By Carole Plumb
carole.plumb@waylandpost.org
Roughly 70 administrators, teachers, parents, and residents gathered at the Council on Aging on Nov. 3 for the first of two community “visioning sessions” organized as part of the Pre-K–8 Facilities Master Plan for the Wayland Public Schools. The session was held in the spacious new conference room A; a first-time experience for most of the audience. The workshop was facilitated by educational consultants Paul White and Mike Pirollo of MLP Integrated Design who are coordinating with HMFH Architects.
White and Pirollo led the group through a structured series of exercises designed to define what “great learning” should look and feel like for Wayland students in the coming decades. White asked attendees to reflect on their own memorable learning experiences and record the qualities that made those moments effective.
Everyone’s input would inform how future facilities might support emerging teaching practices, developmental needs across grade levels, and equitable access to educational programs such as the arts, science and special education. Pirollo explained that creating a long-term educational vision must precede decisions about construction or renovation, noting that the buildings designed today will likely serve the community for 50 years or more.
Superintendent David Fleishman touched on the difficulty of anticipating what the future of education in 50 years might be such as when Wayland schools were built in late-1950s no one anticipated digital devices, AI or content creators.
Fleishman said the goal of the master plan is to “establish updated teaching and learning environments for both our students and staff” for the long term by envisioning how learning and belonging happens inside educational spaces in the digital age. He encouraged residents to participate in shaping that vision by attending both sessions because they build on each other, helping ideas evolve “from vision to structure.”
The second session, scheduled for Nov. 17, will explore how children grow, learn and connect from early childhood through adolescence, and how those developmental differences should influence school size, grade configuration, and the design of optimal learning spaces. Fleishman said the district is committed to engaging a wide cross-section of the community in the planning process and will continue to provide updates as the work progresses.










