FutureFrame scenarios are short real-world challenges that introduce students to different types of problems and careers.
Students read a situation and choose how they would respond.
Each decision reveals interests such as:
• building solutions
• investigating problems
• helping people
• leading teams
• improving systems
These choices help identify natural problem-solving preferences.
Every scenario contributes to the FutureFrame Pattern Tracker.
The tracker records patterns in three areas:
Career Interests
Skills Used
Problem Types
Over time students begin to see visual patterns showing what types of work they enjoy most.
This data helps students make more informed career and academic decisions.
FutureFrame quests are deeper challenges that allow students to apply their interests and skills.
Examples include:
Design a climate solution
Create a community project
Build a technology prototype
Plan a social impact initiative
Quests help students turn curiosity into real experience.
As students complete scenarios and quests they earn digital badges and create reflection artifacts.
These artifacts become part of the student’s FutureFrame portfolio.
The portfolio documents growth, exploration, and emerging career interests over time.
In Grade 12 students present their FutureFrame Senior Declaration.
This presentation includes:
• their Pattern Tracker results
• key skills they developed
• favorite quests and experiences
• their intended career pathway or exploration plan
The declaration helps students communicate their strengths and future goals with confidence.