FutureREADY — Credentials earned, not attended. Coming fall 2026.
FutureREADY

Information is abundant. Judgment is scarce.

FutureREADY teaches teens to evaluate information, communicate with confidence, and act — and prove it. Skill credentials earned, not attended.

Founding pilot opens August 4
For parents of teens

School grades attendance. Nobody verifies the skills that actually matter.

Your teen has instant access to every answer ever written. What no report card shows is whether they can judge what they read, speak with confidence when it counts, and follow through on a plan — the skills colleges and employers say they want most.

FutureREADY closes that gap: short video lessons, real practice on camera and in real life, and evidence — evaluated by a 20-year classroom educator against a published standard. Students don't get a badge for watching. They earn it by demonstrating the skill.

The framework

Five badges. One credential.

RResearchfind & vet information
EEvaluatethink critically
AArticulatecommunicate clearly
DDoact in the real world
YYour Futureplan with purpose

Together they form the FutureREADY Scholar Credential — proof a parent, college, or employer can literally watch. First up this fall: the Articulate badge, where students record a pitch on day one, train for five weeks, then record it again. The before-and-after speaks for itself.

Who's behind this

Built by an educator, not an algorithm.

Founder photo
(160 × 160)

I've spent nearly twenty years teaching teenagers to think critically, build arguments, and speak up — and watching brilliant kids graduate with nothing that proves they can. FutureREADY is the credential I always wished my students could earn: real skills, demonstrated on camera and in real life, verified by a human who knows what good looks like.

My husband and I build everything ourselves — every lesson, every rubric. If your teen earns a badge here, I can tell you exactly why it means something.

— [Your name], Founder

Be a founding family.

The first pilot — Hard Conversations, for Teens — opens August 4 at the founding price of $29, limited spots. The list hears first.