Designing Schools around Student Voice

Colleen A. Timm, Executive Director of Academic and Student Services, School District of Lee County

Colleen A. Timm, Executive Director of Academic and Student Services, School District of Lee County

Colleen A. Timm is a transformative educational leader who helps school systems turn strategy into measurable outcomes. Known for building capacity across diverse environments, she strengthens collaboration, sharpens operational effectiveness and advances student-centered practice. Her work bridges educational leadership and organizational design, enabling districts to evolve with clarity, fiscal discipline and a sustained focus on educational excellence.

Strengthening Student Voice through Thinking Classrooms

One key strategy is implementing Thinking Classrooms, which is a major focus in our district this year as we prepare principals to be instructional leaders in this work. Thinking classrooms create opportunities for students to collaborate, refine their thinking and make their cognitive processes visible to one another.

This approach not only strengthens individual and collective problem‑solving but also shifts the center of gravity toward student voice. When students articulate their thinking and contribute to shared solutions, their ideas meaningfully shape classroom decisions and learning experiences.

Turning Student Feedback into Visible Action

As with any stakeholder feedback, it is essential that students see their input reflected in actual decisions and actions. Our district uses a student advisory focus group model to gather authentic insight. Each quarter, we bring together a representative group of students from across the district to explore topics such as attendance, our code of conduct, mental health and, this year, the question “How much technology is too much technology?”

I facilitate these meetings alongside student facilitators. Students discuss guiding questions, identify themes and present their findings directly to our school board. They share what is working well, what barriers they see and their recommendations for improvement. This feedback is also shared with our cabinet and principals, and it has directly informed our work to strengthen the student experience, instructional environment and outcomes this year.

Creating Environments Where Students Feel Heard

Educators and administrators play a critical role in cultivating environments where students feel truly heard. There are many ways to elevate student voice, from focus groups and listening sessions to surveys and simple exit tickets at the end of a class.

In many ways, schools can mirror the feedback culture adults experience daily: after a medical appointment, a meal, a hotel stay or even a cup of coffee, we are asked about our experience. It’s reasonable to extend the same respect to our students, who are central to our mission.

Our student advisory groups have been especially powerful. Students bring thoughtful, balanced perspectives, not just lists of problems, but well‑considered ideas about how to improve issues such as attendance. Their insight is often optimistic, solutions‑oriented and deeply informed by their lived experience in our schools.

Measuring the Impact of Student Voice on Engagement and Belonging

We measure the impact of student‑voice initiatives by tracking indicators that reflect engagement and a sense of belonging. These include school and class attendance, academic performance, enrollment in programs and activities and the frequency and nature of behavioral incidents.

When students feel heard, valued and supported, school culture improves. Students shift from experiencing school as something done to them to seeing themselves as partners in their education. This increased connection shows up in the data and in the day‑to‑day climate of our schools.

Building Trust through Relationships and Participation

My advice is to remember that the foundation of everything we do in education is relationships. When we take the time to gather input from students, we demonstrate that we care about them and that we value their perspective. This builds trust and fosters mutual respect.

For leaders looking to start or expand this work, find an approach that feels natural to you whether that’s small focus groups, student panels, surveys or classroom‑level routines and then, quite simply, just do it. The investment yields tremendous returns for students, staff and school culture.

Weekly Brief

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