September 22, 2025

After the Tassle

This article has been written by Lacey Eckels

Ready for the Real-World

Bullitt County is charting a bold course toward transformational learning. As part of their journey to build a Community-Based Accountability Model, one message from families and community members has been clear: graduates must be ready for the real world.

 

Enter After the Tassel. This program connects seniors with meaningful work experiences, linking local businesses hungry for fresh ideas with students eager to gain skills and purpose. Internships, mentoring, and real-world projects give learners a launchpad while strengthening community connections.

 

It’s more than career prep. It’s a system-wide commitment to Personal and Real-World Transformations, where every student can graduate with confidence, opportunity, and a pathway forward.

 

Together with business partners, families, and educators, Bullitt County is proving that when schools and communities align, both the future workforce the future of learning get stronger.



Connecting Learners to Mentors

Bullitt County’s After the Tassel program is a bold vision for connecting students with paid internships and real-world learning before graduation. Is your district interested in giving learners more real-world, work-based experiences but not sure where or how to start?

 

That’s where this resource from Learner-Centered Collaborative comes in: Connect Learners to Mentors. It offers practical, scalable ways to deepen professional-mentor connections, whether through community partnerships, professional mentors, or even virtual networks that extend beyond your town’s borders.

 

Think of it as a toolkit for building the bridge between classrooms and careers. Whether you’re just beginning or ready to expand, these strategies can help you design experiences that spark confidence, purpose, and real-world readiness. And, as always, we’re happy to be your thought partners on the journey. 


Your Fall Learning Flight Plan

👀 WE HOPE TO SEE YOU AT THE CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT SUMMIT! 


We’re teaming up with the Kentucky Department of Education and UK Next Generation Leadership to introduce the new Local Accountability Design Guide—a resource with tools, strategies, and ideas to support your district’s journey toward local accountability.


📅 September 22 | 1:15–2:15 PM

📅 September 23 | 1:45–2:45 PM
 

DISTRICT LEADERS: READY TO REWRITE YOUR STORY OF SUCCESS?


✈️ September 29 – Local Accountability Cohort Kickoff (9am–12pm)

Current systems only tell part of the picture, and it’s time for more. This cohort is designed for superintendents, district teams, and leaders who are ready to move beyond compliance and shape a richer narrative of learning

🔗 sign up here

 

COACHES + INSTRUCTIONAL LEADERS: THIS ONE’S FOR YOU.


✈️ November 5 – Coaching for Vibrant Learning (9am–3pm)

Why settle for coaching that feels like compliance? This day is built for instructional coaches, team leads, and anyone who supports teachers—giving you the tools and energy to make coaching joyful, impactful, and impossible to ignore.

🔗 sign up here


By Lacey Eckels December 2, 2025
The Prichard Committee's newest work on the Meaningful Diploma lifts up a challenge many districts feel: seniors often spend their final year in courses that feel disconnected from the futures they're stepping into. Fleming County High School saw that firsthand. Many seniors—especially those heading straight into work or technical programs—were sitting in traditional English classes that didn't match their goals, while their CTE pathways were buzzing with real-world learning, certifications, and purpose. That tension sparked a simple but powerful question: What if senior English lived where students already felt meaning? Fleming County's answer: allow seniors to earn their English credit inside their CTE pathway, where reading, writing, and communication flow from the authentic work they're already doing. The results are alive in classrooms. Instead of Beowulf, welding students analyze OSHA manuals tied directly to the safety skills they're building in the shop. Early childhood students write narratives grounded in their fieldwork with local preschoolers. Ag seniors craft informational pieces connected to the certifications they're earning. Family & Consumer Sciences students develop business concepts from the ground up: researching requirements, outlining processes, and writing the accompanying plans. It's still English—every priority standard intact—but suddenly relevant, embodied, and connected to a future students can see. CTE teachers teach English 12 themselves, using Schools PLP as the spine and collaborating with ELA colleagues to ensure rigor stays high—an approach that shows how staffing, standards, and pathways can work together instead of competing for time. The benefits are already visible: stronger writing across the building, clearer purpose for seniors, and a staff that sees itself less as “departments” and more as a unified team designing for student futures. Fleming County is illustrating how aligned, purposeful design of the student experience can strengthen both engagement and the quality of student work.
By Lacey Eckels November 18, 2025
Discover how Kentucky districts are leading the charge in local accountability — real stories from Fleming and Shelby Counties, a practical Alumni + Employer Roundtable tool, and your Fall Learning Flight Plan to design learner-centered Defenses of Learning.
By Lacey Eckels November 10, 2025
Discover how vibrant coaching fuels vibrant learning—explore the five-shift Coaching Transformations framework, access a free sample Coaching Cards deck, and join upcoming interactive sessions to design human-centered educator experiences.
Show More
By Lacey Eckels December 2, 2025
The Prichard Committee's newest work on the Meaningful Diploma lifts up a challenge many districts feel: seniors often spend their final year in courses that feel disconnected from the futures they're stepping into. Fleming County High School saw that firsthand. Many seniors—especially those heading straight into work or technical programs—were sitting in traditional English classes that didn't match their goals, while their CTE pathways were buzzing with real-world learning, certifications, and purpose. That tension sparked a simple but powerful question: What if senior English lived where students already felt meaning? Fleming County's answer: allow seniors to earn their English credit inside their CTE pathway, where reading, writing, and communication flow from the authentic work they're already doing. The results are alive in classrooms. Instead of Beowulf, welding students analyze OSHA manuals tied directly to the safety skills they're building in the shop. Early childhood students write narratives grounded in their fieldwork with local preschoolers. Ag seniors craft informational pieces connected to the certifications they're earning. Family & Consumer Sciences students develop business concepts from the ground up: researching requirements, outlining processes, and writing the accompanying plans. It's still English—every priority standard intact—but suddenly relevant, embodied, and connected to a future students can see. CTE teachers teach English 12 themselves, using Schools PLP as the spine and collaborating with ELA colleagues to ensure rigor stays high—an approach that shows how staffing, standards, and pathways can work together instead of competing for time. The benefits are already visible: stronger writing across the building, clearer purpose for seniors, and a staff that sees itself less as “departments” and more as a unified team designing for student futures. Fleming County is illustrating how aligned, purposeful design of the student experience can strengthen both engagement and the quality of student work.
By Lacey Eckels November 18, 2025
Discover how Kentucky districts are leading the charge in local accountability — real stories from Fleming and Shelby Counties, a practical Alumni + Employer Roundtable tool, and your Fall Learning Flight Plan to design learner-centered Defenses of Learning.
By Lacey Eckels November 10, 2025
Discover how vibrant coaching fuels vibrant learning—explore the five-shift Coaching Transformations framework, access a free sample Coaching Cards deck, and join upcoming interactive sessions to design human-centered educator experiences.
Show More


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