We found a bunch of kittens living under and behind our woodpile. Deciding that it would be better to try and find homes for them than to let them join the ranks of stray feral cats around here, we built a shelter, laid out some food and water, and spent a good hour digging them out of the woodpile and transferring them to the shelter. Now we're beginning the process of trying to get them used to humans and setting up fliers looking for adopters. We're also planning to keep one, a prospect I'm...less than enthusiastic about.
Sadly, it appears that one of the kittens is already going feral; it'll hiss at, claw, and bite anyone that tries to touch it. We're hoping it's just stress from getting caught, but if it doesn't improve soon we'll probably have to send it to a shelter to be put down.
Unless they're significantly older kittens, I really doubt that one is "going feral". It's probably just the biggest of the group, and it's stressed, afraid, confused, and possibly injured. A calm environment, gradual socialization with humans, and time will make a significant impact over the next few months of development. It's possible that it might still end up being a grumpy cat, but I know people who love grumpy cats, so don't give up yet.
Were you planning on finding them homes directly, or bringing them to a shelter? Since they're wild-born, odds are they have picked up a parasite or two, so the regular regiment of shots are in order. I'd advise getting them to a no-kill shelter ASAP, where they'll be given medical care and human socialization. It's their best chance for adoption.
I'm never going to be able to get through this higher education stuff, am I?
You can get into some pretty sizable projects, especially graduate level stuff. My Brother-in-law's dissertation has taken him years, and I believe it is over 1000 pages. But the build up to those is gradual, and you generally have a long time to work on them. Also, it's something he's particularly passionate about, which helps.