Find tools made for busy educators looking for a realistic way to empower their students—and find connection, support, and fulfillment in their careers.
Curated by experts, tested by your peers, and designed to adapt to you, the resources here help schools and districts become more human, so the adults and children who occupy those spaces can pursue excellence alongside joy.
Practical resources that energize your students and transform your classroom, plus the support you need to make those practices a seamless part of the school day.
Routines that get teachers and leadership on the same page, boost students’ academic performance, and make school a place where people want to be.
Ready-to-go professional development grounded in district-to-classroom outcomes tracking, consistent accountability, and open-minded collaboration.
Make small shifts that progressively lead to big change.
Adopt a combination of Activities to solve a specific challenge.
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“We are improving the quality of teacher services to students using the CARE Network strategies, and we are becoming a more united PLC group working more efficiently together. We are implementing such strategies as student survey, 42Q, student focus information, updating and analyzing D and F list, using review and retake of test strategies.”
Cesar Chapa
Montgomery Middle School, Sweetwater Union High School District
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“CARE is now a priority, not just a strategy. The continuous, universal strategies we’ve learned can be applied by everyone— certificated staff, classified staff, and families— making them adaptable to all types of communities.”
Dr. Precious Hubbard-Jackson
Bell Middle School, SDUSD
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“It has empowered me, as a Sweetwater Union High Schools District equity champion, with the tools necessary to help our schools cultivate a culture of continuous improvement… by adopting CARE Network protocols for coaching our school leads in strong data-driven decision-making practices that lead to improvement in holistic instructional practices and ultimately improved student outcomes for the whole child.”
Luis Lopez
Sweetwater Union High School District
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