Building Confidence, One Credential at a Time
Sandpoint High School has always been a source of pride in our community but, what's happening there right now might just take it to a whole new level! I had the privilege of sitting down with two of the people making it happen.
Jeralyn Mire is the Post-Secondary Transition Counselor at Sandpoint High School, a role she describes with a laugh as "a really fancy title, no extra pay," and Alex Gray is a teacher and Career and Technical Education Director who is starting his 25th year at the school. Together, they painted a picture of a high school that is doing far more than most people realize, and a new facility that is about to make it even better.
Every student in Idaho public education has $4,125 in advanced opportunity funding available to them, money that can be used for industry certifications, workforce training, college credits, and AP tests. That means a student at Sandpoint High School can graduate not just with a diploma, but with an A-plus IT certification, a commercial driver's license, a certified nursing assistant credential, SolidWorks certification, an American Welding Society certificate, and more, often at little or no cost to their family. One of Alex's students is driving a water truck for a fire crew this summer. Four young women are starting their EMT training in the fall. A student who came in from California and wanted to get straight to work crammed three of Alex's classes into two years and is now employed in the field. These are not hypothetical outcomes. They are happening right now, right here in Sandpoint.
Jeralyn made a point worth sitting with. She said that for a lot of students, the goal isn't necessarily a four-year degree, and that's okay. What matters is having a plan. Whether that's military service, a two-year program, a certification, or heading straight into the workforce, the school's job is to help students take that first confident step. And what's becoming clearer is that the skills students build through Career and Technical Education, what the school calls CTE, don't close doors. They open them. A student who earns their CNA certification in high school might go on to become a nurse or a doctor. A student who learns IT fundamentals might land a job at a university help desk while finishing a computer science degree. The credential is a launchpad, not a ceiling.
Alex put it in a way that I loved. He said that if a student takes his class and decides they hate computers, he considers that just as big a success as the student who earns every certification. Finding out what isn't for you, while it's free and while you're still in high school, is enormously valuable. How much better to discover that in a classroom than after four years and a degree in something you can't stand.
Now, about that new building. A brand new Career and Technical Education Center is opening on the south side of Sandpoint High School this fall, funded in large part by the Idaho Career Ready Students Grant, which Dr. Meyer pursued with what Alex described simply as tenacity. The center includes four classrooms and two large labs, each purposefully designed for the programs they'll house. The CNA classroom has hospital beds and sinks built in, finally giving nursing students a real simulation of the environment they're training for. The residential carpentry lab has a garage door tall enough to actually build things in. Alex's IT classroom has dedicated storage and workspace for the student interns who repair Chromebooks for every school in the district. A sports medicine program now has a permanent home. JROTC has been brought under the CTE umbrella, opening up new funding and professional development opportunities. And the culinary program, which went on a decade-long hiatus when its teacher retired, is coming back to life in the spring.
The automotive lab is the one piece that won't open until fall of 2027, and that's intentional. Local automotive businesses have already toured the facility, weighed in on equipment, and some have even set aside money to help purchase lifts and tools. Community service groups have stepped up too. When it opens, it will be done right.
I mentioned to Alex and Jeralyn that from where I sit at the EnVision Resource Center, it is really meaningful to see the community speaking up about what it needs and then watching that actually come to fruition. Our local employers have been asking for workers with real skills. Our students have been asking for relevant, hands-on learning. And our school has been listening. That is exactly the kind of connection that makes a community stronger.
A few things worth knowing if you have a student, know a student, or want to get involved. Sandpoint High School welcomes homeschool students into CTE classes when space allows, so that's worth a conversation if it applies to your family. If you have a skill or expertise you'd be willing to share with students, the school wants to hear from you. And if you want to see the new center for yourself, Alex and Jeralyn would be happy to give you a tour. The grand opening is September 15th at 3:30 p.m., and the community is invited.
It is just one step, as Jeralyn likes to tell her students. But what a step it is.
This post is based on a recent episode of A Little Birdie Told Me. Listen to the full conversation to hear more from Jeralyn Mire and Alex Gray.
"It's not choosing your path for the rest of your life. It's just one step on your ladder." — Jeralyn Meyer
"If a kid takes my class and decides they hate computers... I consider that just as big of a success as the student who earns all the certifications."
— Alex Gray





















































