Hosted by Ken Futernick
In Part 1, we heard how Reading, Pennsylvania, began to turn outward—listening to families, students, and educators to rethink what their school system could be. In Part 2, we see what happened when a new mindset and civic culture shifted from data gathering and healthy conversation to concrete action.
Host Ken Futernick and Rich Harwood, founder of the Harwood Institute, return to trace three major initiatives that are reshaping life for students in the Reading School District—and changing how the community relates to its schools.
You’ll hear how:
Throughout the episode, educators and community partners describe how these efforts are changing the district’s relationship with the city it serves. Schools are no longer expected to shoulder every problem alone; instead, they’ve become the center of a shared project, with nonprofits, churches, funders, and residents working alongside them.
Rich and Ken also step back to ask: What does this mean for other communities that want to strengthen their own school systems—whether they’re in deep crisis or simply trying to move from good to great? Drawing on Reading’s experience, Rich offers four practical mantras for getting started: turn outward, get in motion, start small to go big, and build a “trajectory of hope.”
This is the story of a school system being rebuilt not just from the inside out, but from the outside in—one partnership, one program, and one act of listening at a time.
Download a free study guide and find related resources for this series at schoolconversations.org/reading and theharwoodinstitute.org/reading.