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When My Assumptions Were Wrong
I was certain. The system agreed. And we were both wrong. This is the story of my son Xavier and his classmate Hyun Ki, two boys whose Grade 2 reputation followed them straight into Grade 3, because Margie and I built a belief together and never thought to challenge it. What happened next is the best argument I have for why learning communities need more than two voices in the room.
Angela Langlands
3 days ago4 min read


Attention Made Visible
I didn't notice I was losing her until the third time it happened. Michiko was a good kid — easy to overlook, and I was overlooking her. This is the story of what I did when I realized I couldn't fix it alone, and what a Japanese airport taught me about why one teacher is always a single point of failure.
Angela Langlands
Apr 74 min read


Try, Test, Learn: We're Not Gonna Mess Up the Kids
I said something I probably shouldn't have said in a professional setting. But it cut through the tension and became my mantra. "We're not gonna mess up the kids." This is the story of what happened when a team finally gave themselves permission to experiment — and what that risk gave back to teachers, students, and started my learning community journey.
Angela Langlands
Mar 314 min read


We're Not Here to Meet. We're Here to Think.
Beth didn't think she had to plan everything alone — until she joined a team that proved otherwise. When meetings have purpose, they don't add to the load. They redistribute it. This is the story of what happens when collaboration stops being a performance and starts being the engine. And what it means for every teacher who has ever worked through a weekend alone.
Angela Langlands
Mar 244 min read


Quarter-Turn Moves: Stop Teaching Alone (Without Waiting for Permission)
February is exhausting, but relief doesn’t come from sweeping reform. It comes from quarter-turn moves — small, shared shifts between colleagues. When teachers stop carrying planning, teaching, and assessment alone, pressure lifts and possibility expands. You don’t need permission to begin. You just need to ask. Because teaching was never meant to be done alone.
Angela Langlands
Mar 103 min read


Why Collective Wisdom Beats Gut Instinct
When grouping decisions are made alone, they’re often driven by instinct, habit, or survival. But when teachers design groups together, students are seen through multiple lenses—and everything shifts. This post explores how intentional, collective grouping turns “challenging” students into understood learners.
Angela Langlands
Jan 205 min read


The Art (and Heart) of Grouping
In a learning community, grouping students isn’t random — it’s intentional, flexible, and designed to maximize growth, collaboration, and belonging. This week, explore how thoughtful groupings can transform learning for both students and teachers.
Angela Langlands
Oct 27, 20255 min read
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