When I stepped into the role of curriculum coordinator for Peoria Public Schools District 150 in 2021, I entered a landscape still reeling from the disruption of COVID-19. Teachers were exhausted. Students had suffered interrupted learning. And the instructional frameworks in place–particularly in literacy–were due for serious reexamination.
Initially, the directive was to return to our previous Balanced Literacy framework. But as I dove into research, attended conferences, and listened to thought leaders in the field, it became clear: The science was pointing in a different direction. The evidence base for Structured Literacy was too compelling to ignore.
What followed wasn’t an overnight change. It was a careful, multi-year shift in philosophy, practice, and support. We didn’t have the budget for a full curriculum adoption, so we focused on building a practical, research-aligned framework using targeted resources and strategic professional learning.
A patchwork quilt with purpose
In Peoria, where many students were performing one or two grade levels below benchmarks, we needed a literacy framework that could both repair learning gaps and accelerate grade-level achievement. That meant honoring the complexity of literacy instruction by balancing foundational skills, writing, vocabulary, and fluency.
Our current model includes explicit handwriting instruction, structured phonics and phonemic awareness, and targeted word study, paired with guided small-group instruction informed by student data. We built in an hour each day for foundational work, and another for what we call “guided individual practice,” where students receive support aligned to their needs–not just grade-level expectations.
We were also honest about staffing realities. We no longer had interventionists or instructional coaches in every building. The burden of differentiation had shifted to classroom teachers, many of whom were navigating outdated practices. Transitioning from “guided reading” to true data-informed small groups required more than new tools. It required a new mindset.
Supporting educators without overwhelming them
Change management in literacy instruction is, at its core, about supporting teachers. We’ve been intentional in how we provide professional development. Our work with the Lexia LETRS professional learning course has been especially transformative. Recognizing the intensity of the full cohort model, we supplemented it with a more flexible, self-guided version that teachers could complete during PLC time. Today, every 1st and 2nd grade teacher in Peoria has completed Volume 1 of the professional learning course, and our next cohort is set to begin with kindergarten and third-grade educators.
That blended approach–respecting teachers’ time while still delivering deep learning–is helping us move forward together. Our educators understand the “why” behind the change and are beginning to feel empowered by the “how.”
Technology as a partner, not a solution
Technology plays a meaningful role in our framework, but never in isolation. We initially implemented a digital literacy program for students in grades 5-8 who were below benchmark, but the rollout revealed key challenges. Students were resistant. Teachers lacked the training to connect software data to instruction. And the result felt more punitive than supportive.
Rather than abandon technology, we shifted our model. We now provide Lexia Core5 Reading to every student in grades 2-4, creating a consistent, equitable implementation that supports differentiated instruction while relieving teachers of the burden of sourcing materials themselves. The program is easy to use, offers actionable reports, and provides a strong starting point for targeted instruction.
Still, we’ve been clear: Software alone won’t move the needle. Teachers must be part of the equation. We continue to train educators on blended learning practices, helping them use technology as a springboard, not a substitute, for effective instruction.
From compliance to commitment
One of our next major shifts is moving from compliance to intentional practice. In a large district with approximately 13,000 students across 29 buildings, it’s easy to focus on usage metrics. Are students meeting their minutes? Are teachers checking boxes?
But the true measure is learning. Are students making progress? Are teachers using the data to inform instruction?
We’re investing in professional development that reinforces this mindset and are exploring how to bring more coaching and modeling into classrooms to help operationalize what teachers are learning.
Advice for fellow district leaders
If there’s one takeaway from our journey, it’s this: Don’t rush. Take the time to align every piece of your literacy framework with evidence-based practices. That includes everything from phonics and handwriting to the way letters are introduced and small groups are formed.
Lean on the research, but also listen to your teachers. Usability and educator buy-in matter just as much as alignment. And remember, literacy is a long game. State assessments, early screeners, and benchmark data are just pieces of the puzzle. The real impact takes time.
What keeps me going is the feedback from our teachers. They’re seeing students blend and segment words with confidence. They’re noticing fewer behavioral issues during literacy blocks. They’re asking deeper questions about how to support readers. That’s the kind of progress that truly matters.
We’re not finished. But we’re headed in the right direction–and we’re doing it together.
Lindsay Bohm, Peoria (Ill.) Public Schools District 150
Lindsay Bohm serves as the Curriculum Coordinator for Peoria (Ill.) Public Schools District 150.
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Lindsay Bohm, Peoria (Ill.) Public Schools District 150
Ben and Justin discuss ‘Alien: Isolation,’ with author Andy Kelly later joining in on the conversation. Then Steve Ahlman and Matt James pop by to give their impressions of ‘Silent Hill 2’ and ‘Metaphor: ReFantazio.’
Ben and Justin Charity tiptoe through the halls of Sevastopol to discuss the 10-year anniversary of Alien: Isolation and their experiences with the cult classic. Then they bring on Andy Kelly, author of Perfect Organism: An Alien: Isolation Companion, to discuss the game’s legacy, horror credentials, innovative AI system, and impact on Alien, as well as what they hope to see from the newly announced ‘Isolation’ sequel (15:49). After that, Ben and Charity talk about Netflix and Amazon’s big bets on a Tomb Raider revival, the history of the franchise, and Ben’s impressions of the new Netflix series Tomb Raider: The Legend of Lara Croft (56:58). Finally, Steve Ahlman and Matt James pop in to give their impressions of Silent Hill 2 and Metaphor: ReFantazio (84:32).
Host: Ben Lindbergh Guests: Justin Charity, Andy Kelly, Steve Ahlman, and Matt James Producers: Devon Renaldo and Eduardo Ocampo Additional Production Supervision: Arjuna Ramgopal
On a Thursday evening in January, an intimate group of people gathered at Zin’s Flower Shop’s event space in Pilsen for a hands-on lesson in crafting two nonalcoholic drinks with Up Elevated Cocktails. Hosted by Carlos Ramos, this was the second iteration of a class dubbed “High and Dry January,” which seeks to educate people in the making of cannabis-infused mocktails.
During the instruction, Ramos, who’s imbued with the gift of gab, explains the properties of various cannabinoids, terpenes, and their effects, while also providing a mini consultation to establish an understanding of each participant’s tolerance level. Up Elevated cocktails are typically dosed between 5 and 7 milligrams for the average customer. Together, the group mixed up the Moment of Zen — a drink made with pineapple juice, matcha powder, aquafaba, coconut milk, and THC-infused Zen Green Tea from California brand Uncle Arnie’s — anda play on a hot buttered rum, featuring butter-based gummies infused with THC.
Whether someone is sober curious, totally dry, or partaking in the “California sober” lifestyle (i.e. abstaining from booze while consuming cannabis), there’s a piqued interest these days in alternatives to alcohol. Consumers want to opt out of drinking without compromising the overall social experience. That’s prompted companies such as Marz Community Brewing in Bridgeport and Hopewell Brewing in Logan Square to churn out ready-to-sip canned CBD or hopped spritzes.
Founded in 2020 by Ramos, the same year that recreational cannabis consumption became legal in Illinois, Up Elevated’s mobile mixology service takes modern mocktails to new heights by trading alcoholic spirits for cannabis-infused, water-soluble products — such as Cann bubbly tonics or Artet botanical aperitifs and spritzes — that come with an additional dose of education and awareness. Cannabinoid infusions differ based on state law. Illinois prohibits companies from mixing THC with alcohol, but they can use hemp and delta-8 or delta-10.
“We’re not mixing marijuana and alcohol, so it’s an infused mocktail,” Ramos says, though he shares that the company offers regular bar service as well.
Carlos Ramos and Up Elevated regularly hold events.
During January’s canna-mocktail class, participants Ariah, 25, and Taliya, 23 (who asked to withhold last names due to privacy concerns), shared that alcohol has rarely been a factor in their social lives — a decision they deem a less harmful option.
“We’ve noticed what alcohol has done, we know the history, and it’s not pretty,” Ariah says. “Being intoxicated is literally hurting your body. There’s a naturalness to cannabis or even shrooms — there’s an evident, natural benefit to it.”
In Illinois, bartenders can use cannabis in drinks as long as they don’t have alcohol.
“‘Intentional’ is a big word with our generation,” Taliya adds. “People are talking about it on social media. We don’t see the hype [around alcohol]. We’re very conscious of what we want to put in our bodies, from food to things like this [cannabis cocktail class]. Education goes a long way and having fun, social events where you can also learn is a nice way to go about it.”
Ramos still primarily runs bar services himself but collaborates with a team of talented friends for larger pop-ups and social media content. He takes his mission to destigmatize cannabis and normalize its presence in beverages seriously. While Ramos admits that people get cross-faded (the term for being high and drunk), he’s not encouraging that behavior on Up Elevated’s watch.
“I don’t see a world where mixing alcohol and cannabis in one beverage makes sense,” Ramos says, noting his goal is to normalize cannabis as an alternative to alcohol and set a “standard for responsible service and consumption of these beverages.”
Up Elevated doesn’t take itself too seriousl.
A former beer distributor for companies such as Lagunitas Brewing Company, Ramos was working in sales and marketing as a Chicago area rep for 18th Street Brewery in Hammond and Gary, Indiana, at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. When he lost his job, he saw it as an opportunity to launch Up Elevated as a mobile mixology service in August 2020 — doing small pop-ups at socially-distanced, outdoor markets and private events as folks slowly restarted in-person activities. He, like many people during that time, had begun more deeply assessing his relationship to his habits, particularly drinking alcohol.
“I try to live an active lifestyle and I realized the days where alcohol consumption was part of my job weren’t really aligning with my lifestyle anymore,” Ramos says. “I was never big on alcohol, but I was socially drinking, and selling beer was my job, being a little drunk a couple nights a week. I didn’t like the feeling, I really didn’t like feeling hungover, and COVID was a deciding factor [in drinking] for a lot of people.”
Developing the concept and menus for Up Elevated steadied his focus while inspiring other avenues of cannabis-friendly social activations, including run club Runners High Chicago, yoga classes, and a chess club — disrupting the “lonely, lazy stoner” stereotype. Finding a new path in the community feels like the bet on himself is paying off. Last year, Up Elevated hosted events in six states, including California, Michigan, Massachusetts, and Colorado, and appeared at MJ Biz Con — the nation’s largest marijuana and cannabis conference and expo, held in Las Vegas. It also participated in January’s Chicago’s No I.D. alcohol-free cocktail competition and tasting event at Artifact Events.
“I’d had the idea since 2018 after I’d worked a couple events with the Herbal Notes collective and seeing how chef Manny [Mendoza] brought to life the beautiful culinary experience for cannabis, I wanted to create that mixology equivalent, because I didn’t see that,” Ramos says. “I didn’t see beautiful cannabis cocktails — if anything, there were alcoholic cocktails still being served at weed events. Even still, now, it’s the landscape where it’s a weed event, but it’s at a bar, you have to buy from their bar. I saw the niche for this.”
He adds, “Another theme of Up Elevated is believing that people who don’t consume alcohol should have better choices than juice, water, or soda. A lot of times, when you go to a bar or somewhere and you sit down and say you’re not drinking alcohol, that kind of ends your service experience. We give just as awesome of an experience if you want to drink alcohol, cannabis, or neither.”
Ramos describes his use of cannabis and THC-infused products as similar to using bitters or carbonated mixers as opposed to making them the hero ingredient. It’s what drew one of his newest supporters, the aforementioned Uncle Arnie’s.
Uncle Arnie’s has plans to join the Chicago market later this year. Founder Ave Miller stumbled upon Up Elevated’s Instagram profile in 2023 and connected with the hope that Ramos’s creativity would inspire consumers to reconsider their cannabis experience. Miller says “most people aren’t even educated” about cannabis beverages, placing Up Elevated at the leading edge of an emerging market: “Most edibles are usually way too high-cost or not as effective because most people are fooled by the 500 milligram Laffy Taffy bar,” Miller says. “Liquid beverages are a really great way to introduce high-dose people to recreational markets. Because of the water-soluble technology and increased bioavailability, 100 milligrams really feels like 150 milligrams because of how your body processes it.”
While making sure the community has space to gather, create, and indulge — it’s never solely been about getting high. Working toward complete legalization of cannabis (the plant) and advocating for more equitable access to resources for Black and Brown, small, craft growers and brands — those most impacted by this country’s war on drugs — is of equal importance. Ramos knows this first-hand, having been arrested in 2007 for selling on Purdue University’s campus in West Lafayette, Indiana, when he was a sophomore. For 12 years, Ramos had felony convictions on his record, which made finding a corporate job nearly impossible. That led him to the craft beer industry, where his honesty about his background wasn’t a detriment.
A member of the newly founded Illinois Cannabis Consumption Association, Ramos and like-minded individuals are also coming together to address and promote efforts around the legality of on-premise cannabis consumption and the minted “cannabis hospitality industry.” While there are legal, onsite consumption lounges in Illinois in towns such as Wheeling and Mundelein, Chicago doesn’t permit consumption outside of private properties or licensed dispensaries, and public consumption remains illegal.
“Chicago is likely gonna make it difficult and costly to do these things,” Ramos explains. “Most of the events that happen around cannabis are technically unsanctioned. For me and my events, we try to keep things as compliant as possible. Some safeguards are 21-and-over, private, ticketed or members only, no direct sales of the plant itself. I’ve cultivated relationships with alderpeople who would like to see day permits for cannabis events, as they realize they are happening and want to mitigate involvement of law enforcement for a plant that’s supposed to be legal in Illinois. It makes no sense that we can buy cannabis, but can’t consume it without being in fear of the law.”
In 2021, he connected via LinkedIn with Steven Philpott Jr., a former Marine and current biology PhD student at North Carolina State University who studies crop and soil sciences with a focus on cannabis, and the two started collaborating and building the education and justice element of Up Elevated Cocktails. With a background in sports medicine and coaching, Philpott became an advocate for cannabis for stress and pain management on a personal level before doing so professionally.
“There’s 120 to 200 kinds of cannabinoids that exist. We only really talk about THC, but all the other ones have health benefits too,” Philpott says. “That’s what me and Carlos do. Cannabis is not just THC.”
Philpott sees an opportunity through Up Elevated to spread awareness about alternatives to alcohol and smoking cannabis. He says it should be viewed as a supplement purchased at a vitamin store. “As I get older, I’m like, ‘I would love to find another way to consume.’ So when I saw Carlos making drinks, I thought he might be onto something.”
Discussing cannabis in its fullest terms also helps the two get around legality concerns when Up Elevated Cocktails pops up in states that have yet to embrace recreational or medical use. Philpott joined Ramos at this year’s South by Southwest music festival for an activation dubbed “Sound Bites” on March 9, which combined music, cannabis, and education in a state that’s long opposed legalization but where hemp-derived products like delta-8 have flourished.
Ramos has high hopes for his operation.
Ramos chose to use “non-THC, minor cannabinoids” during his trip to Texas. “Hemp-derived is legal in all 50 states. We can still give the education, the experience with music and drinks … [and] be within the parameters of what we need to be in that state.”
Looking ahead, Ramos hopes Up Elevated Cocktails can serve as a bridge between casual consumption and real-world implications of lingering, federal cannabis restrictions for those who still haven’t been able to gain a stronger foothold in the now-corporate, regulated industry; this would help foster a deeper sense of community where success is available to those who’ve paid a higher price for being on the cultural frontlines for decades.
“There’s no shortage of weed parties, but I don’t see a whole lot of well-rounded programming really building community, which is what we’re trying to come into our own and do,” he says.
/EIN News/ — LAS VEGAS, NV, Dec. 26, 2023 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — via NewMediaWire – This holiday season has been abuzz with everything from hemp-derived personal care products to CBD-infused food and beverages, Hemp, Inc. (OTC: HEMP) reports. Consumers can’t seem to get enough of the power-packed skinny foliage in personal care products, cosmetics, food, beverages, nutraceuticals, and other products, so much so that the global CBD market’s valuation is anticipated to reach $19.67 billion by 2032 and the Hemp Source CBD Market is full speed ahead.
Considered one of the top producers of hemp-derived products, Hemp, Inc. knows a thing or two about CBDs. The Company distinguishes itself by using pharmaceutical-grade beta-cyclodextrin in combination with cannabinoids for rapid absorption and efficacy through its highly potent, therapeutic doses of CBD, CBDA, CBG, CBGA, and CBN products. Notably, Hemp, Inc.’s CBD/CBG coffee enhancer is highly potent, rapidly absorbed, and competitively priced, offering consumers a premium coffee experience. Its lineup of CBD/CBG/CBN products includes a CBD-CBG Topical Pain Relief Roll-on (THC-free with 1,460mg of CBD and 630mg of CBG totaling 2,090mg of cannabinoids in 5ml), CBD/CBG Natural Coffee Enhancers, CBD/CBG Tinctures, and CBDa/CBGa/CBD/CBG/CBN Capsules.
A step above the rest, Hemp, Inc. continues to be featured as one of the major key players in industry-wide hemp market…
What’s the first thing you think of when you hear the word “Gucci?” The brand’s covetable shoes and celebrity-approved dresses probably come to mind, but these four-digit-price-tag items are far from the only things Gucci creates. If you want to treat yourself to a Gucci trinket for less than $300, you have plenty of options.
Gucci’s 100% silk printed scarves, for instance, can be worn around your neck with a white T-shirt, tied onto your favorite bag to give it an instant refresh, or worn in your hair. The possibilities are truly endless. Plus, the variety of prints ensures that there’s something for everyone. The brand’s bright-red key case will definitely be easy to fish out of your bag, while its cute silver key chains are perfect for your logo fix. Of course, any of these items would make for excellent gifts for the Gucci-loving person in your life—trust us. Scroll down to shop every single item that’s $300.