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School systems across the country are under mounting pressure to improve student outcomes while navigating shifting standards, staffing shortages, and rising expectations around accountability. Yet many reform efforts fall short because they are fragmented and short-term. According to Learning Forward’s Standards for Professional Learning, sustained and job-embedded professional learning is linked to improved educator practice and student outcomes. The stakes are high because surface-level change rarely leads to lasting results. Continuous improvement in education requires disciplined, collaborative work that produces measurable impact over time.
How can district and school leaders ensure that their improvement efforts lead to measurable gains rather than temporary reform?
On this episode of Just Thinking, host Kevin Dougherty sits down with Dr. Michelle Bowman, the Senior Vice President of Networks & Continuous Improvement at Learning Forward. They explore how continuous improvement in education strengthens professional learning and drives sustainable results. The conversation unpacks how leaders can move beyond compliance-driven professional development and build cultures rooted in reflection, collaboration, trust, and evidence-based decision-making.
In this episode, they discuss:
Dr. Michelle Bowman is Senior Vice President of Networks and Continuous Improvement at Learning Forward, where she leads national strategies that support state and local education agencies in redesigning professional learning systems. With 30 years in public education, she has served as a mathematics teacher, curriculum director, dean of instruction, and executive director of professional learning, driving large-scale implementation of professional development and continuous improvement initiatives. Bowman earned her Ed.D. in Learning and Organizational Change from Baylor University, where her research examined the impact of inter-district communities of practice on leader efficacy, and she has contributed to industry publications and co-authored work on professional development in the digital age.
By 🎥School systems across the country are under mounting pressure to improve student outcomes while navigating shifting standards, staffing shortages, and rising expectations around accountability. Yet many reform efforts fall short because they are fragmented and short-term. According to Learning Forward’s Standards for Professional Learning, sustained and job-embedded professional learning is linked to improved educator practice and student outcomes. The stakes are high because surface-level change rarely leads to lasting results. Continuous improvement in education requires disciplined, collaborative work that produces measurable impact over time.
How can district and school leaders ensure that their improvement efforts lead to measurable gains rather than temporary reform?
On this episode of Just Thinking, host Kevin Dougherty sits down with Dr. Michelle Bowman, the Senior Vice President of Networks & Continuous Improvement at Learning Forward. They explore how continuous improvement in education strengthens professional learning and drives sustainable results. The conversation unpacks how leaders can move beyond compliance-driven professional development and build cultures rooted in reflection, collaboration, trust, and evidence-based decision-making.
In this episode, they discuss:
Dr. Michelle Bowman is Senior Vice President of Networks and Continuous Improvement at Learning Forward, where she leads national strategies that support state and local education agencies in redesigning professional learning systems. With 30 years in public education, she has served as a mathematics teacher, curriculum director, dean of instruction, and executive director of professional learning, driving large-scale implementation of professional development and continuous improvement initiatives. Bowman earned her Ed.D. in Learning and Organizational Change from Baylor University, where her research examined the impact of inter-district communities of practice on leader efficacy, and she has contributed to industry publications and co-authored work on professional development in the digital age.