


At-a-Glance: Redefining Readiness
Harford County Public Schools’ Key Shifts
- 3 E’s of Readiness: Enroll, Enlist, or be Employed – all equally valued.
- Alternative Ed → Launchpads: Hybrid + virtual hubs for flexible, student-driven learning.
- Middle School Matters: Career coaching + project-based learning start early.
- Teacher Time Protected: More planning, less overload, greater autonomy.
- Career Pipelines Built Locally: Apprenticeships + grow-your-own educator programs
By the Numbers
students in Harford County Public Schools.
equal postsecondary pathways framed with the same value.
of middle schools implementing career-connected learning.
The most powerful shifts in education rarely make a splash. They tend to start quietly—sometimes in the spaces between bells, in the moments before a class begins, or in a passing conversation in the hallway.
They start when leaders pause before prescribing solutions. When they ask, “What’s already working?” When they choose to listen not just to data, but to the heartbeat of a school.
That’s the kind of leadership we saw in Harford County Public Schools. In our recent conversation with Superintendent Dr. Sean Bulson on The K–12 Change Equation, we met a leader who believes that change moves at the speed of trust. That trust isn’t built through top-down mandates, but through a willingness to listen, learn, and lead alongside the people most affected by change.
Readiness Redefined
For decades, “readiness” has too often meant one thing: college enrollment. According to the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), postsecondary enrollment rates have been used as a primary success metric since the 1980s. Yet the Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce reports that nearly 30% of good jobs—those paying $45,000 or more for workers under 45—are held by people without bachelor’s degrees.
Readiness for life is bigger than a single postsecondary path. It includes apprenticeships, military service, entrepreneurial ventures, industry-recognized certifications, and careers that start right after high school.
As Dr. Bulson shares, “It’s enlist, enroll, or be employed. All three matter. All three deserve equal value.”
In Harford County, this reframing has opened doors for students who may not see themselves on a traditional four-year track but who are deeply capable, ambitious, and ready for success in other arenas.
Starting from Stillness
This shift didn’t begin with disruption. It began with stillness.
Like many districts, Harford County faced familiar challenges:
- A narrow readiness lens prioritizing college over other valid options.
- A “missing middle”—middle school caught between early literacy priorities and high school graduation goals, without a clear readiness role.
- Technology trade-offs—devices increased access but raised concerns about focus, attention, and digital well-being (Common Sense Media reports teens spend over 8 hours daily on screens, affecting cognitive endurance).
- Teacher fatigue—educators navigating multiple mandates and reform fatigue.
Rather than rushing toward solutions, leaders began by listening—to students, to staff, and to the community—and letting those voices shape the work.
A Readiness Playbook Built on Human Connection
The district’s approach reflects a growing body of research (Fullan, 2020; Bryk & Schneider, 2002) showing that belonging and purpose are as critical to readiness as academic preparation.
- Reimagining Alternative Education as a Launchpad
Former alternative education sites are now hybrid/virtual hubs offering synchronous, asynchronous, and in-person options. Flexible scheduling supports students earning early college credit, meeting graduation requirements, or reengaging after setbacks—similar to the successful Big Picture Learning model, which reports 90% graduation rates. - Framing Postsecondary Pathways with Equal Value
College, military service, and direct-to-career entry are framed as equally valid. District communications and career nights highlight all options, addressing the American Institutes for Research finding that students’ aspirations align more strongly with outcomes when multiple paths are visibly celebrated. - Building Apprenticeship Pipelines with Business Partnerships
Partnerships with local industry have expanded apprenticeships. Students gain technical skills, professional networks, and confidence—echoing Swiss and German vocational models where youth unemployment rates are among the world’s lowest (OECD, 2020). - Centering Career-Connected Learning in Middle School
Middle schoolers engage in project-based learning, career coaching, and life-skills integration. Research from the University of Chicago’s Consortium on School Research shows that middle school engagement predicts high school persistence more than test scores alone. - Starting Innovation with Strengths
Before launching initiatives, leaders ask, “What’s already working?” Appreciative Inquiry, used here, has been shown to increase buy-in and sustainability of change efforts (Cooperrider & Whitney, 2005). -
Protecting Teacher Time and Autonomy
Schedules are reviewed to safeguard planning time. Professional learning shifts toward collaborative, teacher-driven design. The RAND Corporation has found that educator autonomy correlates with higher job satisfaction and innovation.
- Investing in Grow-Your-Own Talent Pipelines
Recruiting future educators from high school and paraeducator ranks builds a workforce that mirrors the community and improves retention (Learning Policy Institute, 2021). - Making Technology Human-Centered
Intentional boundaries around device use ensure technology enhances—not replaces—face-to-face interaction. This aligns with research from MIT’s Sherry Turkle on the social-emotional costs of over-reliance on screens.
Why This Matters
The Harford County story isn’t about one program. It’s about a shift in mindset: readiness as a living practice rooted in relationships.
When leaders begin with listening, they create conditions where change endures. When teachers have autonomy and time, students benefit. When every pathway is valued, more students can see themselves in the future.
Most importantly, when readiness is reframed as belonging, purpose, and agency, graduates are prepared not just for their next step, but for a lifetime of contribution.
Readiness at a Glance
College Isn’t the Only Path
- 29% of good jobs (≥$45k/year for workers under 45) are held by people without bachelor’s degrees. (Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce, 2023)
Middle School Matters
- Engagement in grades 6–8 predicts high school persistence more strongly than standardized test scores. (UChicago Consortium on School Research, 2014)
Apprenticeships Work
- Swiss and German youth apprenticeship systems contribute to youth unemployment rates under 8%, among the lowest globally. (OECD, 2020)
Teacher Autonomy Boosts Retention
- Educators with higher decision-making power are 14% more likely to remain in their schools. (RAND Corporation, 2022)
Technology Use Needs Boundaries
- Teens average 8 hours, 39 minutes/day on screens outside of schoolwork. Overuse correlates with decreased face-to-face connection. (Common Sense Media, 2022)
Case Studies
Harford County, MD
Turned alternative education centers into flexible hybrid/virtual hubs, leading to increased credit recovery and early college participation.
( AASA Case Study: Harford County Public Schools (Maryland) (AASA Learning 2025) )
Denver, CO
CareerConnect pathways link students to industry mentors; over 1,000 apprentices placed since 2017. ( AASA Case Study: Denver Public Schools CareerConnect Apprenticeship Program )
Lindsay Unified, CA
Uses “strengths first” approach; graduation rates rose 12% after shifting to competency-based, personalized learning.
( Competency Works — Strong Evidence from Lindsay Unified, Digital Promise – Inside Lindsay Unified’s Learning Communities )
References
- Carnevale, A. P., Cheah, B., & Hanson, A. R. (2023). The Good Jobs Project: Three Educational Pathways to Good Jobs for Young Adults Without a Bachelor’s Degree. Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce. https://cew.georgetown.edu/cew-reports/good-jobs-young-adults/
- Farrington, C. A., Roderick, M., Allensworth, E., Nagaoka, J., Keyes, T. S., Johnson, D. W., & Beechum, N. O. (2012). Teaching Adolescents to Become Learners: The Role of Noncognitive Factors in Shaping School Performance. University of Chicago Consortium on School Research. https://consortium.uchicago.edu/publications/teaching-adolescents-become-learners-role-noncognitive-factors-shaping-school
- Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). (2020). Education at a Glance 2020: OECD Indicators. OECD Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1787/69096873-enSchwartz, H. L., et al. (2022). The American Teacher Panel: How Decision-Making Power Relates to Teacher Retention. RAND Corporation. https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA134-10.html
- Common Sense Media. (2022). The Common Sense Census: Media Use by Tweens and Teens, 2021. https://www.commonsensemedia.org/research/the-common-sense-census-media-use-by-tweens-and-teens-2021



Dr. Mort Sherman is a longtime superintendent and national education leader with decades of experience advancing student-centered innovation. As former Senior Associate Executive Director at AASA, he led the development of leadership programs that continue to shape the next generation of school system leaders.
Dr. Sean Bulson is beginning his 8th year as superintendent of Harford County Public Schools in northeastern Maryland serving 38,000 in 55 schools. A former ESOL teacher and high school principal, he is starting his 13th year overall as a superintendent. Dr. Bulson serves on the executive committee for the American Association of School Administrators (AASA) and was Maryland's 2024 Superintendent of the Year.