CAFE News: April 2026 Updates

The Latest in CAFE Partnerships, Conversations & Collaboration

Throughout the year, School Connect hosts trainings, CAFE conversations, and events that bring school leaders and community members together to help solve problems and address the biggest needs in our schools.

The ultimate goal?

To empower every student across Arizona to thrive and realize their full potential. As you know, it truly takes a village!

Thank you CAFE Sponsors for partnering with School Connect to serve Arizona schools!

CORE Construction Logo
First Things First Logo

Keep reading to hear about recent CAFEs in Litchfield and Queen Creek!

Litchfield Elementary School District CAFE

Standing behind a district’s promise to believe, belong, and become!

Filled with enthusiasm and teamwork, the Litchfield CAFE commenced with a “Wheel of Fortune” trivia game as participants competed in their knowledge of district core values and history (one question going all the way back to 1927) with winners earning prizes and bragging rights as champions for the Litchfield community.

Superintendent Dr. Carter Davidson thanked every leader present for having the courage to stand in unity behind the Litchfield Promise: to help students believe, belong, and become. He said that together we are choosing to be defined, not by “what we stand against”, but by “what we stand for”. According to Davidson, this showing of solidarity reveals courageous leadership, and prepares us to take action for a cause worth every ounce of effort, energy, and hope – our children.

The celebrations continued with district partnership stories delivering on this very promise; projects made possible by the connections and planning from the previous Litchfield CAFE.

Grizellie Hedges, Assistant Principal of L. Thomas Heck / Troy Gilbert School and Drew Keil from CORE Construction shared about a recent lending library project where students were taught to design, build, and finish free standing “lending libraries”. Because of the leadership of CORE Construction, DLR and Pueblo Mechanical, field experts taught classrooms how to design and build – taking this project from conception to reality. Students were so enthralled with the project they begged parents to stay at school longer! Even eight grade students participated with the proud knowledge that their mark would remain long after graduation.

At Mabel Padgett Elementary School, Principal Leslie Willis connected with Luke Parker, Adaptive Recreation Coordinator, from the City of Goodyear Parks & Recreation and together they created their 1st Annual Special Olympics including Special Olympics Arizona, the mayor, and Goodyear High School. “I swear we made all the dreams come true that day,” said Principal Willis.

Making dreams come true at Mabel Padgett was not limited to large organizations. A local realtor, Sean Woods, discovered a way to give back to teachers and began the “Sean Wood Wooden Apple Awards” to honor every teacher of the month. His offering sparked a domino effect fueling more community leaders to find a unique way they could support the school.

Finally, Western Sky Middle School Principal Cassie Hardge and Monica Martinez from CHASSE Building Team presented their collaborative CAFE project, proudly named Mission Possible. Mission Possible Fridays gave students a glimpse into “a day in the life of “diverse careers as leaders visited middle school classrooms every Friday in February. Representatives from Adelante Healthcare, Credit Union West, the US Army, Goodyear School Resource Officers, CHASSE Building Team, and more described why and how they entered their prospective fields, answered student questions, and even helped students re-enact real-life work scenarios to problem solve as teams!

Dr. Jennifer Benjamin articulated the district promise this way,

“We want students to believe in themselves and their future. We want them to belong in school and communities, and we want them to become learners, leaders, problem solvers, and people of character. That work requires all of us in this room. School Connect is so important because it brings us all to the same table…This is how we turn ideas into action, and vision into impact.”

Queen Creek Unified School District CAFE

Partnering with Purpose, Passion, and Commitment

The Queen Creek CAFE was electric with enthusiasm and purpose. As he welcomed guests to the sixteenth Queen Creek CAFE, Superintendent Dr. Perry Berry asked everyone to hold up the table gift prepared by their hosting school team or PTA. The room immediately filled with arms raised, proudly displaying tokens of appreciation from cookies, to swag, to flowers, to bundt cakes – evidence of both gratitude and celebration of the community.

Dr. Berry then thanked school principals for being strong school leaders, and even more for being quality people who value effective and collaborative partnerships. He reminded us that these CAFE strategy sessions were designed with the purpose of helping each school and community deliver on the district strategic plan. By partnering together these visionaries create opportunities for students, engage families, close achievement gaps and support the entire community toward their brightest and most important goals.

The room erupted into hearty conversation as attendees took this charge and ran with it. More than just sharing individual goals, table conversations bounced around from one person to another with participants finishing each other’s sentences and turning bright ideas from concept to into actionable plans.

At Newell Barney College Prep, the conversation centered around supporting the school through a change in leadership. Retiring in the spring, Principal Kevin Atkins took special care to introduce the outgoing PTA president and the incoming PTA president to the entire table of partners. Doing this, they aligned legacy work, while also maintaining continuity of relationship and support from the entire Newell Barney community. Next fall when the incoming principal takes over, he or she will be welcomed by an active team ready to keep building!

The Queen Creek CAFE closed with a special highlight of the Queen Creek Schools Education Foundation Scholarship Program. Awarding over $81,000 in continuing education to graduating seniors in 2025, the foundation received a record number of applicants this year. Applause filled the room as they showcased the incredible students awardees from past years and invited everyone to take part in empowering this year’s graduating class of 2026.

Interested in getting involved? Let us know where you want to get plugged in!