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The Science of Hope: Transforming Education and Building Resilience

Hope as a Cognitive Skill, Not Just an Emotion

At Thrively, we’ve long held the belief that hope is not just an emotion, but a powerful cognitive skill that shapes how we learn, grow, and lead meaningful lives. This idea is strongly supported by a recent study from the University of Missouri, titled “In surprising new study, researchers find hope — not happiness — is a key to a meaningful life.” The findings align beautifully with what we strive to create at Thrively—a strengths-based, hopeful, and joyful learning environment that helps students thrive.

Hope in Action: A Student’s Transformation

As Chief Learning Officer of Thrively and a lifelong educator—from classroom teacher to school principal, district superintendent, and assistant state superintendent—I’ve seen firsthand how hope can dramatically change a student’s life. I remember a student, whom I’ll call Emma, who struggled academically and socially. The turning point came when our school began focusing on more than just grades and test scores. We started cultivating hope through targeted interventions that helped her build confidence, resilience, and a sense of purpose. The shift was transformational. Emma’s academic performance improved, and she began participating in school activities with enthusiasm. Hope changed her trajectory.

Hope Is Measurable, Malleable, and Contagious

The University of Missouri study confirms what hope researchers like Cathleen Beachboard, also a Thrively advisor, have long said: hope is not abstract—it is measurable, malleable, and contagious. At Thrively, we integrate this understanding into our educational platform. Hope strengthens cognitive functioning, reduces anxiety, and enhances motivation. When students feel hopeful, they engage in learning with purpose. They set goals, take meaningful action, and believe they can influence their own future. This belief, grounded in real strategies, becomes a foundation for success in school and beyond.

District-Wide Impact of Hope-Infused Learning

Reflecting on my experience as a superintendent, I recall the power of system-wide approaches to hope. We designed district-level strategies that embedded hope into daily teaching and learning. In schools that adopted this model, we saw improvements not only in academic metrics like grades and test scores, but also in emotional well-being and staff morale. Hope became a shared value—a cultural asset that spread from student to teacher to family. It wasn’t just a feel-good philosophy; it was a practical, impactful driver of school improvement and student success.

How Educational Practices Can Nurture Hope

The research encourages us to foster hope through meaningful relationships, long-term goals, and recognizing small wins. These ideas can be embedded directly into educational practice. Project-based learning is one powerful example. When students work on authentic, interest-driven projects where they have choice and agency, they not only build skills—they develop a stronger belief in their ability to make a difference. Over time, this builds both hope and resilience.

The Challenge of Sustaining Hope in All Environments

Of course, there are real challenges. In under-resourced or unsupportive environments, sustaining hope can be difficult. I’ve witnessed the fatigue and disengagement that results when systems fail to support students holistically. But this is precisely where we, as educators, leaders, and innovators, must lean in. We must create learning environments that recognize each student’s potential and equip them with the tools—and the hope—they need to thrive.

Hope as the Foundation of Resilience and Achievement

Hope is not just a feel-good concept. It is central to thriving cognitively, emotionally, and socially. It is the root of resilience—the mental and emotional fortitude that allows us to rise above challenges and keep moving forward. As we continue to explore the science of hope and its connection to well-being and achievement, I invite you to consider two essential questions: How are you fostering hope in your classroom, school, or personal life today? And what steps—small or large—can you take to help others believe in their ability to create a better future?

Thrively’s Commitment to Operationalizing Hope

At Thrively, our mission is to operationalize hope. Through our learner-centered platform and tools, we help educators and students connect with their strengths, set meaningful goals, and build the confidence to reach them. Together, we can create educational systems that don’t just deliver content, but truly empower students to become creators of their own futures—resilient, hopeful, and ready to thrive.

Interested in learning more? Explore the following resources and reach out to me directly:

Your partner in humanizing learning,

Dr. Marion Smith Jr.

Chief Learning Officer

marion@thrively.com

Beyond the Budget Barriers: Maximizing Educational Impact Through Thrively

As someone who has worked at both the school and district levels, I’ve seen firsthand how budget constraints, staffing shortages, and competing priorities challenge even the most passionate education leaders. When exploring strengths-based learning or asset-based learning programs, the question is often the same:
“This sounds amazing—but how can we fund it?”

The answer? Strategic use of existing federal funds.
What many don’t realize is that the money you need may already be at your fingertips—if you rethink how you allocate it.

Thrively’s learner-centered, strengths-based platform is designed to align seamlessly with federal funding requirements, maximizing the impact of every dollar while promoting whole child learning, student well-being, and personalized learning.

Title I: Discover Every Student’s Strengths and Spark Academic Growth

Title I funds, intended to enhance academic achievement for disadvantaged students, can be used to implement Thrively’s industry-first Strengths Assessment. This 30–45 minute activity helps identify each student’s top five unique strengths, forming the foundation for personalized learning, student agency, and holistic student development.

Imagine knowing every student by their name, need, strength, and aspiration. This builds a student portfolio rooted in multiple intelligences, Habits of Mind, and real data from tools like Thrively’s Interest Inventory or RIASEC assessment—turning learning into a personalized, purpose-driven journey.

Title II: Empower Educators with Strengths-Based Professional Development

I’ve seen how high-quality professional learning directly influences teacher retention. Title II funds can support Thrively’s asset-based teaching strategies, aligned with MTSS and PBIS support tools, and infused with social-emotional learning (SEL) practices.

Thrively’s professional development empowers educators to:

  • Improve teacher-student relationships
  • Foster student self-awareness and student self-identity
  • Integrate CASEL-aligned SEL tools for schools
  • Build thriving, inclusive learning cultures

Explore options ranging from self-paced modules to full system-wide PD, grounded in research and practice around whole child education and the Science of Hope.


Title IV: Turn 12,000+ Learning Hours into Purposeful Growth

From kindergarten to graduation, students spend 12,000–14,000 hours in school. Title IV funding supports the transformation of this time into engaging, purposeful learning through Thrively’s digital platform—home to 80,000+ minutes of standards-aligned content across 12 programmatic areas.

This supports Title IV’s focus on:

  • Well-rounded education
  • Safe and healthy students
  • Effective technology use
  • Extended learning opportunities and after-school support

With Thrively, students gain access to tools that fuel hope, resilience, and purpose—backed by the Hope Survey, universal screeners for well-being, and the whole child approach to education.

IDEA: Build Inclusive Learning Environments for All Learners

IDEA funds can support Thrively’s inclusive, tiered learning tools. By centering strengths, Thrively shifts IEP meetings from a deficit-based model to an asset-driven collaboration. Educators and families gain a shared language around student strengths, boosting engagement and promoting whole child development.

Thrively aligns with:

Strength-based progress monitoring

Universal screeners

Whole child assessments

SEL integration within IEPs

Perkins V: Link Student Strengths to Career Pathways

Thrively supports Career and Technical Education (CTE) by helping students connect their strengths to career paths, supporting Portrait of a Graduate and Graduate Portrait goals.

Through strengths-aligned planning, students explore careers with confidence, clarity, and purpose—key outcomes supported by Perkins V funding.

Use Thrively to:

  • Support career readiness
  • Enhance student agency and ownership
  • Design learner-aligned Portrait of a Learner initiatives

Title IX: Promote Gender Equity and Empower All Learners

Use Title IX funds to elevate equitable access to high-impact programming. Thrively supports:

  • STEM initiatives for underrepresented groups
  • Leadership and mentorship programs
  • Gender equity in CTE
  • Tailored wellness curriculum for students

The platform fosters self-identity development for every student, ensuring opportunity isn’t just equal—it’s empowering.

Finding the Path to “Yes”: Fund Braiding That Works

One of the most powerful lessons I’ve learned is this:
It’s not about whether you can afford it—it’s about how you fund it.

Unlike most educational platforms that tap into one or two streams, Thrively supports strategic fund braiding, enabling schools and districts to:

  • Enhance academic achievement
  • Improve educator effectiveness
  • Boost student well-being
  • Expand career readiness
  • Drive true equity and access

Thrively’s whole child learning model promotes environments where hope, purpose, and student success flourish—regardless of background, circumstance, or learning differences.

Reimagine Your Federal Funds: Create Thriving Learners

What federal funding sources are you currently working with? Could Thrively be the connective tissue between your current initiatives?

Let’s rethink your learning continuum with a unified, strengths-based strategy that drives measurable impact and humanizes learning for every student.

Learn More About Thrively

🎥 Thrively Overview: Humanizing Learning | Video
📘 Guide to Creating Strengths-Based Classrooms
📩 Reach out to me directly at jasmine@thrively.com for personalized guidance.

Your partner in humanizing learning,

Jasmine Cox

Customer Success Manager, Thrively

Building Bridges: How Thrively’s Connections Feature Transforms Student-Educator Relationships

Building Bridges: How Thrively's Connections Feature Transforms Student-Educator Relationships

The Power of One Trusted Adult

Abraham sat quietly in the corner of my kindergarten classroom, eyes fixed on the blocks in front of him. As his teacher, I noticed his reluctance to engage with other children during the first weeks of school.

One morning, I noticed him arranging colored blocks in intricate patterns. “I love how you’re organizing the colors, Abraham,” I told him. His eyes lit up as he pointed to the pattern and whispered, “It’s a rainbow house.” The next day, when I called him “Hammy” (a nickname his family used), his face broke into a full smile for the first time.

Over the next few weeks, I made a point to connect with Abraham daily about his block structures, documenting each interaction in our new Thrively Connections feature. I moved him from “Distant” to “Transactional” in our tracking system. By winter break, Abraham wasn’t just participating—he was thriving, eagerly sharing during morning meetings and helping younger students during buddy time. The transformation was simply the result of intentional connection.

The Connection Crisis in Education

Research reveals a startling reality: the biggest complaint students have is “My teachers don’t know me.” The data is clear: students are 30 times more engaged when they believe educators know their strengths. Yet with increasing class sizes and mounting demands, educators struggle to build meaningful connections with each student.

Introducing Thrively Connections: Strengthening Teacher-Student Relationships

Thrively’s newest feature, Connections, addresses this challenge by providing a structured approach to relationship-building and student well-being. Available exclusively for Thrively Pro users, this tool facilitates intentional relationship-building through four developmental zones:

  • Distant Zone: Initial relationship building, learning basic information
  • Transactional Zone: Regular interactions establishing consistent communication
  • Personal Zone: Meaningful conversations about interests and strengths
  • Confidant Zone: Deep connections where students share challenges and aspirations

How Connections Works

The interface features an intuitive concentric circle design where teachers can:

  • Drag and drop student avatars between zones as relationships develop
  • Add detailed notes about meaningful interactions
  • View which students are in each relationship phase at a glance
  • Track relationship milestones as students progress to deeper zones

For administrators, Connections includes powerful reporting tools to visualize connection breakdowns across zones, track transitions, identify students with no established connections, and generate downloadable reports.

The Ripple Effect of Connection: Social-Emotional Learning and Beyond

When educators use Thrively Connections, the benefits extend throughout the educational ecosystem:

  • For students like Abraham, being truly seen creates a foundation of trust that supports both academic readiness and social-emotional learning (SEL) development.
  • For educators, tracking relationships provides professional satisfaction and helps prevent burnout.
  • For administrators, the feature offers a tangible way to support school culture initiatives, aligning with MTSS and PBIS frameworks.
  • For parents, knowing their child has an educator who truly sees them provides peace of mind, supporting whole child development and fostering student self-awareness.

Supporting Holistic Student Development

The Connections feature fits perfectly within a strengths-based learning approach, contributing to personalized learning and fostering student agency. Teachers can track students’ progress using tools like the RIASEC assessment, student portfolios, and a portrait of a learner. This enhances student self-identity and supports the science of hope through hope assessments and hope surveys.

With Thrively’s social-emotional learning tools and universal screeners, educators can easily implement SEL tools for schools, track student well-being, and improve social-emotional learning outcomes. The focus on the whole child approach to education ensures that students thrive not only academically but emotionally and socially.


Start Building Stronger Connections Today

The Connections feature is now available exclusively to Thrively Pro users. To learn more about how Thrively Connections can enhance your educational environment and support student development, contact our team for a personalized demonstration.

Because when we truly connect with students, we don’t just change their educational experience—we change their lives.

Interested in learning more? Contact me directly: jasmine@thrively.com
Jasmine Cox
Customer Success Manager