Cadiz Rotary Club & Thoroughbred Academy Benefit Many Including Ethridge Family

Every dollar that’s raised through the 56th Annual Cadiz Rotary Radio Auction eventually finds its way back into the hands of Trigg Countians who need a lift at their most critical moment.

Just ask Christina Ethridge.

A 26-year veteran English teacher for Trigg County High School and Hopkinsville Community College, she’s a wife and the mother of Alex, Anthony and Avery — three students who have, or will have, gone on to see post-secondary success thanks to Rotary scholarships and Thoroughbred Academy.

And as she noted to a full crowd at the W.J. Hopson Kickoff Breakfast earlier this week, a future with college would’ve been far more difficult had this support not been available.

College isn’t for every high school graduate, and that’s fine. But when specific barriers — namely tuition and transportation — stand in the way of those who seek to achieve higher learning in any capacity, it’s a problem that needs to be addressed.

Back in the mid-2000s, Ethridge said the right questions started to get asked.

Checking in with TCHS Guidance Counselor Janay Futrell, Ethridge said that as of the 2008-09 school year, only 19 students were taking dual-credit English classes in preparation for the future. Those numbers remained fairly consistent, until Ethridge noted the “Advance Kentucky” initiative pushed more students toward AP courses between 2010-12 — which heightened course load challenges, but didn’t guarantee dual-credit without high marks on end-of-year AP testing.

Ethridge said even then, it was easy to discern that students who began college courses while in high school had a better support system — surrounded by teachers, families and like-minded peers interested in dual-credit work.

The Cadiz Rotary Club, she added, made these possibilities realities.

In the last decade, members of Thoroughbred Academy have exponentially increased. Ethridge said a dual-credit partnership with HCC in 2013-14, taught in Trigg County, brought about 148 enrollments through the two-year school and another 118 through MSU.

Fast-forward to the past two years, Ethridge confirmed this dual enrollment sits between 650 and 700 Trigg County students — a far cry from the 19 just 14 years ago.

The current rate for one credit hour at MSU is $172. Ethridge said with more than 4,800 credit hours completed through Thoroughbred Academy, the full value is worth more than $825,000.

What’s more, Ethridge said, is that in-state tuition at MSU for her in 1992 was $1,410. Today, it’s $9,432 — making dual-credit all the more valuable.

Friday is the final day to bid on items.

Avery Ethridge Speaks:

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