Courses are designed for teacher-facilitated classrooms while maintaining the flexibility schools need to support a variety of scheduling models.
Aligned to Indiana’s Next Level Programs of Study course Computing Foundations for a Digital Age (4565), this course introduces students to the foundations of artificial intelligence and modern digital systems. Students explore
Designed for flexible implementation across middle or high school, the curriculum helps districts build an early computer science pipeline.
Structured lessons, real-world applications, and assessments support implementation even for teachers without a finance background.
PCC may be offered across grades 7–12, allowing schools to introduce career and postsecondary planning at the stage that best fits their students.
220 semester courses are designed for straightforward classroom implementation and include
The result is a complete curriculum that allows districts to implement new graduation requirements without building courses from scratch.
Semester courses are structured around applied learning and cumulative project work.
Students complete guided research, applied assignments, and cumulative projects that require analysis, creation, and presentation. Instruction encourages student-driven learning through questioning, discussion, and real-world problem solving.
Technology and AI are integrated where appropriate to help students build modern digital literacy while strengthening meta-skills such as communication, critical thinking, and collaboration.
Each semester course includes access to its aligned mini course, giving districts additional flexibility in how the curriculum can be delivered.
Districts implement mini courses in multiple ways:
Schedule a conversation to learn how 220 semester courses align with graduation frameworks in other states and organizations.