Community · Contributions
From the Field.
Real school leaders. Real work. Real results. This is a living community of practitioners committed to making excellent Tier 1 instruction the center of their schools for children AND adults.
They share what they know so others can grow.
The best ideas for improving schools are already in schools. This is where they live.
FEATURED CONTRIBUTION
This month's featured voice from the field.
Leading by Learning
| The following reflection from a current assistant superintendent captures how one leader embodied the heart of modeling learning, staying close to instruction, and earning credibility not through position, but through authentic participation in the work.
In my fourth year as principal, our school received a grant to launch a personalized learning instructional framework. The grant came with eighteen months of professional learning, new technology infrastructure, and an ed-tech pilot platform.
By that point, I had already learned the hard way not to commit teachers to multi-year initiatives without their input—no matter the pressure from external stakeholders. So when the grant was presented, I invited a diverse group of teachers, representing multiple perspectives, to the table. I was transparent about the terms and made it clear that I was prepared to decline if they weren’t on board. To my relief, they were honored, curious, and enthusiastic. They asked thoughtful questions, and from there we launched a pilot with teachers from grades 1, 4, 5, and junior high writing—alongside me.
At the time, I was the only administrator in our 210-student, inner-city Catholic school—under-resourced but rich in culture and spirit. I was also the 8th-grade social studies teacher. For my first six years as principal, I kept teaching daily, last period. At first, I did it for selfish reasons. As a young principal uncertain about the future, I wanted to maintain my craft. But as the work intensified, teaching became my favorite part of the day. It grounded me, kept me connected to students, and reminded me why every decision mattered. Over time, it became a philosophy: all administrators should teach.
When we move from the classroom into leadership, our teaching shifts from students to adults—but the core work remains the same. The further we drift from the student experience, the harder it is to lead instruction with credibility. That’s why I asked my assistant principals to teach, too—sometimes one period a day, other times a weekly elective or an integrated STEM course. Even now, as an assistant superintendent, I find ways to stay close to classrooms—like running a monthly LEGO STEM club at a local school.
When the personalized learning initiative began, I didn’t lead from the sidelines. I joined my teachers in the learning. When they designed a six-week implementation cycle, I created one for my social studies class. I tested strategies, opened my room for feedback, and shared my own struggles and small wins. I was both a learner and a leader, giving and receiving feedback at every PD and PLC.
This was not the culture I inherited. Four years earlier, teachers worked in isolation. Collaboration meant logistics, not instruction. Vulnerability was rare. Coaching wasn’t even in our vocabulary. But together, we built something different. We gave up Saturdays for learning, pushed through discomfort, and supported one another. By the end of two years, our teachers had grown into confident, innovative practitioners.
What began as a personal decision to keep teaching evolved into a leadership philosophy: when leaders model vulnerability, stay connected to instruction, and learn alongside their teams, they earn the credibility to guide change. Whether through teaching, coaching, or engaging in classroom practice, leaders must show they’re willing to do the work they ask of others. That’s what keeps Tier 1 instruction—and the learning culture that sustains it—at the center of school improvement.
CONTRIBUTOR
MCKENNA CORRIGAN
ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT
SUBMIT YOUR WORK
Your experience
belongs in this community.
This community exists because the best ideas for improving schools are already in schools. If you have led work that improved instruction, developed your faculty, increased student achievement or shifted your school's culture — and you've reflected on it with clarity and honesty — we want to hear from you.
Submissions are reviewed personally by David Corvi. Selected contributions are published on this site and featured on LinkedIn.
The Role of the Leader
How you understand and enact your role as the teacher of teachers
Tier 1 Instruction for Students
What you've done to improve the everyday classroom experience
Tier 1 for Faculty & Staff Development
How you've applied instructional principles to adult learning system-wide
Resources, Actions & Reflections
Tools you've used, decisions you've made, and what you learned from them
How to Submit
Please follow these directions carefully. Submissions that do not meet the standards below will not be reviewed.
1 Write Your Submission
Submissions must be 500–1,000 words, polished, and publish- ready. Anecdotal narratives and case studies are both welcome. Half-formed ideas are not accepted. Proofread carefully — submissions with significant errors will not be selected.
2 Compose Your Email
Send to fixyourtier1instruction@gmail.com with the subject line: Submission for Contribution. Include your full name, position title, and employer in the body of the email.
3 Paste Your Submission
Copy and paste your submission directly into the body of the email. Do not send attachments — they will not be opened.
Submission Standards
500–1,000 words, fully written and polished
Focused on one of the four topic areas to the left
Written from your own professional experience
Minimal to no errors — proofread before sending
A note on response time
Due to volume, only selected submissions will receive a response. If you have not heard back within 4 weeks, your submission was not selected for this cycle — but may be reconsidered in the future. David reserves the right to edit, excerpt, or reframe selected submissions, kept to a bare minimum.
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Looking Ahead
The strongest contributions will have a chance to appear in future editions of this work.
As this community grows, selected contributions will be considered for inclusion in future editions of Fix Your Tier 1 Instruction. Contributors whose work is selected for publication will receive a copy of the new edition. This is a long game — and the best ideas from the field deserve a permanent home.