Boerne- Fair Oaks Ranch | December 2025

Education

BY JARRETT WHITENER

The program aims to teach students vocational skills alongside professional development.

The Straight to Trades Program launched with the participation of 24 students.

Boerne ISD vocational students can participate in the Straight to Trades program, oering entrepreneurial experience.

PHOTOS COURTESY BOERNE ISD

Vocational students in Boerne ISD have a new program to take advantage of, oering 12th-grade students the opportunity to learn entrepreneurial and leadership skills before graduation. Straight to Trades Ownership is a program founded within Boerne ISD with the purpose of welding the relationship between trades and business ownership. The overview Started at the end of October, the program takes students through an 11-week business curriculum led by Andrew Flippo, executive director of the Hope Builds Life nonprot, which promotes local businesses. Flippo said this is a pilot program for the organization, which has been in development over the last year. “We wanted to go to the high school level to Straight to Trades program launches at Boerne ISD

teach some of the high-level skills in building a business, then go into some of the soft skills on the leadership side,” Flippo said. “When they go into the workforce, even if they don’t start a business, they will know how to work better with colleagues and move into a management role.” In the second phase of the program, students will move into the business incubator at Das GreenHaus, where they’ll begin developing their own trades-based companies with mentorship, resources and workspace funded by local spon- sors, according to an Oct. 3 news release. A closer look Das GreenHaus Executive Director Samantha Morganroth said the program will help expand entrepreneurship in the area and provide students with the resources needed to potentially start their own business. “We see so much value in bringing entrepre- neurship to high school students,” she said. “They have just as many brilliant ideas, and they are really excited about businesses and the ideas that they have.” At the end of the second phase, students will participate in a pitch competition, and the winners will have a sponsored membership at Das Green- Haus, providing hands-on experience.

Other contributors to the program include the Greater Boerne Chamber of Commerce, the Boerne Kendall County Economic Development Corpora- tion and community member Michael Ethridge. Why it matters Dorman Vick, Texas AG mechanics/welding teacher at Champion High School, said the program will help ll the growing skills gap in the country. Overall, Vick said he hopes to set an example for education across the state and country, encour- aging other school districts to put a spotlight on vocational education. Vick said the program’s success, which includes an initial 24 students, is a testament to the community’s collaborative eorts as organizations and leaders come together to rewrite how students receive education. “It is beyond humbling to see our community come together and form this Straight to Trades entrepreneurship program,” he said. “Not only have we been, for 21 years, trying to close the wid- ening skills gap, but now we are empowering these students to not only leave here making $80,000 a year, but also own their own companies.”

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