College by design

Ringae Nuek • Founder of Waysmith

After 20 years in product design and strategy, I've seen what happens when people make expensive decisions without understanding themselves or the landscape first. Families make that mistake with college all the time. On this show, you'll hear from higher ed leaders doing genuinely different things—rethinking curriculum, student support, career integration. You'll come away understanding what actually matters, asking smarter questions during the college search, and making a decision that's genuinely yours. Hosted by Ringae Nuek, a college admissions consultant and founder of Waysmith.

Episodes

  1. Doubles Your Odds: The Case for Work-Integrated Learning

    4D AGO

    Doubles Your Odds: The Case for Work-Integrated Learning

    A graduate with an internship doubles their odds of having a good job at graduation — and doubles their odds of being engaged in their work for the rest of their career. So why do only a third of U.S. college graduates leave school having had one? Brandon Busteed has spent his career at the intersection of education and workforce outcomes — as founder of an ed-tech company, as the executive at Gallup who led the largest representative study of college graduates in U.S. history, and now as CEO of Edconic, which runs industry-immersive degree programs with partners like Sotheby's, Vogue College of Fashion, The School of the New York Times, and Manchester City Sports Business School. His argument: where your kid gets in matters less than what happens after they arrive. We get into the Gallup research — specifically what the data says about internships, long-term projects, mentors, and relationship-rich experiences, and why most families aren't asking about any of them. The findings are striking. Students who complete a long-term project spanning a semester or more also double their odds of workplace engagement — because that kind of sustained, iterative work mirrors what most jobs actually require. And students who report having a mentor who encouraged their goals and dreams? Same effect on lifelong wellbeing. Only 22% of graduates say they had one. We also talk about what questions to actually ask on a college tour — not "do you offer internships?" (every school will say yes) but what percentage of students across all majors actually complete one, and whether they receive academic credit for it. That second question is the real signal: academic credit means the institution treats work-integrated learning as core, not an optional add-on. A counterintuitive finding worth sitting with: humanities majors who get internships differentiate themselves with employers more effectively than STEM majors alone. Employers want broadly educated and specifically skilled — and the combination is more powerful than either alone. Brandon shares data showing an English major with an industry credential is four times more likely to be hired than an English major without one. We also get into how AI is changing this calculus — and not entirely in the ways you'd expect — plus what a genuine teaching culture looks like on a campus versus what colleges say about it, and why the liberal arts versus vocational training debate is one of the biggest things holding higher ed back right now. What Parents Should Ask: What percentage of students across all majors complete an internship — not just in a few programs?Is it required, or optional?Do students receive academic credit for internships?Is there funding available for students doing unpaid or low-paid internships?Does this major have a capstone or long-term project requirement?Who are the faculty here known for their teaching — not their research output?Find Brandon: On LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/busteed/ On Forbes - https://www.forbes.com/sites/brandonbusteed/ Find Ringae: Website - https://waysmith.io/ Book a discovery call - https://cal.com/waysmith/discovery-call Sign up for my newsletter - https://waysmith.io/#newsletter

    47 min

About

After 20 years in product design and strategy, I've seen what happens when people make expensive decisions without understanding themselves or the landscape first. Families make that mistake with college all the time. On this show, you'll hear from higher ed leaders doing genuinely different things—rethinking curriculum, student support, career integration. You'll come away understanding what actually matters, asking smarter questions during the college search, and making a decision that's genuinely yours. Hosted by Ringae Nuek, a college admissions consultant and founder of Waysmith.