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2025 Kentucky Summative Assessment (KSA) Results for

Proficient Reading:

21%

|

Distinguished Reading:

21%

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Proficient Math:

17%

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Distinguished Math:

19%

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TCMS Opens New Greenhouse & Land Lab 

TCMS Opens New Greenhouse & Land Lab 

Partnership with Kentucky State Benefits Students & Neighbors

In a horticulture class three years ago, a student asked “Can we get some gardens? Like a greenhouse?” Now that seventh grader’s initiative has blossomed into a state-of-the-art outdoor learning space at Tates Creek Middle School (TCMS). Fayette County Public Schools, in collaboration with Kentucky State University, hosted an April 2 ribbon-cutting ceremony and tours of the greenhouse and land lab to celebrate. 

The space will be an outdoor classroom for gardening, floral production, and agriscience research while enabling students to give back by providing locally grown, healthy food to community neighbors. 

Eli Parham

   Eli Parham

“This was about creating a space where learning feels real,” said agriscience teacher Eli Parham. “This space represents access and opportunity. And it’s all driven by curiosity and student leaders.” 

Avery Adams, now a sophomore at Tates Creek High and Locust Trace AgriScience Center, has seen the possibilities become realities. “That question became a conversation, and that conversation became an idea, and that idea became a blueprint,” he recalled. “People really came together to make this happen.” 

After Avery’s spark, Parham and his students connected with Kentucky State (KSU), which brought Farm Credit Mid-America to the table. With that partner support, our students helped create the vision for the project, pitch the idea to potential sponsors, design the layout, and build the outdoor classroom. The groundbreaking was in December 2024. 

sophomore Avery Adams with a mic at the podium

Avery Adams

Now classes will study a variety of farming methods such as hydroponics, aeroponics, and aquaponics, which are among the most productive avenues of food production. Students will also get hands-on training in safe-handling of food, sales of food, and farm financial management. “We can learn how food is grown and how agriculture affects us all,” said eighth grader Ajong Kemcha. 

Additionally, nearby residents will receive the TCMS fresh produce, and Kentucky State will send people to show them how to cook healthy meals with carrots, cabbage, radishes, peppers, and more. KSU will also supply eggs for incubation and chicks for the coop, where a few birds are already thriving. “We’ll have each stage of life, which makes it so much fun,” eighth grader Emalyn Motsch said as guests toured the grounds. 

Ajong is also excited about how the greenhouse and garden will benefit neighbors around their school. “This is another thing Tates Creek can add to its list of achievements,” he said. “This can elevate us.” 

Did you know? 

Fayette County Public Schools is home to 60 outdoor classrooms, 39 school gardens, and five greenhouses. 

wide angle of lots of students and guests after the ribbon-cutting moment in front of the greenhouse
boy in FFA jacket with potted plants on the right
two girls with laptops explain their research to visitors
a visitor and a student next to small plants and the KSU banner
NutraPonics plants displayed on several shelves
two girls show KSU visitors a display of drawings in the greenhouse
a girl shows a visitor a collection of starter plants
Ron Chi at far left with a handful of boys in the garden
young plants in the ground surrounded by plastic, with a blue water barrel at the far end of the garden row
two students and three guests with a chicken
Superintendent Liggins flanked by two boys in FFA jackets