • Idea Generation – How can we help learners connect to their writing and think freely?
  • Drafting – How can writers draft with less pressure and more purpose?
  • Revision – How do we make revision about voice and vision, not red ink?
  • Collaboration – What does it look like for peers to act as sounding boards and co-creators?
  • Publication – How can students share their work beyond the classroom walls?



The takeaway? Reimagining writing doesn’t require an overhaul. Even small, intentional shifts at each stage can spark more joyful, authentic, and sustainable writing for both learners and teachers.


Not Your Grandma's Guide to Vibrant Writing

Are you asking the same kinds of questions Williamsburg teachers wrestled with: How do we make writing more relevant, more human, more joyful especially in the age of AI? Ready to try a few simple shifts in your own classroom? We’ve pulled together a free preview of our resource, Not Your Grandma’s Guide to Vibrant Writing, so you can explore some first steps.

 

In these opening pages, you’ll find the five Transformations that spark vibrant learning, a table of contents of all the moves, and the first three “launch” strategies designed to help writers get started with energy and authenticity. Say It Out Loud First invites students to speak their ideas before they write, capturing their real voice and letting the words flow more naturally. Ask Your Own Question gives learners the chance to frame their own inquiry, so their writing begins with genuine curiosity rather than compliance. And Draft in the DM asks writers to jot down their thoughts as if texting a friend, lowering the stakes and surfacing the heart of what they really want to say.

 

This preview is only the beginning. If you would like to bring this tool to life in your district, school, PLC, or team we would love to partner with you to co-design a session that fits your needs.


Your Fall Learning Flight Plan

✈️ September 22 – The Learner/Graduate Profile Playbook (9am–3pm)



💬 Make collaboration & communication the heartbeat of your classrooms

Your Learner Profile can be more than a poster on the wall. In this full-day deep dive, teachers, coaches, and school/district leaders will:


  • Design powerful learning for collaboration + communication
  • Walk away with ready-to-run lessons and strategies
  • Profile or no profile—you’ll leave with tools to transform teaching and learning, because a profile isn’t the goal, the learning it sparks is.
  • 🔗 Sign up here


✈️ September 29th - Local Accountability Cohort Kickoff (9am-12pm) 


🚀 It’s time to rewrite the story of success

Current systems only tell part of the picture. This kickoff invites educators, coaches, and leaders to:


  • Learn alongside districts breaking free from compliance-only measures
  • Explore real prototypes + models that are working now
  • Build the foundations for scalable, community-powered accountability
  • 🔗 Sign up here


✈️ November 5 – Coaching for Vibrant Learning (9am–3pm)


🌟 Coaching that’s joyful, energizing, and impactful

Why settle for coaching that feels like compliance? This day gives coaches and leaders the chance to:


  • Learn protocols + frameworks that bring joy to coaching
  • Build feedback routines that motivate teachers
  • Walk away with tools, inspiration, and a plate full of fresh ideas 🍽️
  • 🔗 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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