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Career, College and Life Ready

To be prepared for the future, each student needs a strong academic base. They also need essential life skills and support to explore – and find – their next steps to a happy, healthy and productive life.
 
From early childhood through high school, students are building academic and life skills. They are also exploring and finding their life, education and career path. We recognize that each student is on their own journey. Our job is to support them in finding and being prepared for the path they choose. 
 
When they leave our schools:
  • We want each student to have the skills they need for life, education and career success.  
  • We want each student to have explored and have a good idea of careers that may bring them joy and success.
  • We want each student to have exposure to college-level learning and the chance to earn some free credits.   
Along the way, we want each student to have learned how they can unlock their learning for life. 

Gaining Career, College and Life Ready Skills

Students "travel" the world simulating a security checkpoint at the airport
Academic learning is important. Just as important are the skills and mindsets students will need to succeed in the future.
 
At all grade levels, student work is designed to develop academic and life skills students will need in their future.
 
Students who engage with meaningful, relevant work are better able to apply their learning in situations they will encounter throughout their lives. Students learn more deeply when they are doing work they find relevant to their life and their future.
 
This is true at every age. Our teachers take this very seriously as they design student work. 
 

Exploring Careers

Middle school student works with elementary on prairie planting
We want to provide students with opportunities to explore their future possibilities based on their strengths and interests. When we do, we meet their current needs and set them up for long-term success. 
 
This all starts early in a child’s experience at Spring Lake Park Schools as we make connections between learning and life. When kids ask why they are learning something, we want to provide a real-life answer. Early on, this leads to connections students make between what they are learning and different professions.
 
As they grow, students learn more about how their strengths and interests might translate to specific career paths. Beginning in middle school, there are opportunities for students to more explicitly explore career paths through their learning experiences. 
 
At Spring Lake Park High School, career exploration becomes more concrete and immediate. Career and College Pathways are sets of courses students can take within specific industry and career sectors as they explore what they may like – or not like – to do in the future. 

Earning College Credits

Students pose with their college gear on decision day at the high school
Increasingly, any path beyond high school requires some exposure to college-level work. Our goal is for each student to have the chance to explore college courses at the high school with the potential to earn up to a semester of college credit before they graduate. That translates to 12 college credits by the end of the 12th grade – all without leaving their Spring Lake Park High School experience. 
 
Research shows that completion of one semester of college-level work results in greater success after high school regardless of the path you take. This approach prepares students for 2-year, 4-year and technical training and jobs. It also makes financial sense. Earning college credits now saves money in the future.
 
Spring Lake Park High School offers more than 50 courses that have opportunities for college credit. Learn more about the many pathways to earning college credit at the high school.

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A student in a business entrepreneurship presentation shakes hands with the audience