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A blank page with the outline of the state of Michigan with four stars on it, depicting where Next Education Workforce models are being implemented.

Bringing team-based teaching to the Midwest with the Michigan Educator Workforce Initiative

Pilot teams at schools in Concord, Michigan, and the Detroit Academy of Arts and Sciences are part of a broader initiative supporting schools as they explore, design and implement team-based staffing models, through a partnership between Arizona State University’s Next Education Workforce™ and the Michigan Education Workforce Initiative, launched in spring 2024. 

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Empowering student success coaches with the Community Educator Learning Hub

The Community Educator Learning Hub, an award-winning online learning platform developed by Arizona State University’s Next Education Workforce™, received an investment from the Leon Lowenstein Foundation to provide scholarships for organizations training student success coaches. With a goal of supporting up to 2,500 student success coaches by December 2026, the grant provides open access to the Hub, including the 12-nanocourse Student Success Coach collection. 

An old photo in black and white showing students sitting watching a TV in a library.

The future isn’t smarter tools, it’s powerful systems

From filmstrips to flipped classrooms, the arc of educational technology often tends to reinforce the usual ways of doing school. While tools like AI hold great promise, their effectiveness depends on both the structures of schooling — how we organize time, roles and relationships — and the systems that undergird those structures: the policies, assumptions and routines that determine what school looks like.

A graphic depicting a quadrant with four educators, one in each quadrant, and groups of multi-colored dots in each quadrant.

Beyond the roster: Rethinking how we dynamically group students and assign educators

What might seem like a scheduling tweak is actually a structural foundation for transformation. When the same educators share the same students during the same blocks of time, they can move beyond coverage to connection, beyond sorting to support. Dynamic student grouping is an instructional move grounded in the belief that students deserve not just one educator, but a team of educators who know them, coordinate around them and respond to their needs.

A blue background with lines.

How legacy software holds schools back — and how smarter systems could move them forward

If we want to scale promising staffing models and other student-centered innovations, we can’t keep relying on software tools designed for the past. In a new report published in collaboration with Common Group and Siegel Family Endowment, we explore the need to rethink outdated administrative software.

An image of a mural in a school library with the words Community, Culture, Curiosity painted in white.

From skeptic to advocate: One parent’s perspective on teaming

Jennie Clausen, a parent of three kids at Hermosa Vista Elementary School in Mesa, Ariz., was once strongly opposed to the school’s move to team-based staffing models. Now, she’s a proud self-proclaimed “teaming convert.”

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Explore the latest news and stories about our work at ASU’s Mary Lou Fulton College for Teaching and Learning Innovation. Read more or subscribe to updates.