Revere schools expand coach collaboration to support multilingual learners and tier‑1 instruction

Revere School Committee · December 17, 2025

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Humanities and multilingual-learner (ML) directors described a cross-department coach-collaboration model to strengthen tier‑1 instruction using daily literacy routines, video exemplars and scaffolded practices; the team said it includes six elementary, three middle and one high-school coach and immediate priorities for the year ahead.

District humanities and multilingual-learner directors presented a coach-collaboration plan the committee said aims to advance the district’s multi-tiered system of support (MTSS) for multilingual learners.

The presenters said the short-term priorities include developing classroom tools around speaking, vocabulary and reading; a sample set of daily literacy routines and suggested scaffolds (for example, annotation guides and pre-teaching vocabulary) were shown to the committee. The district described meeting structures that pair humanities and ML coaches — weekly and monthly collaboration — and collection of classroom videos to use in professional development.

"One of our first steps is to develop tools to support ML-aligned classroom routines around speaking, vocabulary, and reading," a humanities director said, and coaches will adapt materials to avoid watering down grade-level texts while increasing access through scaffolding.

The presenters said the organization includes six elementary coaches, three middle-school coaches and a high-school coach who meet with principals and teachers; video exemplars captured during professional-development days will be used in teacher groups. Committee members asked for additional classroom-level examples and follow-up on measurable outcomes; directors said they will report progress and metrics at future meetings.

Administrators said the work is aligned with the district improvement plan and is intended to make high-quality Tier 1 instruction more accessible to ML students without changing grade-level expectations.