Citizen Portal

Mooresville describes Skills for the Future pilot, expands summer offerings and plans community partnerships

Mooresville Graded School District Board of Education · March 4, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

District presenters updated the board on the Skills for the Future pilot (part of a $4 million initiative with state and national partners), reported cohort and artifact counts, described teacher coaching and business partnership outreach, and outlined expanded summer programs including increased Readers and Read to Achieve capacity and face‑to‑face high‑school credit recovery.

District presenters gave a multi‑part update March 3 on the Skills for the Future pilot and planned summer instructional programs.

Skills for the Future: Presenters described the pilot as a statewide initiative that Mooresville joined, noting partnerships with the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, ETS, AASA and the Carnegie Foundation. Staff said the initiative is part of a roughly $4,000,000 funded effort to cultivate and measure durable, workplace‑aligned skills (the district framed this as aligned with the Portrait of a Graduate). For the first semester, the district reported 10 staff members in cohort 1, 182 students participating and 349 artifacts uploaded; cohort 2 will include 12 staff (10 classroom teachers) and offers stipends up to $1,650 for participants who complete program components.

Presenters emphasized classroom integration: teachers are building tasks that pair academic content with collaboration and other durable skills, uploading student artifacts and coaching new cohort teachers. The district also highlighted network and community partnership events (a March 25 virtual session) intended to recruit business leaders for classroom experiences, mentorships, and brief virtual guest visits.

Summer programs: District staff outlined summer offerings for elementary and secondary students. Elementary Readers was expanded to five classrooms (six‑week program); Read to Achieve for grades 2–3 will run five weeks with six classrooms and aims to serve roughly 80–120 students depending on program. High‑school summer school will emphasize teacher‑led, face‑to‑face credit recovery (moving away from the previously used online Apex model for some offerings) and will include jump‑start transition programs; transportation, breakfast and lunch will be provided for summer sites.

Presenters said these programs are intended to provide targeted literacy and math support, credit recovery opportunities and additional career/college readiness experiences. Board members asked about community response and participation, and presenters asked for community outreach and volunteer involvement to support business partnership elements of the pilot.