On Monday, it was all about maneuvering through a seemingly endless maze of high school hallways. By Tuesday, it was about soaring through the air on a zip line.
It was day two of LIFE, or Learning is for Everyone, a pilot program launched this summer for graduates of Whitehorse and Sennett middle schools. In the fall, the teens will enter La Follette High School as ninth-graders -- both statistically and anecdotally one of the toughest periods of a student's school career.
"Ninth grade can be a really rocky, challenging transition for many students," said Julie Koenke, a grant communications coordinator for the Madison School District who helped write the curriculum for LIFE. "They're not always sure of the change in expectations for them around academics. There's a different school culture, and just the largeness of what a high school can be."
LIFE -- which offers students everything from scavenger hunts at La Follette to learn their way around the school to an athletic ropes course, classes on time management and visits to MATC and UW-Madison -- is part of a trend: High schools are reaching out to freshmen to keep them in school even before the school year begins.