The Kirkland Ranch Academy of Innovation (KRAI) near Tampa, Florida is giving teenagers the opportunity to have a different kind of high school experience - one that’s essentially a trade school to create a pipeline to landing a skilled blue-collar job. Considering how hard it has become for students with higher-education degrees to land their desired careers, KRAI may just have created a blueprint for an alternative form of schooling that focuses on the practical.
For the 30 to 40 percent of high schoolers not planning on attending an expensive four-year university course (or are simply and sensibly exploring alternative ideas), KRAI wants to give them the tools they need to land one of the 30 million well-paid jobs that don’t require a degree. The burgeoning 'green economy' is already crying out for more trained people to help America reach its climate goals.
KRAI teaches crafts and trades such as engineering, robotics, welding, cyber security, biomedical science, and patient care, reports Fast Company. It focuses on making learning interdisciplinary, like learning how to design a bridge in engineering and learning about the history of bridges in social studies.
It’s also highly collaborative, such as assigning projects where electrical engineering and robotics students work together to solve problems, says TheFutureParty.
Michael Kmak, the VP of CannonDesign (the firm that designed KRAI), says the Pasco County School District in Tampa took into account student, parent, and community needs when deciding how it wanted to organize the school and its curriculum - so everyone feels heard.