District CCR leaders presented a year‑end highlight and compliance report, describing the program that spans grades 7 through 12, includes roughly 67 courses taught by about 31 instructors, and must meet Perkins Grant and state reporting requirements. The presentation emphasized three program goals: expand community and industry connections, ensure curriculum aligns with employer needs, and provide workplace learning opportunities for students in each CCR course.
Presenters said the district’s robotics program increased mentorship and participation (including a run toward regional/worlds competition), and that the district piloted IBM data‑analytics certificates that are free to students. Staff discussed industry‑recognized certificates (IRCs) such as Microsoft Office Specialist and cautioned that some IRCs have substantial per‑student costs; advisory committees and employer partners — including Microsoft contacts and local engineers — help vet which certifications hold resume value for employers.
Board members asked how the district balances offering many emerging industry‑oriented courses with enrollment constraints in a single high school (the risk of 'singleton' classes that do not fill). Staff described partnerships with a regional consortium that allow students to take courses at other area high schools and summarized strategies to cycle courses to ensure sustainable offerings.
Why it matters: CCR programs provide pathways to college and careers and can confer industry certifications or college credits; how the district manages partnerships and course selection affects student readiness and district budget priorities.
What’s next: Staff said they will continue piloting low‑cost certificates, lean on advisory committees to validate IRC value, and work with counselors on scheduling to reduce singleton classes while preserving equitable access to pathways.