Nominate your loved ones for a story:

Nominate your loved ones:

Joshua Brown: Making legacies possible

by | Apr 2025

LIFE THREW a wrench into Joshua Brown’s plans — ideas of numbers, data, and creation all woven into the career of an electrical engineer fell apart. Instead, the Florida native turned into what he swore never to become.

He then forever transformed the livesof teachers and students at a school district in Lebanon.

The Lebanon Special School District (LSSD) serves over 4,000 students from pre-K through eighth grade every year. In this district, Brown did not make his mark as a teacher. Instead, he served the teachers as the instructional coordinator, with a focus on data and instructional software.

After all, his upbringing ingrained the value of service into him.

Brown grew up in Central Florida as the youngest of three brothers. His father lived as a pastor, and his mother worked as a teacher in a classroom, where he would sometimes go after hours or on the weekends to assist her.

His mother’s field did not exactly push him to follow in her footsteps.

“Honestly, I wanted to be anything except a teacher,” Brown recalled, laughing. “My dream was to be an electrical engineer.”

Photography by Robin Holcomb

He even received a scholarship for the U.S. Air Force ROTC. However, about a month before his debut, situations changed, leading the then-18-year-old to try substitute teaching — his entrance into the world of education. He served in various teaching roles while attending night classes at Warner Southern University until his last semester.

“So my journey into being a teacher was a bit of a reluctant one because I saw how much effort and time my mother put in, and I didn’t think that was the route for me.”

But his heart weirdly danced to the tap of the ancient chalkboard’s call.

Brown continued on to graduate from the University of Georgia for graduate school. Jobs as a third grade teacher and then a technology coordinator in Georgia followed before he became an employee at Pearson Education, which required him to hit the road often. He finally moved to Gallatin around 2008. Brown began forming a client relationship with Lebanon Special School District, opening the door for him to leave Pearson and work there.

“I wanted to be off of the road and not living in hotels anymore and wanted to come back to public education,” Brown said. “And I’ve been here ever since.”

In what Brown described as a unique background, he taught himself the skills that would propel the district to a whole different level. Before his onboarding, LSSD leaders realized the district failed in efficiently obtaining and organizing student data to properly outline goals for students, teachers, and administrators, so they turned to Brown.

Photography by Robin Holcomb

He went on to meet those expectations.

Brown worked as the curriculum and support person for new instructional software programs, introducing them, troubleshooting, and training teachers on how to employ the tools to collect data. This eased the district away from manual efforts of excessively inserting and correcting information.

The second level of success involved Brown’s retransformation of LSSD’s student information system: the database housing students’ grades, discipline, attendance, registration information, and more. However, his favorite job component revolved around the tools he built surrounding data analysis after seeing co-workers duplicating their workload. As a remedy, he constructed tools from scratch with the Google framework, mainly using the Looker Studio to streamline information and a data visualization tool to make interactive data more accessible to help administrators lay out plans.

“It really allowed us to drill into data to be able to make informed decisions so much clearer and faster than we ever could before,” Brown said.

Teachers found the man easy to understand and a source of calm in a sometimes scary, technological world.

Although classroom instructors deserve a great deal of applause for a school’s success, LSSD’s tech-savvy administrator lives as an example of the great behind-the-scenes work required to create a strong backbone for any district.

People could say that he leaves behind a different type of classroom legacy — one that makes those legacies possible. GN

More Good News

Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

WHEN YOU choose a locally owned business over a national chain, you’re not just spending your money, you’re planting it. And the roots of that investment reach deep. Every dollar counts, and it...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A STUDENT IN our community today will walk the halls of Congress with a pinned American flag on their chest. A student in our community today will pray their knees still hold when their nerves get...

read more
Jenna Jones: Made to dance

Jenna Jones: Made to dance

JOY AND laughter fill the hallways of Belamour Ballet Dance Academy, bright colors swirling gracefully as dancers of all ages practice their craft. The academy is a beloved location for many...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

THE SOUNDS of the self-checkout registers beep through the entire store. The short lines of people with baskets and carts move across the reflective tile like a conveyor belt and out the door. Uh,...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

A nurse walked down the hallway his mother walked decades before he did. Beep … beep … he could hear the sounds from patients’ rooms. He kept a small keepsake pinned to his scrubs, a pin his mother...

read more
Chris Crowell: Rooted in Service

Chris Crowell: Rooted in Service

It might be at a city council meeting, at a Rotary Club fish fry, or at Liberty State Bank’s veteran’s breakfast, but you will always see Chris Crowell involved with the community. Crowell’s roots...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

The people of the year 1000 faced division, uncertainty, and fear for the future. They didn’t know it then, but they stood at the edge of change, transitioning from the Dark Ages to the Middle Ages....

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From The Editor

AUTUMN SETTLES into our town like a puppy in a warm bed. There’s a magic in the air that only this season can bring. Golden leaves drift gently from the trees, painting the sidewalks in shades of...

read more
Help Is a Click Away

Help Is a Click Away

WILSONHELPS.ORG IS a large-scale, comprehensive, and user-friendly guide to Wilson County’s broad array of available aid. This is the most general way to describe what is an enormous,...

read more
Neighbors Helping Neighbors

Neighbors Helping Neighbors

PAYING IT forward describes the beneficiary of a good deed repaying the kindness to others rather than paying it back to the original benefactor. It has also been referred to as serial reciprocity....

read more
A Story of Faith & Peace

A Story of Faith & Peace

IN 2020, less than 6,000 people across the United States became living organ donors, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. Lebanon is proud to be home to one of those brave donors:...

read more
Los Compadres: A Lebanon Favorite

Los Compadres: A Lebanon Favorite

WHEN I’M in the mood for an authentic Mexican dinner, one of my go-to restaurants in Lebanon is Los Compadres. It always hits the spot, and my most recent visit was no exception. Our server, Manny,...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From The Editor

SHE FLASHES her lights and pushes the gas pedal a little harder. The walkie-talkie is too quiet, so she spins the dial and makes her bulletproof vest a little more comfortable. She worked hard to...

read more
A Safe Haven

A Safe Haven

HEROES COME in many shapes and sizes, but at the end of the day, each has the same important quality: they are willing to do difficult things to help people in need. A hero might rescue someone from...

read more
David Ashley: Pick Up Your Cross

David Ashley: Pick Up Your Cross

WITH EVERY heavy step down the road, Pastor David Ashley’s rugged hands grip the weight of a wooden cross — a symbol of strength and sacrifice — carried not for himself but for the countless victims...

read more
Letter From the Editor

Letter From the Editor

OUR FOOD nourishes us, from the soil beneath our feet to the table where we gather with family and friends. The hot sun beams from the sky into the field of sprouting seeds. Farmers rise early,...

read more
Kansha Japanese Express

Kansha Japanese Express

KANSHA JAPANESE Express was an excellent choice for a quick lunch date. It’s a charming restaurant with a nice variety of Japanese cuisine. The atmosphere was laid-back, with a few subtle touches to...

read more
Christy Mock Opens the Prom Doors

Christy Mock Opens the Prom Doors

THE PROM is an American rite of passage that has, through cultural ups and downs, become an enshrined part of adolescence for almost a century. Yet the costs associated with the prom — costs that...

read more
Sherry’s Run

Sherry’s Run

FOR NEARLY 20 years now, in August and September, green bows have been found all around Wilson County, Tennessee. Some people pass by the vibrant bows not knowing what they represent, while others...

read more
President Stumb

President Stumb

AS THE president of Cumberland University for the last nine years, Dr. Paul Stumb has become an important figure both on campus and within the broader Lebanon community. President Stumb recently...

read more
Unexpected Delight

Unexpected Delight

LET ME start by saying that I’m not a fan of bar food, so I wouldn’t choose a sports bar for lunch. However, I recently met a business associate for lunch at Coach’s Eastgate Grille off Highway 109...

read more
From Katrina to Compassion

From Katrina to Compassion

THOSE WHO lived along the Gulf Coast braced for impact or fled further inland despite gasoline shortages and lanes of traffic that steadily crept north. As a nation, we held our collective breaths,...

read more
Recipes: Fuel for Focus

Recipes: Fuel for Focus

RISE AND shine to breakfasts that fuel minds and bodies alike! Celebrate the power of wholesome, delicious meals to kickstart learning and energize young students. We’ll dish up recipes packed with...

read more