Systemic Coherence · Instructional Leadership · Curriculum Alignment · Burden Resolution · Data Systems · Honest Diagnosis · Structural Coherence · Editorial Practice · Federal Research Base · Instructional Leadership · Curriculum Alignment · Burden Resolution · Data Systems · Honest Diagnosis ·

Education is one of the most difficult jobs in the world. The only way to honor it is to name what's actually happening — clearly, openly, and with the structures around students in full view.

ForwardEd is an independent publishing practice focused on K–12 instructional systems. The work is grounded in fifteen years of practitioner experience across California and South Carolina public schools, and in peer-reviewed scholarship from the federal research base — the Institute of Education Sciences, the National Center for Education Statistics, the Learning Policy Institute, RAND, and the Carnegie Foundation.

The editorial premise is straightforward: when outcomes fall short, the instinct is to look at students or teachers. The more honest move — and the one most likely to produce real change — is to look at the structures around them.

01
Look at the Structures
The research has known for decades that what most often determines student outcomes is the coherence of the system around them — not the effort of the people inside it. ForwardEd starts where the evidence starts: with the structures.
02
Follow the Evidence Past the Narrative
Polished narratives, board-deck optics, and reform-cycle branding can make convenient cover. ForwardEd follows the evidence past the messaging to where systems are actually breaking — and what it would take to repair them.
03
Resolve the Burden, Don't Just Reduce It
Educators are not burned out because they stopped caring. The systems around them were never designed to work coherently. When that changes, the burden begins to resolve — not because the work gets easier, but because it finally makes sense.
04
Open Practice
Findings, frameworks, and methodology are disclosed and developed openly. ForwardEd does not arrive with predetermined conclusions. It arrives with a process, a research base, and a willingness to stay in the room when the answer is uncomfortable.
The Editorial Premise
"Education is an impossible job in a difficult world. The way we honor it is not by softening what we say about it, but by naming what's happening clearly enough that it can finally be addressed."

When authority and accountability are not aligned around student outcomes, systems stop serving the people they were built for. ForwardEd examines that alignment — not to assign blame, but because naming what's actually happening is the only honest starting point for change.

Using what is known to do better.

Founded and edited by Nicole Simmons, M.Ed.

Nicole has worked across a wider range of school types than most practitioners see in a single career — charter, private, alternative, and traditional public; Title I and otherwise. Fifteen years across California and South Carolina public schools, every level of the system from classroom teacher to founding teacher to district-level Teacher on Special Assignment to inaugural assistant principal.

Across that range of schools and roles, Nicole could see what most practitioners only see in fragments: the structural patterns that consistently worked toward student achievement and wellness, and the ones that consistently did not. That observation is the foundation of ForwardEd's research.

ForwardEd was born from burnout — but not the kind that comes from doing too much. The kind that comes from doing what is right inside structures that will not sustain it. After two years opening a new middle school with a staff who came together around a shared vision and commitment to students — work that earned the school a California Distinguished School designation in that span — Nicole stepped away. Not from the work, but from the structures around it. The work itself was the right work. The system around it would not let it hold.

ForwardEd exists to name those structures clearly enough that they can be addressed — and to prevent others from burning out doing what is right. The premise is simple: now that we know better, it's our job to do better. The work of ForwardEd is to illuminate what is known, so that others can use it to do better too.

Nicole Simmons, M.Ed., founder and editor of ForwardEd