Engaging Community
Overview
This step is about learning with and from the broader community to strengthen the foundation for a bold school vision. You will use this time to meaningfully engage stakeholders—especially students and families—in reflecting on the current state of their school or schools and shaping what could be possible.
Holistic engagement is important—it should include sharing insights from the Educational Outcomes Audit and Analysis (EOAA) and School Readiness Assessment (SRA), conducting community research, and gathering feedback on the Case for Change. These actions can be combined into integrated activities as appropriate.
Outputs
- Organized and synthesized community feedback documented in the Design Journey Notebook
- Draft or updated Community Engagement Plan capturing who was engaged, what was learned, and emerging themes
- Public-facing share out artifact (e.g., a poster, newsletter, or slide deck) used to share findings and invite continued community feedback
Goal
Collect and analyze community insights to ensure that the school design process is shaped by the voices and experiences of those it will serve.
Owner(s)
School design team
Contributor(s)
District transformation team, students, families, community stakeholders, facilitation partner
Resources
Community Engagement Toolkit
A menu of ready-to-use engagement strategies—from student shadowing to community interviews—to spark listening and learning.
Youth Voice Toolkit
Tools that help students surface issues that matter and shape their school’s future.
Community Engagement Plan in School Design Journey Notebooks
The template schools began using during Design Experience 1 to organize their engagement goals, activities, and timelines.
PRO TIP! What successful community engagement looks like:
- Community members feel heard and valued.
- Input directly shapes the evolving school concept.
- Engagement events are well-attended and inclusive of diverse voices.
- Feedback is synthesized and visibly integrated into next steps.