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Redford Union expands early‑college and CTE pathways; district touts credit transfer and industry partnerships
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Summary
Redford Union presented results of its early‑college program and new CTE offerings, reporting 80 students enrolled across cohorts, partnerships with Wayne County Community College and plans with Lawrence Technological University, and industry ties that grant students college credits and employability credentials.
Redford Union Schools District No. 1 told its board at a Dec. 16 workshop that its early‑college and career‑technical education programs are growing, offering students a path to postsecondary credentials while still in high school.
Presenters Laditra Lindsay Taylor, early college and careers coordinator, and Asha Shaw, district college and career programs counselor, described a four‑year early‑college model that begins in 10th grade and culminates in a thirteenth year of mostly college coursework. The district partners with Wayne County Community College for the majority of dual‑enrollment coursework and is planning to add programming through Lawrence Technological University in 2026. "When the students are done with our program, they're able to receive a certificate," Taylor said, noting students complete at least 15 college credits and verified community service or job‑shadow hours to meet MEMCA technical‑certificate requirements.
Board members were given outcome data: presenters said the program includes nine cohorts, with 74 graduates overall and about 47 of those (roughly 64%) earning an associate degree or other credential. Presenters said students in the program typically leave with about 58–60 transferable college credits.
The presentation also outlined three state‑approved CTE pathways now available: automotive technology, early childhood education and computer information systems (networking/cybersecurity). The automotive pathway includes articulation for up to 16 college credits at Wayne County Community College and work‑based placements with local Ford dealers (Pat Milliken Ford and Bill Brown Ford). The CIS pathway prepares students for CompTIA credentials and will offer competitive experiences through CyberPatriot.
A student who spoke at the meeting said the program "helped me with my persona and my attitude," praising the college exposure and practical supports. Board members and staff discussed capacity limits—presenters said staffing and logistics currently limit expansion beyond district students but noted the district is exploring scaled options such as adding a college fair and expanding cohort capacity when staffing allows.
The board requested continued reporting on student outcomes and transfer rates. Administrators said program growth, articulation credits and credential attainment are guiding decisions about staffing and postsecondary partnerships.
The early‑college and CTE expansion was presented as informational; no budget vote was taken on the presentation itself. The district will present related budget requests for board action in January.

