| Educators have been frustrated
by senioritis for years.
"The 12th grade is the biggest wasteland in America,"
Charles Reed, chancellor of the California State University system,
told USA Today.
Some schools allow internships, letting seniors take classes
at local colleges and universities, or by instituting special
skill building programs that give students a taste of what's to
come.
At Freeport High School in Maine, seniors apply to participate
in a month-long project that they must turn into a presentation.
Often projects are related to or lead to post-graduation work
or study.
One student refurbished a lobster boat in preparation of becoming
a commercial fisherman and another traveled to Korea to visit
her birth family.
"You hear these clichés about authentic learning,
but it really is an experience, a huge source of community pride,"
the school's principal Tom Edwards told the Portland Press Herald.
"This is an opportunity to gain real-life experience,"
Sara Maghen, who is interning at Los Angeles Superior Court and
is considering becoming a lawyer, told Time magazine.
"This is way more interesting than studying for my advanced-placement
bio test."
At New Trier Township High School in Illinois seniors, take a
"Senior Institute" in which they learn about money management,
college life, eating disorders and other issues.
"It's human to be thinking about what is ahead," Janice
Dreis, one of the school's directors, told the Washington Post.
"We have to let them think about that."
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