At Project-Based Tech Valley High School, Small Is Big
Uniquely funded school serves 30 districts, and balances high expectations with close relationships.

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Albany
If anyone could sell you a $2 million school bus, it鈥檚 Karina Butler.
The 17-year-old spent last fall learning about hydrogen fuel cells 鈥 New York school districts must stop buying conventional diesel buses by 2027, and by 2035, Butler explained, all school buses in the state must operate electrically.
The new buses are clean, she said, but at $2 million apiece they’re also 鈥渧ery pricey.鈥 That鈥檚 a tough sell for cash-strapped districts in the state鈥檚 capital region. So working with a local , she and three classmates developed a pitch for the company to deliver to nearby districts.
A senior at Tech Valley High School in Albany, N.Y., Butler is by now used to this. She said she owes her confidence to the school, which pushes students to embrace discomfort and grow into their own through an unusual mixture of corporate-inspired teamwork, self-discovery and personal attention from adults.
When it opened in 2007, Tech Valley was at the forefront of project-based STEM learning. One of the early schools, it was conceived during a high-tech building boom, taking its name from a marketing campaign in the late 1990s to promote eastern New York State as a high-tech competitor to Silicon Valley.

But while other schools built on the principles of STEM, projects or corporate partnerships have come and gone, Tech Valley has endured for nearly two decades. Now in its own boxy two-story building on another tech campus, it endures due to an unusual funding structure, small size and a close-knit community.
It鈥檚 not a charter school and it鈥檚 not a traditional district school. Technically, it鈥檚 a state-funded technical school underwritten by two regional chapters of New York鈥檚 Board of Cooperative Education Services, or , which typically offer training programs in welding, cosmetology and the like. Many rural districts rely on BOCES programs for one-off courses they can鈥檛 afford.
Tech Valley offers a BOCES program in STEM-focused, project-based learning that spans four years. Instead of a license or certificate, students earn a full diploma, taking a full load of courses that includes one year of computer science and two of Mandarin.
鈥淚 sometimes personally call it 鈥榓 unicorn school鈥 because it’s something that doesn’t exist in nature,鈥 said Sarah Hugger, Tech Valley鈥檚 outreach coordinator.
Even after 17 years, it enrolls just 150 students. As a BOCES program, the school draws students from 30 school districts via random lottery. The small size means virtually everyone knows each other.

鈥淵ou literally can鈥檛 avoid anybody here,鈥 said junior Willow Kabel. While she鈥檚 not good friends with all of her classmates, 鈥淚’d say I’m friendly with everyone.鈥
She added: 鈥淎 lot of us are introverts, so we don’t want to socialize. But the introverts find each other.鈥
In their applications, most prospective students say they鈥檙e looking for something different from what they got in their first eight years of schooling. Many write of bullying in elementary and middle school, often over gender identity. Others, from small towns, simply don鈥檛 want to continue with the same handful of kids they鈥檝e always known.
鈥淓veryone is coming from other districts, so no matter how many friends you had at your home district, coming here is basically starting over,鈥 said junior George Hartman. 鈥淎nd I think what that really does is it puts everyone on such a level ground.鈥
Once they arrive, students encounter a program in which many classes are team-taught and interdisciplinary, with an emphasis on 鈥 perhaps even an obsession with 鈥 collaboration. Open-access, flexible work spaces dot the building, inviting impromptu brainstorms and conversations. Teachers long ago ditched the traditional coffee-and-donuts teachers鈥 lounge for a central common work space with a long work table. Students are welcome.
Long, multi-period, interdisciplinary classes are the norm rather than the exception, and teachers鈥 time planning lessons together 鈥渋s non negotiable,鈥 said special education teacher Danielle Hemmid.
The school assesses students not just on communication and literacy but on their ability to work together to get things done. 鈥淲e know that being able to collaborate with others is going to help you now and in the future,鈥 said Principal Amy Hawrylchak. 鈥淪o we want to give you those tools and skills while you’re here.鈥
We know that being able to collaborate with others is going to help you now and in the future. We want to give you those tools and skills while you're here.
Amy Hawrylchak, principal
For students, the responsibilities they bear for group projects are well understood. Unlike in many high schools that dabble in projects 鈥 these days that鈥檚 basically every school 鈥 students at Tech Valley are graded not just on their work but on how they share and delegate tasks.
Freshman Ari Story recalled that when he was assigned a project at his previous school, 鈥淚 would just sit there and think, 鈥榃hat am I going to do? How do I start this? How do I continue? How do I spread it out?鈥 I wouldn’t know what to do鈥
Teachers look closely at who鈥檚 doing what and assign (or withhold) 鈥渃ollaboration points.鈥 Senior Teddy DuBois noted that in a few circumstances, teachers might even check the revision history on a shared document to determine if one person typed it all. Typically, though, teachers get good at spotting team members who are skating by and letting others do the work.
Eventually, skating by catches up: After three warnings, a student who鈥檚 not participating can be removed from a team and lose valuable points.
鈥淗ere, if you don’t work together, you don’t really pass, and you don’t do well,鈥 said Hartman.
Hawrylchak studied student and teacher agency in graduate school and as a result the school is thick with it. Virtually all clubs and activities, from debate to drama to flag football, are student-run.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the school attracts a large number of neurodivergent students. At last count, 35% of Tech Valley students arrived with either an individualized education plan or a less restrictive 504. Even with such a small student body, the school employs three full-time special education teachers.
鈥淲e’re bridging this gap between who you were in elementary and middle school and how you are going to function in college,鈥 said Hemmid, the special education teacher. That most commonly looks like helping kids develop so-called 鈥渆xecutive functioning鈥 skills that allow them to work independently.
The goal, she said, is to help every graduate do well in college with minimal accommodations such as more time on exams or extra help in a writing center.
By planning together, Hemmid said, teachers are able to anticipate the challenges students bring and navigate them. 鈥淭he classroom just runs and it should be so that I don’t need to say, 鈥楺uick, let me prepare something so that my students can do this work.鈥欌
While a direct comparison with local high schools is difficult, Hawrylchak said that with few exceptions students attend Tech Valley all four years. Of those, virtually 100% graduate.
鈥淪tudents who stay here graduate,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd have since we started.鈥
I-Term and 鈥榠kigai鈥
Once a year in the winter, all classes stop for a week so students can take part in a schoolwide 鈥淚-Term鈥 that matches them with community partners to explore careers. Like much of the curriculum, the project is guided by the Japanese principle of 鈥渋kigai,鈥 or purpose. It asks students to consider not only what they love to do and are good at, but what the world needs and what they might someday do well enough to earn a living.

As freshmen, students explore openly, Hawrylchak said 鈥 many freshman boys take this opportunity to shadow game designers at local studios, for instance. But by sophomore year, teachers are asking them to think more holistically about their purpose. 鈥淲e’re saying, 鈥極.K., now we want to add the layer of: What are you good at?鈥欌
It gets more complex: As juniors, they must confront not only their tastes and abilities, but whether the world needs what they have to offer 鈥 and how they can make a living doing it.
Pretty soon, Hawrylchak said, 鈥淭hey’re aware of this entire Venn diagram鈥 that encompasses a larger sense of purpose. That鈥檚 when they begin job-shadowing for a week as juniors. As seniors, that becomes a two-week commitment, offering 鈥渁 deeper, richer experience,鈥 she said.
It all leads to a lot of soul-searching, with students often taking years to narrow down their ideas. One student who loved soccer spent her first I-Term shadowing soccer coaches at both the high school and college levels, then developed an interest in politics and worked in a state senator鈥檚 office and, later, for a legislative lobbyist. She eventually attended the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, intending to study politics.
鈥淢y deepest hope is that the kid exits high school with a sense of maybe, 鈥楾hese are some things I don’t want to do,鈥 鈥 Hugger said. 鈥 鈥楾hese are not things that inspire me or make my heart beat fast. And maybe here’s the thing that I do want to do.鈥 鈥
鈥楾he more times I do it, the more skills I learn鈥
Each fall, seniors spend about six weeks on a capstone project in which they partner with a local business 鈥 given the region, that can mean anything from a small advertising studio to IBM or State Street Bank.
Students take a day to 鈥渟peed date鈥 with company representatives and figure out which one they want to work with. Then they settle in and work out solutions to a problem the company presents.
For one group this winter, the challenge was to design soundproofing surfaces for a in nearby Troy. DuBois, who wants to study engineering, designed a chandelier that absorbs sounds and a gaming surface that turns into a moveable, soundproof wall, while a classmate proposed panels filled with homegrown mushrooms that absorb sound.

Butler recalled that she was an abysmal public speaker when she arrived at Tech Valley as a freshman. She would cry, laugh 鈥 or both 鈥 when called upon to make a presentation. Four years later, she is now quite comfortable in front of a crowd. 鈥淭he more times I do it, the more skills I learn. You get better at it.鈥
I wanted to go (here) because they said that you get to go out on your own, discover who you want to be.
Karina Butler, student
After graduation this spring, she鈥檚 hoping to study education or museum curation at a nearby state university campus 鈥 she has always loved wandering through museums, ever since she visited one that her grandmother cleaned.
Her previous school couldn鈥檛 come close to what Tech Valley offered: 100 community service hours, working with business partners, job shadowing.
鈥淚 wanted to go [here] because they said that you get to go out on your own, discover who you want to be, what you are going to be,鈥 she said. 鈥淚nstead of just sitting in traditional classes and people talking to you about their careers, you got to experience that.鈥
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