why we start the school year in peace and community
September 28, 2025

At the beginning of the school year, something powerful happened in our church. Karri asked everyone connected to education to stay for a moment after the service. As people began to gather, the room filled with teachers, bus drivers, cafeteria workers, coaches, custodians, parents, administrators, and students. Before long, it felt like nearly the entire congregation had stayed.


It was more than a headcount. It was a living picture of how deeply education runs through our communities. Every role mattered. Every person carried part of the weight. And together, they represented what it really takes to raise up a generation.


Karri spoke about abundance that morning — the ministry we created to encourage educators and faith-driven leaders. She reminded the church that schools are not sustained by one role or one person. They are held together by communities willing to show up, support, and carry peace into classrooms, buses, cafeterias, and gyms.


That moment was a reminder of why we started abundance.


when logos weren’t enough


Before abundance came the alchemy collaborative. Our agency began with a clear goal: to help schools and districts strengthen their communication. On the surface, that meant designing logos, creating templates, building websites, and crafting strategic plans. All of those things matter. They help schools look organized, communicate clearly, and build trust with their families.


But I wanted our work to mean more than logos and templates. I wanted it to help educators feel supported, to remind them that their stories matter, and to create systems that could hold people together when the demands of education felt overwhelming.


As we worked alongside superintendents, principals, and teachers, I saw the weight they carried. Long hours, shrinking budgets, teacher shortages, political pressures, and hostile environments that often left them feeling discouraged and alone. The challenges were bigger than any logo or website could fix.


That’s when abundance was born. While alchemy equips school systems with the tools they need, abundance was created to equip the soul of the leader. Where alchemy handles the practical, abundance tends to the heart. And Karri now leads this mission with a calling that is deeply rooted in faith.


the threefold peace of abundance


Abundance exists to remind educators and leaders of one simple truth: peace is possible, even here. Not because circumstances are easy, but because Christ is enough.


We talk about peace in three ways — what we call the threefold peace of abundance:


  • peace in completeness (Jesus): through Christ, we are whole and fully loved. Our worth is not tied to test scores, public opinion, or the weight of endless demands.
  • peace in contentment (the Father): through the Father, we trust His provision. Even when resources are stretched and funding falls short, He remains faithful.
  • peace in community (the Spirit): through the Spirit, we share peace with one another. Education is not the work of one individual. It is sustained when communities carry the load together.


This vision is what Karri spoke over our church family that Sunday. She didn’t just bless the educators for the year ahead. She reminded everyone in the room that they had a role to play in carrying peace into schools.


the why behind the mission


The world is only getting busier. The demands on schools are only growing heavier. Educators are often asked to be more than teachers. They are social workers, counselors, event planners, and crisis responders. And in the middle of all this, many feel unseen, undervalued, and overwhelmed.


Abundance was created for this very moment. We believe the calling of education is holy work, but no one is meant to carry it alone. Our mission is to remind leaders that their identity is not in their performance. It is in Christ. Our role as a community is to speak that truth again and again. To offer encouragement, resources, and reminders that peace is still possible.


That’s why Karri encouraged our church not just to hear the message, but to share it. Share about abundance. Share encouragement with a teacher. Share peace with a leader who feels like giving up. Every time you do, you plant a seed of hope.


what I saw that morning


As I sat in the pews that morning, watching nearly the entire congregation stand, I felt the deep connection between our two callings: alchemy and abundance.


Alchemy was the beginning — the place where I saw the practical needs of schools and wanted to help. But abundance is the outflow — the reminder that beyond communication systems and strategic plans, educators need encouragement, faith, and peace.


Both are part of the same mission: strengthening communities so leaders can thrive.


That morning gave me a fresh picture of why we do this. Education is not carried by one person or one job. It takes all of us. And when we show up together, when we speak peace over our schools, when we lean into Christ for provision, the culture shifts. Schools become places of belonging, not burnout.


an invitation to share


As this new school year unfolds, I want to invite you into the mission. If you are an educator, abundance is here to remind you that you are seen, loved, and not alone. If you are part of a church or community, you have a role to play in carrying peace into schools. And if you know a leader who feels weary, point them toward this space.


Because abundance is not just about one voice. It’s about all of us. It’s about communities choosing to believe that peace is still possible, and then sharing that truth until it takes root.


So let’s start the school year in peace and community. Let’s remind one another that God’s provision is enough. And let’s carry this story together: into classrooms, cafeterias, buses, and boardrooms.



👉 learn more about the mission and how you can share abundance in your community: about abundance.


share:

we're just getting started. explore our other blogs.

By Brooke Goff September 28, 2025
alchemy collaborative partnered with fleming county schools to launch vibrant accountability 4.1, a next-generation model of school accountability that puts stories, skills, and community trust at the center.
By Brooke Goff September 28, 2025
kentucky heads into a pivotal budget session, the kass summit and step up program highlight the critical role of superintendents as communicators. alchemy collaborative explores why clear leadership communication matters now more than ever.
By Brooke Goff September 28, 2025
Brooke Goff shares hard-earned lessons about personal branding, showing how aligning values with intentional rhythms turns branding from self-promotion into a way to spread the message of vibrant learning.
By Brooke Goff September 28, 2025
cumberland county schools introduced a baby panther mascot for their new elementary school. here’s how ac helped bring it to life.
giraffe
By Brooke Goff September 22, 2025
A simple zoo trip shows why curiosity-driven, experiential learning transforms classrooms. Discover how schools can nurture wonder, engagement, and vibrant learning for every student.
By Brooke Goff September 19, 2025
School leaders tell us all the time: “We don’t want to get ahead of ourselves.” It’s a valid worry. When a new initiative is still in motion, whether it’s a graduate profile, a deeper learning framework, or a fresh vision for instruction, it can feel risky to share stories before everything is fully polished. The fear is that communication might look like promotion: marketing something that isn’t ready yet. But here’s the truth we’ve seen again and again. Communication is not the same as promotion. When done well, communication is an act of teaching. the tension is real The hesitation comes from a good place. Leaders want to be honest. They want to protect their credibility. No one wants to put out glossy photos and bold claims if the work in classrooms is still uneven. But there’s a danger in waiting too long. If stories only get told once the system is “perfect,” teachers never see examples in real time. Families never get invited into the journey. Communities never understand what the work actually means. And that’s how initiatives stall. Not because people don’t care, but because they don’t know what it looks like. communication teaches as much as it tells Think about the last time your district rolled out a new vision. Did everyone immediately understand what it meant in practice? Probably not. That’s where communication steps in. Sharing even small, imperfect stories along the way helps your people learn. Teachers begin to see concrete examples of “what good looks like.” Principals gain language to use in their own buildings. Families catch glimpses of how the vision shows up in classrooms. Stories are not fluff. They’re case studies in action. Every post, newsletter, or video clip isn’t just a highlight reel: it’s professional learning. It gives your community shared language and real-life anchors for abstract goals. clarity beats perfection every time Leaders sometimes think they need to wait for the perfect exemplar before going public. But clarity is more important than polish. Small stories work . A quick post about a 9th-grade English class recording podcasts instead of writing book reports can spark more understanding than a long white paper. Transparency builds trust . Sharing where you’re headed — and admitting you’re still growing — is far more powerful than staying silent until the system feels complete. Momentum matters . Every story shared is a seed planted. Enough seeds grow into a culture where teachers, families, and community members all know the vision and can describe it in their own words. practical ways forward So how do you balance honesty with visibility? Start small: Share stories that are in-progress. A picture of students building, presenting, or collaborating is enough to spark curiosity. Equip principals: Give school leaders a simple weekly habit — like reviewing teacher posts and flagging one that reflects your district’s vision. Frame stories as learning: Remind your team: this isn’t PR, it’s teaching. Every story is a mini professional learning opportunity. Use systems, not scatter: Whether it’s a collector form, advisory reps, or tagging in your comms platform, make it easy to gather stories without adding another burden to teachers. the bottom line If communication only happens after perfection, you’ll never get the momentum you need.  Leaders, teachers, and families learn through stories. That means every early, imperfect example matters. Communication is not about selling your district. It’s about shaping understanding. It’s about helping your people see the future you’re building — one story at a time.
By Brooke Goff September 19, 2025
Discover how schools can balance vibrant learning and accountability with both data and stories. From elementary projects to high school career pathways, learn why leaders must lift examples across all grade levels to build trust and shared understanding.
By Brooke Goff September 15, 2025
How a Kentucky student’s journey from the barn to the boardroom reflects Henry County Public Schools’ vision for vibrant learning. A story of belonging, purpose, and culture-led success.
Show More