Louisville – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Fri, 01 Nov 2024 21:30:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Louisville – 社区黑料 32 32 鈥楴umerous鈥 Complaints of Kentucky Foster Youth Sleeping in Office Buildings /article/numerous-complaints-of-kentucky-foster-youth-sleeping-in-office-buildings-spark-investigation/ Sat, 02 Nov 2024 16:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=734901 This article was originally published in

After receiving what she called 鈥渘umerous鈥 complaints about foster children in Kentucky without supervision by trained staff, state Auditor Allison Ball said Tuesday the Office of the Ombudsman will investigate.

Calling it an 鈥渙ngoing crisis鈥 that is 鈥測ears鈥 in the making, Ball said the will investigate the Cabinet for Health and Family Services to get at the root causes.

Terry Brooks, the executive director of Kentucky Youth Advocates, said the problem isn鈥檛 new 鈥 and solving it won鈥檛 be聽 simple or cheap.


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It involves a 鈥渘iche population鈥 of high-needs youth who likely need specialized care, he told the Lantern.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not typically 5-year-old kids who look like they fell off a TV commercial,鈥 Brooks said. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e talking about older kids, teenagers, high levels of acuity, probably some special needs, probably with a history of aggressive behavior. I鈥檓 painting a portrait of a young person who we definitely need to care for, but we know it鈥檚 going to take creativity and resources to be able to do that.鈥

A spokesperson for the auditor said the office thinks the practice has 鈥渂een going on for two years and has affected about 300 children, but we鈥檒l know exactly once we dig in.鈥

The cabinet said in a statement that it has 鈥渢aken action to address the challenges that come with placing youth with severe mental and behavioral problems or a history of violence or sexual aggression with foster families or facilities.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檝e publicly addressed this many times with lawmakers and have offered more funding to secure additional safe, short-term care options for youth,鈥 a cabinet spokesman said. 鈥淲hen one of these placements are necessary, we work to make sure each youth has a safe place to stay until a placement can be made. We urge those interested in becoming a foster parent to help us meet the needs of all our youth, please visit聽.鈥

In 2023, The Courier Journal reported that a was a factor in the state鈥檚 decision to house some youth in a Louisville office building. earlier this year that the practice has continued, despite concerns raised by a Louisville judge.

鈥淢y office has continued to receive numerous complaints of foster children and teenagers sleeping on cots and air mattresses in office buildings, often not supervised by trained staff,鈥 Ball said in a statement. 鈥淚 have instructed the Ombudsman鈥檚 Office to investigate this issue to uncover the problems associated with this ongoing crisis.鈥

鈥淭he vulnerable children of Kentucky deserve to be placed in nurturing environments where they are provided with the resources, stability, and care they need,鈥 Ball said.

Staff are still trying to confirm how many office buildings are involved, a spokesperson for Ball said, though 鈥渨e can confirm that this is not exclusively a Jefferson County issue.鈥澛

Sleeping in an office building can compound trauma youth already have experienced, Brooks said. 鈥淚t certainly is not going to create a positive childhood experience,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 going to create more adversity to kids who have already experienced too much adversity.鈥

Kentucky 鈥榗an鈥檛 do this on the cheap鈥

Kentucky needs more families to , but it also needs a better system to support children who can鈥檛 be placed, Brooks said. Kentucky must 鈥渋ncentivize鈥 鈥 through higher wages and reimbursements 鈥 a 鈥渨illingness to take on tough cases.鈥.

Lawmakers can look to Tennessee, he said, which has faced and responded by increasing聽 payments to foster parents and wages to state staff working with higher-needs children.

鈥淭hey have just owned the fact that,鈥榠f I鈥檓 getting paid $15 an hour, I鈥檓 probably not going to be volunteering to get bitten, spit on and other issues with tough kids,鈥欌 Brooks said.

Another solution Kentucky should consider, Brooks said, would be聽 to 鈥 safe, secure, designated spaces 鈥 to temporarily house children who can鈥檛 immediately be placed.

鈥淚f the General Assembly cares about those kids sleeping in offices as much as (CHFS Secretary Eric Friedlander) and Auditor Ball, then they鈥檝e got to take action,鈥 Brooks said. 鈥淎nd it can鈥檛 be rhetorical. It has to be resources. So I don鈥檛 know if that is looking at existing resources, I don鈥檛 know if that鈥檚 taking the big swing (and) reopening the budget, but you can鈥檛 do this on the cheap.鈥

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jamie Lucke for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com. Follow Kentucky Lantern on and .

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The Student-Led Music Group that Led Zeppelin Loves /article/the-school-music-group-that-led-zeppelin-loves/ Thu, 18 Jul 2024 12:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=729961 Music teacher Diane Downs had no idea her music class students would end up performing for Ozzy Osbourne, or that Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin would praise their cover of 鈥淜ashmir鈥 on Facebook, saying 鈥渋t鈥檚 too good not to share.鈥

But the , a music group made up of second- to 12th-graders began in humbler circumstances at Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School in Louisville, Kentucky. In 1993, Downs was searching a school closet for bulletin board paper but found a closetful of instruments instead. So, she asked her students if they wanted to do a concert. 

鈥淵ou know, being second- and third-graders, they鈥檙e fearless,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o they were just, 鈥楲et鈥檚 do this!鈥


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First, they played at a PTA meeting and then at a nursing home. Ms Downs said the invitations to perform kept coming, leading them to play all over Louisville, and then across the country. 

In 2003, the group became a non-profit organization, offering the Leopard experience to more kids beyond King Elementary. Three years later, HBO documented the group鈥檚 journey to New York City to open for the Chick Corea Trio in the film The Leopards Take Manhattan

But what really skyrocketed the Leopards to stardom was when a YouTube video of them playing Ozzy Osbourne鈥檚 Crazy Train went viral.

鈥淥ut of the blue, we got a check from Ozzy Osbourne to help support our group,鈥 Downs said. 

A couple years later, they were invited to appear on the reality show Ozzy and Jack鈥檚 World Detour

鈥淪ome of the kids didn鈥檛 know who he was, so we had to do a little education, and they know who he is now,鈥 she added.

The group鈥檚 cover of Led Zeppelin later also went viral on YouTube. Downs said the views went from 6,000 to 6 million views in a week. The students did interviews with media outlets all over the world. 

While the students don鈥檛 really understand the impact that the group had in their lives when they were younger, Downs said, 鈥淚 have had alumni come back to me and just say, 鈥業 can鈥檛 believe I did that when I was a kid鈥 I can鈥檛 believe that happened to me.鈥

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Relied on by Parents, Hailed by Schools, GPS Bus Trackers Raise Security Risks /article/relied-on-by-parents-hailed-by-schools-gps-bus-trackers-raise-security-risks/ Wed, 24 Jan 2024 11:01:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=720760 Louisville father Robert Bramel began to panic. Hours after the first day of elementary school ended in August, his two sons hadn鈥檛 yet returned home, and he grew frightened for their safety. 

It wasn鈥檛 until after 7 p.m. that evening when the boys, 5-year-old William and 8-year-old Joseph, arrived on a school bus unharmed.Their delayed return was the result of what officials at Kentucky鈥檚 Jefferson County Public Schools a 鈥渢ransportation disaster鈥: A tech-enabled bus routing system implemented to improve efficiency backfired and some kids didn鈥檛 make it home until nearly 10 p.m. 

鈥淚 was wondering, 鈥業s my son safe?鈥 鈥 Bramel told 社区黑料. 鈥淎re they safe? Are they OK? Did anything happen?鈥


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Months later, Bramel is once again upset and concerned that his kids had been left vulnerable. Again, technology is the culprit. After the bus delay fiasco, school officials in Louisville signed up for a GPS tracking system offered by the Montana-based company Education Logistics, commonly known as Edulog. Through an app, the system gives parents real-time information about the location of their children鈥檚 school buses. 

The service offers parents valuable updates about bus arrivals and departures and tools like it have been embraced by families and heralded by school officials across the country, especially when there are busing snafus. Bramel said he now regularly relies on the Edulog service. Yet in Louisville and at districts nationwide, cybersecurity researchers found, vulnerabilities could have left sensitive data open to exploitation by bad actors. 

James Sebree, a senior staff research engineer at Maryland-based cybersecurity company Tenable, said his inquiry into Edulog鈥檚 Parent Portal began after a friend voiced security concerns as it was being rolled out at his child鈥檚 school. . Because the Edulog apps lacked sufficient authentication and access controls, anybody could access a large swath of sensitive information about students and families with little more than a free account. Among the exposed records were the real-time location of school buses, pick-up and drop-off times, information about scheduled delays, logs of students who were assigned to specific routes and their parents鈥 contact information. 

鈥淚t was startling to see the extent to which we were able to access information by bypassing the client-side restrictions, particularly when that information involved minors,鈥 Sebree said in an email to 社区黑料. Sebree said his firm isn鈥檛 aware of any instances where the data was actually exploited by bad actors and that Edulog worked quickly to patch the vulnerabilities once Tenable alerted them to the issues in early September. But the bug while it existed, he said, was relatively easy to exploit. 

鈥淕PS data in conjunction with parental contact information, if compromised,鈥 he said, 鈥 could lead to scary situations for parents and students.鈥

School districts nationwide have increasingly turned to GPS tracking systems to help keep parents in the loop about arrival and departure times, particularly amid a national that鈥檚 led to chaos in many places and education leaders having to rethink their transportation logistics. 

In Louisville, the school bus woes forced leaders to cancel classes for several days right at the beginning of the new academic year. Last March, Chicago Public Schools to address widespread transportation hurdles of its own, including canceled routes and unreliable service. In some instances, the district has called on taxis and paid $500 transportation stipends to parents to get kids to and from school. 

As school districts increasingly turn to thousands of third-party education technology vendors to streamline instruction and across all parts of their operations, the Edulog vulnerability highlights how such arrangements can introduce new privacy and security risks, especially when for-profit companies collect sensitive information like real-time location data involving students. 

Edulog claims more than 6 million students are transported on school buses equipped with its software. Recent customers include the school districts in Wichita, Kansas, Newport News, Virginia, and Greenwich, Connecticut, according to data from GovSpend, which tracks government procurement. 

In , the company acknowledged that it had been notified of 鈥渁 potential vulnerability鈥 and that they had 鈥渞esearched the issue and resolved it in the next build of the product.鈥 Yet the company is not contractually obligated to notify their customer districts or parents that the weakness was uncovered, Lam Nguyen-Bull, Edulog鈥檚 chief experience officer and general counsel, told 社区黑料 in an interview. At the same time, she recognized the student safety risks involved in the potential breach of real-time GPS data is 鈥渃ertainly a concern.鈥 

鈥淭hat鈥檚 something that districts have to weigh, as it is any time you get into a service like this: What are you willing to risk and is it worth the cost?鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou can take as many cautions as possible, but a creative and dedicated person will always be able to find a vulnerability.鈥 

Mark Hebert, the Jefferson County Public Schools spokesperson, said in an email the Louisville district relies on Edulog鈥檚 鈥淟ite鈥 version, which offers parents bus location information 鈥渂ut little else.鈥 

Yet for Bramel, news that the bus tracker that he found so handy carried privacy risks brought newfound anxiety. Bramel said that he had heard rumors about a Edulog security lapse but hadn鈥檛 received formal outreach from the district, leaving him to wonder about the types of information that could have been exposed. 

He said school transportation in Louisville remains so erratic that he鈥檚 considered moving out of the district boundaries altogether. Allowing anyone access to real-time school bus information, he said, could have been catastrophic. 

鈥淭hat鈥檚 infuriating because that puts my child at risk, that鈥檚 their life in danger,鈥 he said. 鈥淎 perpetrator could be meeting up or something like that. Human trafficking is still going on.鈥 

The privacy implications of bus trackers

Edulog鈥檚 Nguyen-Bull noted that privacy issues have been present ever since GPS services were first introduced to consumers in the late 1980s. Such implications are perhaps amplified in the context of students and schools, but ultimately, she said, they take a back seat for most people.

鈥淭he truth is, we generally are lazy beings, right?鈥 Nguyen-Bull said. 鈥淲e go for convenience.鈥 

Edulog has been providing school districts with bus routing services since 1977, but Nguyen-Bull said it was consumers who ultimately began to push for real-time GPS tracking about a decade ago. 

Numerous companies now offer such services for school buses, including in big urban districts like , which just launched its long-awaited tracker last week; and Los Angeles. The services, however, haven鈥檛 always lived up to the expectations of parents or school bus drivers, with both reporting accuracy concerns. The power of real-time information has also introduced new safety risks, Nguyen-Bull said. If the app says a bus is expected to arrive five minutes late, she said that 鈥減ersonal optimizers鈥 will use that information to delay their trek to the bus stop. 

鈥淭hat creates problems where kids are rushing across streets or they鈥檙e not being careful in how they approach the bus,鈥 she said, adding that the issue is compounded in instances when the GPS information is inaccurate. 鈥淲e鈥檝e become so reliant on our phones that we don鈥檛 actually look up and see what the reality is.鈥 

Meanwhile, over the last year the federal government has placed a heightened emphasis on cybersecurity risks introduced to the education sector through third-party technology vendors like Edulog. In September, the federal Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency to sign a voluntary pledge and commit to building products with robust security protections. Companies that sign the pledge agree to 鈥渞adical transparency鈥 and to 鈥渢ake ownership of customer security outcomes.鈥 

In a December blog post, the federal cybersecurity agency noted that school districts should not be required to 鈥渂ear the cybersecurity burden alone,鈥 and advocated for shifting many responsibilities to vendors. 

鈥淐ybersecurity issues facing K-12 could be much more effectively and cheaply dealt with earlier in the supply chain, by focusing on a relatively smaller number of linchpin companies serving very large numbers of students and educators instead of school district by school district, school by school,鈥 the post noted. 

But Nguyen-Bull said her company was uninterested in signing the pledge, calling it meaningless without any clear cybersecurity standards. Yet she also balked at the idea of regulations that would set specific cybersecurity requirements. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e not just going to sign random pledges that ask for slightly different things if we don鈥檛 know if we can track those things,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s a small family-run business, we don鈥檛 have five compliance people tracking all of the different pledges and ensuring that we check all of the boxes.鈥

Sebree, of the cybersecurity firm Tenable, said that transparency about security lapses is key, telling 社区黑料 in an email that vendors 鈥渉ave an ethical responsibility鈥 to inform customers in a timely manner so they can make knowledgeable decisions. 

鈥淣otifying their customers that a vulnerability had been discovered and fixed, even if no evidence of a breach was found, would have been the most transparent action here,鈥 he said. 鈥淐ustomers deserve to know when their data has been at risk so they can make decisions in the future with all of the information in hand.鈥 

Louisville father Bramel said that he and other parents should also have been notified 鈥 either by the district or the company itself 鈥 about the extent that information had been exposed to preserve trust.

鈥淲hen you鈥檝e got to rely on this system to cover your kids and they can鈥檛 have open communication, what other issues are going on besides that issue?鈥 Bramel asked. 鈥淚鈥檓 honestly shocked there aren鈥檛 lawsuits and stuff like that happening right now 鈥 because this is completely uncalled for.鈥

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How One High School Turns Career Dreams into Practical Pathways /article/how-one-high-school-turns-career-dreams-into-practical-pathways/ Thu, 08 Dec 2022 18:00:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=701038 This article was originally published in

 sits near the heart of Louisville, KY, down the street from a community college, two big hospitals, a museum, and a short hop to the Jefferson County courthouse and the central business district. But take a different turn off the nearby Interstate and you see a far less prosperous Louisville, with homeless encampments, empty lots, public housing, and the flashing lights of police and ambulance sirens day and night.

Central, the alma mater of heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali, has a mostly Black student body and 70 percent of its students are from low-income families. It鈥檚 had some tough knocks against it over its 150-year history, and it鈥檚 not where Rikaiya Long, now a junior, first thought about going after middle school. She was a high-achieving student, doing well in advanced classes. Many who knew her assumed she would head to , widely considered one of the best high schools in the state.


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But Rikaiya, an aspiring lawyer, felt confident about choosing Central instead, where more than 60 percent of graduates go to college. 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 put myself in a position to get a subpar education,鈥 she says. Middle schoolers can apply to a high school in Louisville, and every year school representatives make their pitch to eighth graders, touting their school鈥檚 offerings. At one such session, Rikaiya learned that Central had a solid reputation for supporting its students while providing rigorous pathways toward their futures. 鈥淚 knew I wanted to be in a legal profession,鈥 says Rikaiya. Central offered a Law Magnet program with a sterling record. Its alumni, she found out, included attorneys, elected officials, and judges. Seven Law Magnet graduates were in law school in 2022. And that鈥檚 what Rikaiya wanted as well 鈥 to go to law school.

Pathways to career options

Not many eighth graders are as focused as Rikaiya. For too many teens, high school is little more than an annoying habit they must put up with until graduation. Beyond that, their goals are often vague. Some, like Rikaiya, have been steered to college, but chances are high that many teens haven鈥檛 received much guidance.

Some educators are changing this by giving every student an education that provides a solid direction 鈥 a pathway 鈥 after graduation. At Central, Magnet Coordinator Cynthia Eddings-King explains that students are encouraged early on to think beyond high school, and they鈥檙e given several pathway choices through the school鈥檚 magnet programs that lead from getting a diploma to getting a life.

Pathway programs combine academics with exposure to careers in specific fields.  include Innovation (STEM), Medical/Health Services, Teaching and Learning, Montessori, and, of course, Law and Government. Each pathway includes real-life experiences, such as job shadowing or internships, connections to community businesses and professionals, and in some fields, professional certification that can lead to a job right after graduation.

Teachers at Central also see part of their role as making sure youth of color realize all their options, explore them, and go for what they want. Shantel Reed, nursing pathway coordinator and a registered nurse, says she is thrilled to watch teens learn about different medical professions available to them. They return from visiting a hospital, she says, amazed at seeing jobs they didn鈥檛 even know existed鈥攍ike a speech language pathologist checking patients鈥 swallowing function. 鈥淚 can tell them all day, but when they are following someone all day, they get it. There are jobs they never imagined.鈥

School culture is part of its mission

While Central gets high marks for its magnet structure and curriculum, what seems to be the glue holding the pieces of the puzzle together is its school culture, where administrators, teachers, students, and staff all feel as if they have each other鈥檚 back. That was something new for Rikaiya.

鈥淚鈥檝e always been in (advanced) classes,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I鈥檝e been the only Black girl. At Central, I have classes where everyone looks like me. It鈥檚 an amazing feeling; I feel extremely comfortable.鈥 She adds that this has created a more relaxed learning atmosphere for her. The academics are still rigorous, but the sense of being with family makes learning natural, she says.

Central was Louisville鈥檚 high school for Black students until 1956, when a school busing program began. After that initiative ended, Central, located in a Black neighborhood, reverted to a mostly Black student population. Today the school is 77 percent Black, 12 percent Hispanic, 7 percent white, and 4 percent other.

Principal Dr. Tameka Coleman is thrilled about that 7 percent. She sees Central鈥檚 culture having a positive effect on white kids, too. 鈥淭hese students will be the most well-versed, diverse kids because they have been able to garner an experience that their white counterparts will never have. They will see when an environment lacks diversity.鈥

Many of the other 93 percent, however, might experience culture shock in the other direction when they leave Central. At predominantly white institutions and workplaces, they won鈥檛 see as many Black and brown faces. They may wonder where they fit in.

Central will have given them one big advantage, however. They鈥檙e academically ready, says Coleman. 鈥淥ur college partners are always so complimentary on how Central students come in with an edge,鈥 Coleman says. The culture may be different, but the work is familiar because of the pathways program. The nursing students know how to draw blood. The law students are already dissecting cases and writing briefs. The engineering students are programming robotic animals. And Central鈥檚 vet students are doing things that many college students don鈥檛 learn until vet school 鈥 post grad, Coleman adds. 鈥淭hey can approach the work unapologetically and unafraid.鈥

Sometimes, the pathway changes

The culture of Central is supportive, but the schoolwork obviously has an impact. Assignments in all of the programs are often multilayered, for instance, with multimedia documentation and team presentations. Students meet and learn from local, practicing professionals. Students in every program are out in the community, participating in city forums, mentoring and teaching elementary school children, shadowing medical professionals at the hospital, or working at dental, vet, or law offices.

Rikaiya鈥檚 law magnet teacher (and magnet coordinator), Joe Gutmann, is a former prosecutor, 鈥渨ith a lot of experience and a lot of stories,鈥 says Rikaiya. The Law Magnet has a double-sized classroom, half of which is decked out as a courtroom to allow students to practice what they learn. After first seeing it in eighth grade, Rikaiya has become the one presenting in it. The junior classes鈥 mentors/student teachers from University of Louisville鈥檚 Brandeis School of Law sat on the bench listening to oral arguments from the briefs each student had written. The assignment regarded 鈥渟trict liability,鈥 and the case revolved around a Tiger King incident. 鈥淭he judges ask a lot of questions, and you鈥檙e defending your side. It鈥檚 not a debate, but it鈥檚 very intense. It makes you think on the spot,鈥 says Rikaiya, who adds enthusiastically that she enjoyed the presentation, and, at least for a while, the rest of her law studies, too. The curriculum鈥檚 practical, participatory education about law, democracy, and human rights also matched one of Central鈥檚 key principles, social justice, something Rikaiya feels strongly about.

Despite all that, she realized something during her sophomore year: 鈥淟aw didn鈥檛 grab my attention like I thought it would.鈥 That was during the pandemic, when the campus was closed and lawyer-wannabes had to figure out what practicing law meant over Zoom. 鈥淚 was still interested in the business aspect of things; I was still looking at a corporate career, but no longer a law job,鈥 she says. Rikaiya made the decision to change her intended college major. Through studying various law specialties, she came across public relations. 鈥淚 started to get to know what they actually do, and I kind of fell in love with the idea of becoming a public relations specialist.鈥

But now what? Just as at the end of eighth grade, she faced another big choice. Back then, she had successfully become one of a class of 350 accepted to Central, applying with the Law Magnet in mind. She鈥檇 spent the requisite first semester learning about all of Central鈥檚 magnets before joining Law and Government. Once you鈥檙e in a magnet, it鈥檚 a commitment. The curriculum from semester to semester, and year to year, is linked to your pathway. Changing magnets, though not impossible, would require a lot of catching up on classes and adjusting.

Another option, of course, was to change schools. Rikaiya never considered that. Ultimately, she decided it just wasn鈥檛 necessary. Her core academic classes would still provide the rigor she needs, and the skills taught in the law magnet would not go to waste. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to be a lawyer just because you鈥檙e interested in law. You can use your law degree for anything,鈥 Rikaiya says. She is reminded that Gutmann had often told them that the law touches everything: If there are regulations, policies, and contracts, the law is involved. One of the big advantages of pathways over older, more traditional vocational programs is that they are coupled with academics strong enough to help a student into college. Even if the first pathway a student takes isn鈥檛 what she envisioned, she can find another to her liking.

Her journey continues

Despite her qualms about practicing law, Rikaiya was elected president of the Law Magnet and of Central High School鈥檚 junior class. The people in her magnet are like family and those in the other magnets are like neighbors 鈥 and Rikaiya is the type of young woman to knock on a neighbor鈥檚 door and give them cookies. She wants to keep that feeling of family, community, and belonging alive. 鈥淚 like to intermix with people and have them meet each other, too. I connect people whenever I can.鈥

That is what others have done for her. When she changed her career goals, her teachers and counselor were there to help her. For college, Rikaiya is applying to Howard University, Florida A&M University, and Xavier University of Louisiana 鈥 all historically Black institutions with public relations programs. The teacher of her favorite class has already put her in touch with a Howard graduate working in the field.

It鈥檚 clear to Rikaiya that Central is committed to successful pathways for everybody, and that high school graduation isn鈥檛 the end of a journey, but just the beginning. She says learning now that law wasn鈥檛 what she thought it would be was the best thing. 鈥淚 definitely saved myself some money!鈥 she says, thinking of paying for a year or two of college and then changing her mind and major. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I like the career magnets; they help you really figure out what you like and what you want to do.鈥

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