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When Parents Meet the Team
When Victoria’s mom quietly reimagined a parent conference, she revealed something schools often overlook: a child’s learning doesn’t belong to one teacher—it lives in the space between many. This story explores how learning communities reshape parent conferences, challenge assumptions, and help families see the whole child through a shared lens.
Angela Langlands
Feb 104 min read


How Small Celebrations Shape Big Belonging
Celebration in a learning community isn’t reserved for performances, showcases, or Spirit Days. It lives in the everyday moments that help students and teachers feel seen. From a colleague bringing a morning tea to a team rallying behind a hesitant learner, celebration becomes the culture, not the event. And when it is woven into the fabric of how we work together, it strengthens belonging in ways no checklist or curriculum ever could.
Angela Langlands
Dec 16, 20254 min read


Finishing Strong: How Learning Communities Build Momentum Before a Break
The weeks before a holiday break can feel equal parts joyful and chaotic. Students are buzzing, teachers are stretched, and the calendar is packed. But learning communities don’t lose momentum—they channel it. By celebrating small wins, protecting essential learning, supporting each other honestly, and planting seeds for January, teams finish strong without burning out. A great end to the year isn’t about doing more—it’s about doing it together.
Angela Langlands
Dec 10, 20255 min read


When the Hard Thing Is a Teammate
In every school, there’s a truth we don’t talk about enough: sometimes the hardest part of collaboration isn’t the work — it’s a teammate. Teaching is human, and humans bring history, fear, pride, and resistance. I once worked with a colleague who pushed against every part of our learning community model. I couldn’t change him, but I learned how to change the conditions around him. This is a story about navigating resistance, protecting the team, and doing the hard things tha
Angela Langlands
Dec 2, 20253 min read


The Things People Don’t See
No one, except your team, sees the meetings, shared notes, or quiet compromises—but they feel the outcomes: community, consistency, safety, and belonging. The invisible work is the real work that builds trust and community.
Angela Langlands
Nov 25, 20253 min read


The Strength of We
True community isn’t measured by how we plan together, but by how we hold one another when plans fall apart. Two years ago, when I got the call that my mom didn’t have many days left, my team showed me what true community looks like. They didn’t just cover for me—they carried me.
Angela Langlands
Nov 18, 20253 min read


When Every Day Feels Like PD
In a true learning community, professional development isn’t an event — it’s a way of teaching and learning together. Discover how everyday collaboration transforms teachers into continuous learners.
Angela Langlands
Oct 21, 20254 min read


Parts: Building the Machinery of a Learning Community
Note to the reader: This post is part of a series using the People, Parts, Interactions thinking routine from Harvard’s Project Zero . Last week, I wrote about People as the heart of a learning community . This week, let's zoom in on the Parts . Looking at schools through a “parts” lens helps shift the conversation from “this is a great idea” to “this is actually manageable—and here’s how to do it.” Every school already has a lot of moving parts. The key is to make them vis
Angela Langlands
Sep 29, 20253 min read


Trust: The Heartbeat of a Learning Community
Trust drives every thriving learning community. Through shared norms, accountability, empathy, and appreciation, teams build collective efficacy. Every action—listening, helping, or owning mistakes—strengthens collaboration, showing students how adults work together. Trust isn’t flashy; it’s moment-to-moment, and it transforms culture.
Angela Langlands
Aug 25, 20253 min read


Teacher Planning Week: The Conversations That Move Teams Toward a Learning Community
Teacher planning week is more than icebreakers—it’s the foundation for shared ownership. Teams co-create agreements, plan collaboratively, and set routines that span classrooms. Small shifts, like rotating student groups or shared end-of-day activities, spark connection and reflection, helping the community focus on what’s best for every student.
Angela Langlands
Aug 2, 20254 min read
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