Friday, April 24, 2026

Been there, done that, got the T-Shirt

 

There’s something quietly powerful about a high school t-shirt.

Not the fabric. Not the slightly questionable design choices. Not even the fact that every student owns at least one shirt that has survived spirit weeks, sleepovers, and an accidental trip through the wrong dryer setting.

It’s what the shirt represents.

A closet full of t-shirts can look like a pile of cotton. But read it the right way, and it becomes a résumé written in threads.


High School as a T-Shirt Collection:

Imagine telling students on day one:

“Your goal in high school isn’t just grades. It’s to collect t-shirts.”

Not as memories, or as souvenirs, but as evidence.

Each shirt is earned. Each one means you showed up, contributed, struggled a little, improved something, led something, built something, or supported something bigger than yourself.

The trick is shifting the meaning:

  • From “I was there”
  • To “Here’s what I learned by being there.”

Decoding the Closet:

A student pulls out a shirt from an FBLA State Conference. Most people see:

“Oh, that was FBLA.”

But look closer, and it reads more like:

  • Public speaking under pressure
  • Project management with deadlines that don’t care about excuses
  • Team collaboration when not everyone pulls their weight
  • Networking with people who were once strangers

That shirt isn’t cotton. It’s communication, leadership, and adaptability stitched together.

A Football Jersey?

  • Discipline
  • Resilience after a loss
  • Time management balancing school and practice
  • Performing when people are watching

A theater shirt?

  • Confidence
  • Creative problem-solving
  • Memorization and execution
  • Trust in a team where everyone’s role matters

A volunteer event shirt?

  • Empathy
  • Initiative
  • Reliability
  • Understanding impact beyond yourself

Suddenly, the closet starts to feel less like a storage space, and more like an archive.


The Missed Opportunity:

Here’s the problem: most students never make this connection.

They collect the shirts.
They remember the moments.
But they don’t translate those experiences into language the world understands.

Then graduation hits, somehow like a plot twist nobody studied for.

And then someone asks them:

“What skills have you developed in school?”

And the student, who has done so much, says:

“I don’t know… I was in a few clubs.”

That’s like owning a library and saying you’ve never read.


The Shift from Participation to Articulation:

High school shouldn’t just be about doing things.

It should be about understanding what doing those things did to you.

Every t-shirt should come with an invisible tag:

  • What did I learn?
  • What did I improve?
  • What did I contribute?
  • Where did I struggle and grow?

Because eventually, students need to take those shirts and translate them into:

  • College essays
  • Résumé bullet points
  • Interview answers
  • Real-world confidence

The Visual That Sticks: 

Picture graduation.

Two students walk across the stage.

Both participated in many different activities over their four years in high school. Both have a similar pile of t-shirts.

But one student carries something extra: the ability to tell the stories behind each and every one.

That student doesn’t just say:

“I was involved.”

They say:

“I learned how to lead a team through deadlines, to adapt when plans failed, and to communicate ideas clearly under pressure.”

Same shirts.
Vastly different outcomes.


The Role of Schools:

If this idea is going to work, schools must do more than hand out shirts.

They have to:

  • Make the connection explicit between participation in activities and skills developed
  • Build opportunities for reflection into experiences, not just participation
  • Help students translate their experiences into language they can use
  • Celebrate and Reward skill development, not just involvement

Because the real goal isn’t school spirit. It’s preparedness for the rest of your like, disguised as spirit.


Closing Thought:

High school isn’t just four years.

It’s a collection.

A closet.

A growing archive of who you are becoming.

So yes, absolutely, collect the t-shirts. As many as possible!

Fill the drawers. Stack them high.

But don’t stop there.

Learn how to read them.

Because one day, those shirts might be the difference between saying
“I did some things in high school…” and saying... “I’m ready for what comes next.”

 

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