Kentucky
Kentucky Innovative Learning Network exhibition showcases student-centered learning
Nikki Jolly, an art teacher at Metcalfe County Middle School and a 2024 Kentucky Innovative Teacher Fellowship member, presents her work on project-based learning in her classroom during the Kentucky Innovative Learning Network Exhibition and Learning on June 7 at the Hardin County Early College and Career Center. Photo by Joe Ragusa, Kentucky Department of Education, June 7, 2024
(ELIZABETHTOWN, KY) – The Kentucky Department of Education (KDE) hosted the second-annual Kentucky Innovative Learning Network (KY ILN) Exhibition of Innovation and Learning at the Hardin County Early College and Career Center on June 7.
The event, sponsored by KDE’s Division of Innovation, showcased the work of educators in 18 districts.
KY ILN is a partnership between local school districts and KDE, providing a shared professional learning space for education leaders dedicated to furthering the United We Learn vision: creating vibrant learning experiences, accelerating innovation and building a bold new future with communities.
Rob Collins, innovative programs consultant in the KDE Division of Innovation, said the exhibition was the culmination of a year’s worth of work and effort.
“There’s something about the atmosphere that’s electric; seeing folks who really care about the future of education and making it more student-centered,” he said. “When they get together and they get to collaborate and improve one another’s work and you can see them making connections that they’re going to pull on later, it’s really special.”
District leaders and teachers showcased the work they’ve done through poster displays and formal presentations with school leaders from other districts.
“(The KY ILN is) really offering feedback on those efforts so that they can improve right into the next year,” said Collins.
Nikki Jolly, a member of the 2024 KY ILN Innovative Teacher Fellowship program from Metcalfe County Middle School, worked on project-based learning in her art class, directing students to create an art piece that helped tell the story of Metcalfe County.
“The students were just immersed into all different things Metcalfe County,” she said. “They came up with an interest and then researched it, created an art piece with it, an artist statement, and then they were able to present it at their exhibition.”
Jolly said she had been working as a special education teacher for 12 years before teaching art at the middle school this past school year. She pursued the KY ILN Innovative Teacher Fellowship to connect and collaborate with other teachers.
“It really did pay off,” said Jolly. “I had a lot of good people that I worked with, colleagues that were able to help me.”
The day started with student-led tours of the Hardin County Early College and Career Center, which serves students in the county by giving them the opportunity to explore their interests and get hands-on, in-depth instruction in several career and technical education (CTE) pathways.
“We’re very excited about what we’re able to do here in this building,” said Dan Robbins, principal of the center. “And our big focus here is all around postsecondary readiness.”
Hardin County district leaders work with Elizabethtown Community and Technical College, Western Kentucky University, Sullivan University and many local businesses to bolster the center’s offerings.
Interim Commissioner of Education Robin Fields Kinney toured the career center and opened the exhibition, thanking the educators who participate in the KY ILN for their efforts.
“We are so fortunate that we have people that are working in this space: being innovative, being creative and being good examples for others,” she said. “We are looking for each and every child in the Commonwealth to have the opportunities that you all are already providing in some form or fashion.”
The Kentucky Student Voice Team (KSVT) also joined the exhibition and led the group in an interactive keynote activity.
Part of the activity involved asking teachers how much they felt like they were heard as students, with most indicating some level of being overlooked as a student. Other activities exemplified the work of the KSVT, which aims to bolster the role of students and young people in education research, policy and storytelling.
Collins said work being done in the districts and the feedback provided through the KY ILN will continue to strengthen education in Kentucky.
“We are an innovative network, so we’re always reinventing,” he said.
Kentucky
Recent $167m lottery winner arrested for allegedly stealing $12,000 in Kentucky
A man who recently won a $167m Powerball lottery jackpot stands accused of stealing the relatively paltry sum of $12,000 after breaking into a house in his home state of Kentucky on Saturday, according to authorities who arrested him.
James Farthing’s arrest on Saturday on counts of burglary and illicit marijuana possession reportedly was at least his third since winning Kentucky’s most lucrative lottery prize ever.
Farthing, 51, was allegedly captured on surveillance cameras at the side door of a woman’s home in Lexington before unlawfully entering the place, police wrote in an arrest citation that was reported by the local news outlet WKYT. The break-in victim heard a loud noise consistent with a door being busted open, and she realized $12,000 was missing from the home after Farthing broke in, officers alleged in the citation.
Police later found Farthing at a casino and harness-racing track and took him into custody in connection with the alleged burglary. Officers said they added the illegal marijuana possession count after searching his car and finding the herb along with multiple blunts, including one that had burnt out in his vehicle’s ashtray.
Farthing had spent most of his life in and out of incarceration before he, his mother and girlfriend bought the winning ticket for a $167m Powerball jackpot awarded in April 2025, according to the Smoking Gun website.
Hitting that jackpot left them with deciding whether to collect the full amount in annual increments over 29 years or immediately in a one-time, lump sum of $77.3m.
Farthing and his family said they would talk with a financial adviser before choosing the better option for them.
As Farthing put it, the win resulted from playing the odds. “I’m always buying [lottery tickets] ’cause I’m like, ‘Somebody’s gotta win,’” he later told WKYT.
It was a matter of days before he recorded another brush with the law – when officials in Florida said he hit a hotel guest in the face, kicked a deputy and violated his parole conditions by leaving Kentucky without permission.
He pleaded guilty to that case in early March as part of a deal requiring him to pay $1,000 in fines but sparing him any additional jail time, WKYT reported.
Furthermore, in February, Kentucky authorities arrested Farthing on allegations that he tried to intimidate a participant of a legal process. Investigators said the alleged victim in that case reported meeting Farthing and being pressured into ingesting a marijuana edible. The woman later reportedly called police and reported that people with a weapon wanted to hurt her.
Officers who responded to the scene alleged that they found marijuana and a gun. And as the alleged victim was being questioned, police accused Farthing of sending her a text message which read, “Why would you do this to me? Unreal. I’d never hurt you.”
Farthing was tentatively due in court in the burglary case on Monday and on the intimidation charge on Thursday. He also reportedly has an separate hit-and-run case pending.
Kentucky
Mark Pope can’t gamble on three-point shooters in the transfer portal
Mark Pope and the Kentucky Wildcats will be looking to replace a lot in the transfer portal, and one thing that Pope will need a ton of is three-point shooting. The three-point shooting this season for Kentucky outside of Collin Chandler was rough. Otega Oweh, Kam Williams, and Denzel Aberdeen all had a solid shooting season, but Chandler was the only true, reliable three-point shooter.
Williams is a player that fans expect to get much better from three next season if he is back in Lexington, but Pope is still going to need a lot of shooting.
When Pope took the job at Kentucky, he wanted to shoot over 30, perhaps even 35 threes per game, but in his two seasons, this has not happened. Coach Pope needs to get back to this for his offense to work at a high level, but he will need the roster to get it done.
While the portal is not technically open yet, some players have announced that they plan to enter the portal when it does open on April 7th. Some Kentucky fans have already started to list players whom Pope should reach out to in the portal. Many of the guard’s BBN wants look good on paper, but don’t have elite three-point shooting percentages.
The point of this article is to make the case that Coach Pope can’t gamble with the players he brings in via the portal to be shooters. A great example of this is Jaland Lowe, as he came over from Pitt with a bad three-point shooting percentage. He didn’t play enough this year to really judge him as a shooter, but Pope doesn’t need projects like this.
He shouldn’t take guards who shot 31% from three. Pope needs to take players who are true knockdown shooters from deep, so the Wildcats offense next season will have a handful of players who are all capable of making threes.
There are some guards and forwards in the portal right now who had great seasons shooting the ball from deep and more will enter when it officially opens on the 7th. Coach Pope needs a bunch of players who shot 35% or better from deep, so the Wildcats are an elite team from beyond the arc.
If Kentucky isn’t a good shooting team, we will see a season similar to this one next year, so shooting is a top priority for the staff when the portal opens here in about a week.
Kentucky
2026 top-50 recruit Chris Washington Jr. drawing interest from Kentucky Basketball
Even in the era of the transfer portal and NIL, fans of a team will still focus on and care about recruiting. That’s especially the case with the Kentucky Wildcats. Fans are already up in arms about Kentucky’s recruiting for the class of 2026, or, in their case, lack thereof.
Only one player is signed for the class of 2026, after 4-star point guard Mason Williams announced his commitment to play for the Cats on Friday. On the board. Still work to do.
Chris Washington Jr., an Alabama decommit and top-35 senior prospect, is a new target for Mark Pope and UK ahead of the spring signing period in mid-April. The staff reached out to his AAU coach, Bobby Maze, to gauge the athletic wing’s potential interest. This is all according to Kentucky Sports Radio.
Washington is a 6-9, 195-pound forward who originally committed to Alabama, but decommitted in November. Kentucky is now included among the likes of Tennessee, Oregon, Oklahoma State, USC, and SMU that are interested in Washington.
“It’s a good program,” Washington said of Kentucky while adding, “Honestly, I just want to go where I’m wanted — and the play style. I got to go where I fit in and where the coaches really want me. (My recruitment is) open. Whenever the time is right.”
Only four players ranked ahead of him remain available in 2026, including No. 1 Tyran Stokes. That tells you just how big of a prospect Washington will be in the spring signing period.
Kentucky has swung and missed in recruiting a lot recently. But there is still time to get things moving in the right direction this spring on both the high school front and in the transfer portal.
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