logo
This project-based high school serving 30 districts has endured for nearly two decades with a focus on STEM

This project-based high school serving 30 districts has endured for nearly two decades with a focus on STEM

Miami Herald08-05-2025
Albany
If anyone could sell you a $2 million school bus, it's Karina Butler.
The 17-year-old spent last fall learning about hydrogen fuel cells-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 "very pricey," she told The 74. That's a tough sell for cash-strapped districts in the state's capital region. So working with a local electrical equipment manufacturer, 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 New Tech Network 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's not a charter school and it's not a traditional district school. Technically, it's a state-funded technical school underwritten by two regional chapters of New York's Board of Cooperative Education Services, or BOCES, which typically offer training programs in welding, cosmetology and the like. Many rural districts rely on BOCES programs for one-off courses they can't 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.
"I sometimes personally call it 'a unicorn school' because it's something that doesn't exist in nature," said Sarah Hugger, Tech Valley's 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.
"You literally can't avoid anybody here," said junior Willow Kabel. While she's not good friends with all of her classmates, "I'd say I'm friendly with everyone."
She added: "A lot of us are introverts, so we don't want to socialize. But the introverts find each other."
In their applications, most prospective students say they're 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't want to continue with the same handful of kids they've always known.
"Everyone is coming from other districts, so no matter how many friends you had at your home district, coming here is basically starting over," said junior George Hartman. "And I think what that really does is it puts everyone on such a level ground."
Once they arrive, students encounter a program in which many classes are team-taught and interdisciplinary, with an emphasis on - perhaps even an obsession with - collaboration. Open-access, flexible work spaces dot the building, inviting impromptu brainstorms and conversations. Teachers long ago ditched the traditional coffee-and-donuts teachers' 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' time planning lessons together "is non negotiable," 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. "We know that being able to collaborate with others is going to help you now and in the future," said Principal Amy Hawrylchak. "So we want to give you those tools and skills while you're here."
For students, the responsibilities they bear for group projects are well understood. Unlike in many high schools that dabble in projects-these days that's basically every school-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, "I would just sit there and think, 'What am I going to do? How do I start this? How do I continue? How do I spread it out?' I wouldn't know what to do"
Teachers look closely at who's doing what and assign (or withhold) "collaboration points." 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's not participating can be removed from a team and lose valuable points.
"Here, if you don't work together, you don't really pass, and you don't do well," 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.
"We're bridging this gap between who you were in elementary and middle school and how you are going to function in college," said Hemmid, the special education teacher. That most commonly looks like helping kids develop so-called "executive functioning" 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. "The classroom just runs and it should be so that I don't need to say, 'Quick, let me prepare something so that my students can do this work.'"
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.
"Students who stay here graduate," she said, "and have since we started."
Once a year in the winter, all classes stop for a week so students can take part in a schoolwide "I-Term" that matches them with community partners to explore careers. Like much of the curriculum, the project is guided by the Japanese principle of "ikigai," 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 - 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. "We're saying, 'O.K., now we want to add the layer of: What are you good at?'"
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 - and how they can make a living doing it.
Pretty soon, Hawrylchak said, "They're aware of this entire Venn diagram" that encompasses a larger sense of purpose. That's when they begin job-shadowing for a week as juniors. As seniors, that becomes a two-week commitment, offering "a deeper, richer experience," 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's office and, later, for a legislative lobbyist. She eventually attended the U.S. Coast Guard Academy, intending to study politics.
"My deepest hope is that the kid exits high school with a sense of maybe, 'These are some things I don't want to do,' " Hugger said. " 'These are not things that inspire me or make my heart beat fast. And maybe here's the thing that I do want to do.' "
'The more times I do it, the more skills I learn'
Each fall, seniors spend about six weeks on a capstone project in which they partner with a local business - given the region, that can mean anything from a small advertising studio to IBM or State Street Bank.
Students take a day to "speed date" 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 makerspace 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 - or both - when called upon to make a presentation. Four years later, she is now quite comfortable in front of a crowd. "The more times I do it, the more skills I learn. You get better at it."
After graduation this spring, she's hoping to study education or museum curation at a nearby state university campus - she has always loved wandering through museums, ever since she visited one that her grandmother cleaned.
Her previous school couldn't come close to what Tech Valley offered: 100 community service hours, working with business partners, job shadowing.
"I 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," she said. "Instead of just sitting in traditional classes and people talking to you about their careers, you got to experience that."
This story was produced by The 74 and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
© Stacker Media, LLC.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AM Best to Speak in a Session at the 2025 CAS China Insurance Summit
AM Best to Speak in a Session at the 2025 CAS China Insurance Summit

Business Wire

time2 days ago

  • Business Wire

AM Best to Speak in a Session at the 2025 CAS China Insurance Summit

HONG KONG--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- AM Best will participate in a session during the Casualty Actuarial Society's fourth annual China Insurance Summit, taking place on Aug. 22, 2025, at the Mingyu Chengdu Dongda Hotel in Chengdu, China. Christie Lee, senior director, head of analytics, will speak at 2:30 p.m. CST in a session titled, 'Reinsurance Market Development Trends.' Additional AM Best attendees will include Judy Li, market development analyst, and Lucie Huang, senior financial analyst. Participants will be able to attend in-person or virtually. The event will be conducted in Mandarin, with limited sessions in English. This summit will feature an action-packed schedule with a broad range of topics. To learn more about the summit, visit the event website. To schedule a meeting, please contact Judy Li, or James Chan, Copyright © 2025 by A.M. Best Company, Inc. and/or its affiliates. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

ChatAndBuild Founder Christel Buchanan Wants to Make You an App Developer
ChatAndBuild Founder Christel Buchanan Wants to Make You an App Developer

Newsweek

time3 days ago

  • Newsweek

ChatAndBuild Founder Christel Buchanan Wants to Make You an App Developer

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. What started out as an advertising slogan for Apple more than 15 years ago has morphed into somewhat of a modern day colloquialism: There should be an app for that. Who hasn't—ticked off by an inconvenient annoyance or inspired by a stroke of midnight genius—thought, "If only I knew how to code?" Meet Christel Buchanan. Buchanan, the founder and CEO of ChatAndBuild, is on a mission to create a world where anyone, regardless of their ability to code, can turn their app dreams into a reality. "Why can't a grandmom in Thailand chat and build? Why can't my dad, who speaks Mandarin, chat and build?" Buchanan asked during a private interview following her panel discussion at Newsweek's Women's Global Impact forum. "Why is that only someone with a Stanford [computer science] degree in the Bay Area gets to build something and then walk away as a multibillionaire?" The Singaporean tech founder told Newsweek that while her dad isn't a multibillionaire yet, he's already built two games with her AI-driven platform. After seeing the mahjong game and Pac-Man game he built, Buchanan realized, "This could be big." Christel Buchanan, the founder and CEO of ChatAndBuild, joined Newsweek at the Women's Global Impact forum in New York earlier this month. Christel Buchanan, the founder and CEO of ChatAndBuild, joined Newsweek at the Women's Global Impact forum in New York earlier this month. Newsweek Illustration/Canva Using a conversational interface, ChatAndBuild empowers users to "chat" their software ideas into real products. Prompts like, "create an AI-powered horoscope quiz" or "build me a to-do app," are answered with products that are ready for use. The rapid ascent of AI has been likened to everything from the rise of the internet to the industrial revolution, but, to Buchanan, the potential of her platform feels closer to Instagram, a tech tool that offers everyone a chance to create. "If you think about social media, it kind of empowered anyone to take a photo and share it," she said. "This is going to be the next wave." She foresees that app-building and coding will change the same way that photography did with the introduction of smartphones. "Right now, there's maybe 5 million coders," Buchanan said. "How do we make it so that 1 billion people are able to code and talk to a computer?" As of today, about 150,000 users around the world are using ChatAndBuild to create their own tech products, she said. To put those figures into perspective: Buchanan began working on the platform only earlier this year, and it wasn't until May that the product was ready for the public. With ChatAndBuild, users "don't have to worry about code dependencies, code packages, which programming language [to] use," she explained during last week's Tech Savvy: Leveraging AI to Exceed Expectations panel. "Chat and build, and everything is done for you in one platform," she said. Buchanan's goal to democratize coding stems from her own path. Just a year into university, she abandoned a coveted government-sponsored scholarship in search for something more. It led her to a job at Twitter, where she eventually became the regional head of content for Asia, Middle East and Africa, and later to software company Brandwatch and blockchain platform Zilliqa. "I've always loved technology," she said with a massive smile. "Because, for me, technology was the great equalizer. It lifted me." "With AI, we're really at the most fundamental change. ... Everything [will] be disrupted in the next 10, 20 or 30 years," she continued. The AI revolution feels fairly recent for most, but there are already new concerns being raised. Buchanan—who staunchly believes that the future of tech is better understood through hackathons than thought-leadership conferences—said she's already beginning to see questions pop up about how generative AI models are storing data, with some worried that any intellectual property entered into a chatbot might no longer belong to the user. "This is something that we need to take note about, which is why I'm developing this idea that you can train and trade your AI agent," she said. "You should have ownership of your data." "I think it's going to become a very big topic in the next one, two years," she said. "It'll be a different kind of doomscrolling." It's why Buchanan has turned her attention to non-fungible agents (NFAs), a decentralized digital entity that would establish unique digital ownership. "Right now, there is no graphical user interface for AI," she explained. "It's a very bare bones kind of thing. We don't know what the operating system is going to look like, which is why it's going to be very interesting to see what happens."

Walmart in Central Mass. looking to become supercenter
Walmart in Central Mass. looking to become supercenter

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

Walmart in Central Mass. looking to become supercenter

A Walmart in West Boylston has been selected to become a Walmart supercenter, according to Town Administrator Heather Butler. Butler told the town select board last week that representatives from Walmart confirmed its plans to build the supercenter with town officials. The current store will be demolished to make way for the new supercenter, she said. In a post on Facebook, Select Board Chair Kristina Pedone wrote that the current store will be closed for 12 to 18 months starting in early 2027. The new store will be twice the size of the existing Walmart, which is located at 137 West Boylston St., according to Pedone. 'The new super center would include a full-service grocery department (produce, meat, bakery, deli, frozen foods), in addition to their existing merchandise and pharmacy,' Pedone wrote. 'Walmart will also expand online pickup and delivery services.' During the select board meeting, Butler told members that as part of the construction project, a significant portion of the building that once housed the West Boylston Cinema would be demolished. The cinema building is located at 101 West Boylston St., right next to Walmart. The West Boylston Cinema closed its doors for good in May 2024. During the construction process, employees at the West Boylston Walmart would be offered transfers to nearby Walmart locations, according to Pedone's post. Walmart has also offered to attend a future select board meeting to discuss the proposal, Pedone wrote. More Business News Tobacco harvest in full swing at Wendolowski Farm in Hatfield (Photos) Nationwide recall alert: Soap products may cause sepsis, life-threatening infections Popular regional bakery to close two Boston-area stores Say goodbye to your Hulu app - Disney is making a major change to how you'll stream in 2026 Business Monday ETC: Aug. 11, 2025 Read the original article on MassLive. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store