She never got the chance to stand at the front of her first classroom — but Blake Shelton just made sure her dream echoes across America. Katherine Ferruzzo was only 18 when the Texas floods took her life, leaving behind a quiet but fierce wish: to teach children with special needs. In her college essay, she’d written one line that could stop your heart — “I want to teach the kids the world doesn’t see.” When Blake stumbled across those words, he didn’t just read them… he felt them. Without fanfare, without an announcement, he sat down and poured them into a song — Still Teaching — a tender ballad that now carries Katherine’s voice to places she never lived to see. Today, that song is breaking hearts from coast to coast. Because somehow… she’s still teaching. Not in a classroom, but in a way even more powerful — through music, through memory, through the love that outlives us all. And when the chorus comes, it’s not just Blake Shelton singing — it’s Katherine, speaking straight to the soul.

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She never got to step into her first classroom — but thanks to Blake Shelton, her dream is now echoing across America.

Katherine Ferruzzo's remains found

Katherine Ferruzzo, 18, from Llano County, Texas, had just graduated high school this spring. Friends say she was “the kind of girl who noticed the quiet kid in the back of the room” — the one who would sit with children who struggled, who volunteered after school to help those with learning differences.

When the devastating Texas floods swept through Hill Country last month — claiming over 110 lives — Katherine was among those lost. She had been helping an elderly neighbor evacuate when the rising water pulled them both downstream. Her body was found two days later, still holding the woman’s hand.

Katherine Ferruzzo, Camp Mystic counselor, remembered for dedication to children with disabilities | Texas Standard

In the days that followed, her parents discovered a college application essay she had written for the University of Texas. Tucked between paragraphs about her love for reading and her desire to major in Special Education was one haunting sentence:

“I want to teach the kids the world doesn’t see.”

Somehow, that sentence reached Blake Shelton. The country superstar had been following news of the floods and quietly contacting families of victims. When he read Katherine’s words, he admitted to friends he “had to walk away from the table for a while” before he could process them.

Blake T. Shelton, Class of 2014 | Oklahoma Hall of Fame

Three days later, alone in his Nashville writing room, Shelton picked up his guitar. He didn’t sit down to write a radio hit. He wasn’t thinking about charts, or tours, or album deadlines. He was thinking about Katherine — and the classroom she never got to have.

The song that emerged was “Still Teaching” — a tender, almost whispered ballad about how love and influence don’t end with life. Its chorus contains what some fans are calling the most powerful line Shelton has ever sung:

“The bell still rings, your lesson’s clear / You’re still teaching, even here.”

This week, Shelton recorded the song in one take at Ocean Way Studios in Nashville, using nothing but an acoustic guitar, a soft organ swell, and his raw, unpolished voice. The track was released without fanfare — no press release, no promotion — just a quiet upload to streaming services with a note: “For Katherine. For every teacher who never got the chance.”

Blake Shelton Helps Teacher Get All of Her Needed School Supplies

Still Teaching

(Written and performed by Blake Shelton — in memory of Katherine Ferruzzo)

Verse 1
The bell never rang on that first day,
The books stayed stacked in the hallway,
Your name tag’s still on that little desk,
Guess Heaven needed your gentle best.

You had chalkboard dreams and a heart that knew,
How to find the light in the darkest room,
And you told the world in a single line,
“I’ll love the kids no one takes the time.”

Chorus
The bell still rings, your lesson’s clear,
Your voice still whispers, I can hear,
Through every child that learns to try,
Through every tear a mom wipes dry.
You’re still teaching, though you’re gone,
In the laughter, in the song,
In the kindness they keep reaching,
Girl, you’re still teaching.

Verse 2
Some say the flood washed it all away,
But your love’s a river that’s here to stay,
It runs through hearts you never met,
And leaves a mark they won’t forget.

I picture you there with the angels’ choir,
Turning every soul into something higher,
Even Heaven needs a hand like yours,
Showing broken hearts there’s an open door.

Chorus
The bell still rings, your lesson’s clear,
Your voice still whispers, I can hear,
Through every child that learns to try,
Through every tear a mom wipes dry.
You’re still teaching, though you’re gone,
In the laughter, in the song,
In the kindness they keep reaching,
Girl, you’re still teaching.

Bridge
No cap and gown, no crowded gym,
But every life you touched still sings your hymn,
You never stood in front of your class,
But you’re changing lives as the seasons pass.

Final Chorus (soft then building)
The bell still rings, your lesson’s clear,
Your voice still whispers, I can hear,
Through every dream that finds its wings,
Through the hope a brand-new morning brings.
You’re still teaching, though you’re gone,
In the laughter, in the song,
In the love they keep on reaching,
Katherine… you’re still teaching.

Outro
Yeah, Heaven’s got your classroom now,
And I bet the angels all know how,
To love the kids the world don’t see…
Just like you taught me.

Within hours, #StillTeaching was trending on social media. Teachers from across the country began posting videos of themselves listening to the song, many in tears. Parents shared it with children heading back to school. The Ferruzzo family said they have received thousands of messages from strangers touched by Katherine’s story.

Blake Shelton hasn’t performed the song live yet — but at his upcoming Opry appearance next week, there’s talk he might debut it on stage, dedicating it not only to Katherine, but to “every kid who dreamed of making the world kinder.”

Her desk may be empty, but her dream is not gone. Through music, through memory, and through love… Katherine Ferruzzo is still teaching.

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