College & Career Readiness Radio

T.J. Vari

College & Career Readiness Radio with T.J. Vari A podcast about all things career and college readiness. Brought to you by MaiaLearning.

  1. Career-Connected Learning in Every Classroom with Steve Regur and Ed Hidalgo

    HÁ 3 DIAS

    Career-Connected Learning in Every Classroom with Steve Regur and Ed Hidalgo

    Our guests for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio are Dr. Steve Regur and Ed Hidalgo from connectthework.com. Ed Hidalgo emphasizes the importance of giving students agency in their academic and career planning, focusing on self-discovery and personal strengths. Steve Regur discusses strategies for fostering student empowerment, including the use of personalized learning plans and reflective activities. Both guests highlight ways that schools can use career frameworks and tools to help students connect learning to future opportunities. Ed notes the value of career exploration starting in elementary and middle school, not just high school, to build awareness and readiness early. Steve shares how engaging families and community partners increases student motivation and ensures relevance in career readiness programs. They underscore the need for teaching students practical skills for navigating career pathways, such as networking, informational interviewing, and tracking progress. Ed and Steve both advise educators to provide students with multiple pathways, including technical, community college, and four-year university options. They stress that continuous feedback, goal-setting, and self-reflection are key elements for students to remain engaged and confident about their future plans. The guests share real-life examples of students discovering strengths and interests through structured curriculum, assessment tools, and mentorship. Closing advice centers on cultivating student curiosity, encouraging student voice, and building strong school-to-career connections to prepare learners for purposeful futures. If you want to see a tool that can help teachers facilitate all of what Ed and Steve talk about on the show, book a demo now. If you want to discuss college and career readiness with the host, book time here.

    33min
  2. Removing Barriers to College Access with Ray Thiry

    30 DE SET.

    Removing Barriers to College Access with Ray Thiry

    Our guest for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio is Raymond Thiry from Access ASU. Ray highlights the complex requirements for college eligibility—such as 16 core required courses and a minimum GPA—that often differ from state high school graduation requirements. Without monitoring these, many students miss out on university options they are close to qualifying for. Ray notes that high school counselors in Arizona (and beyond) are stretched thin, with ratios around 650:1, making it hard to track and support all students in becoming college-eligible. Access ASU bridges these gaps for students—especially first-generation college-bound students—by providing hands-on support for applications, FAFSA, and navigating system complexities. Ray and his colleagues work directly with K-12 schools and communities, often in Spanish as well. He underscores the importance of demystifying the real cost of college. Published tuition is not the price most students actually pay; with scholarships, need-based aid, work programs, and employer tuition benefits, college is often more affordable than families expect. Ray advocates for aligning high school course planning to university eligibility from the beginning, reverse-engineering programs to ensure more students naturally meet admissions requirements. He insists that “access” includes communicating the value of university as well as explaining career and technical pathways, but warns against misconceptions: low transfer and completion rates at community colleges mean pathways must be followed carefully. Ray shares that institutions like ASU offer student success programs such as the “First Eight Weeks” and practical classes on “how to do college,” which are especially helpful for first-generation and low-income students. For schools, Ray recommends improved data sharing and direct admissions strategies to bridge high school and college transitions smoothly. His billboard message: No one regrets getting their degree—invest in access, preparation, and planning for every student’s future.

    34min
  3. Developing a Shared Vision for  Work-Based Learning with Amanda Daniels

    16 DE SET.

    Developing a Shared Vision for Work-Based Learning with Amanda Daniels

    Our guest for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio is Amanda Daniels from GPS Education Partners. Amanda emphasizes that building quality work-based learning starts with a clear and shared vision among all stakeholders—teachers, district leaders, business partners, students, and collegiate partners. She warns that the absence of a shared vision leads to confusion, burnout, and lack of alignment on student success. Amanda shares practical strategies for facilitating vision clarity: ask every stakeholder “what does success look like?” then get them in the room to co-create a repeatable, energizing vision statement. She highlights the importance of including collegiate and community partners early in planning, to build “bridges” for students’ ongoing education and avoid the “drop-off model” between high school and post-secondary life. Amanda encourages using tools like the “five whys” for consensus, Knoster’s Model of Complex Change for strategic planning, and a logic model for organizing implementation steps. She recommends hiring a consultant as a neutral party to facilitate and sustain strategic planning, but says districts can make progress using these models even without outside support. Amanda stresses measuring what truly matters—beyond headcounts—by tracking growth in students’ social capital, stakeholder confidence, and meaningful work-based learning outcomes. Her central message: College and career readiness is too important to leave to chance—create a shared vision, align your community, and measure what matters for students and partners. She points to Jason Van Nus for a description of ROI, Kristy Volesky for how to tell a story, and Julia Freeland-Fisher for more about the network effect of work-based learning.

    33min
  4. Empowering All Students to Enact Their Postsecondary Plans with Eder Joseph

    2 DE SET.

    Empowering All Students to Enact Their Postsecondary Plans with Eder Joseph

    Our guest for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio is Assistant Superintendent Eder Joseph. EJ shares that about 65% of his CTE high school graduates pursue two- or four-year college, reflecting that CTE is a path to college as well as careers. He highlights that parents often carry outdated views of CTE as “vocational,” and that it requires effort to change the narrative toward CTE as a viable, rigorous, and respected option. EJ points out that many of his students use CTE pathways as a springboard, for example, learning culinary, cosmetology, or trades and then choosing to pursue business education in college so they can become entrepreneurs in their field. He describes intentional program features such as having students in programs (like cosmetology) develop business plans, create resumes, and design business cards with help from other CTE students. EJ notes that students in his CTE programs get the chance to showcase their business plans schoolwide, including details like pricing and service offerings, which builds real-world business skills. EJ states that branding and program structure matter: his district groups CTE programs into “schools of” (e.g., School of Allied Health, School of Performing Arts Academy, School of Skills Trade) and uses “career major” terminology to enhance program appeal and clarity for families. EJ is a big fan of community college because of its affordability and the flexibility for students to explore various pathways before committing to a four-year program. Don’t miss what he shares about his own children who followed the two-year community college to four-year university path, resulting in significant cost savings. EJ reports that dual enrollment is a core focus, both in academic and CTE courses, making it possible for students to earn college credit prior to high school graduation. He urges district leaders to research local colleges’ offerings and build dual enrollment partnerships, noting that community colleges are generally eager to partner with high schools. EJ explains that by aligning curriculum with college offerings and collaborating with decision-makers, high schools can quickly expand dual enrollment opportunities for students. He emphasizes the value of work-based learning: students in allied health programs, for example, complete clinical rotations that help clarify which areas of the field they do (and do not) want to pursue. EJ sees the process of learning what careers students don’t want as equally valuable as confirming what they do want, minimizing costly missteps after high school. EJ believes that both credentials and lived experience are key—his students leave with “real” industry-valued credentials that pass scrutiny from industry partners. He and his district use parent engagement sessions—including events with community college partners—to educate families about the financial benefits, flexible transfer options, and overall value of CTE and dual enrollment. EJ shares that enrollment in his district has increased by 18% since adopting strategies like the exploratory major period and dual enrollment partnerships. He stresses the importance of both CTE and AP/academic rigor, ensuring that all students are challenged and graduate prepared for either college or a successful career. EJ’s “billboard” message: every student should graduate with a true understanding of the pathway they are choosing, so that they avoid spending unnecessary time and money finding their direction after high school.

    33min
  5. Empowering All Students to Enact Their Postsecondary Plans with Eder Joseph

    2 DE SET.

    Empowering All Students to Enact Their Postsecondary Plans with Eder Joseph

    Our guest for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio is Assistant Superintendent Eder Joseph. EJ shares that about 65% of his CTE high school graduates pursue two- or four-year college, reflecting that CTE is a path to college as well as careers. He highlights that parents often carry outdated views of CTE as “vocational,” and that it requires effort to change the narrative toward CTE as a viable, rigorous, and respected option. EJ points out that many of his students use CTE pathways as a springboard, for example, learning culinary, cosmetology, or trades and then choosing to pursue business education in college so they can become entrepreneurs in their field. He describes intentional program features such as having students in programs (like cosmetology) develop business plans, create resumes, and design business cards with help from other CTE students. EJ notes that students in his CTE programs get the chance to showcase their business plans schoolwide, including details like pricing and service offerings, which builds real-world business skills. EJ states that branding and program structure matter: his district groups CTE programs into “schools of” (e.g., School of Allied Health, School of Performing Arts Academy, School of Skills Trade) and uses “career major” terminology to enhance program appeal and clarity for families. EJ is a big fan of community college because of its affordability and the flexibility for students to explore various pathways before committing to a four-year program. Don’t miss what he shares about his own children who followed the two-year community college to four-year university path, resulting in significant cost savings. EJ reports that dual enrollment is a core focus, both in academic and CTE courses, making it possible for students to earn college credit prior to high school graduation. He urges district leaders to research local colleges’ offerings and build dual enrollment partnerships, noting that community colleges are generally eager to partner with high schools. EJ explains that by aligning curriculum with college offerings and collaborating with decision-makers, high schools can quickly expand dual enrollment opportunities for students. He emphasizes the value of work-based learning: students in allied health programs, for example, complete clinical rotations that help clarify which areas of the field they do (and do not) want to pursue. EJ sees the process of learning what careers students don’t want as equally valuable as confirming what they do want, minimizing costly missteps after high school. EJ believes that both credentials and lived experience are key—his students leave with “real” industry-valued credentials that pass scrutiny from industry partners. He and his district use parent engagement sessions—including events with community college partners—to educate families about the financial benefits, flexible transfer options, and overall value of CTE and dual enrollment. EJ shares that enrollment in his district has increased by 18% since adopting strategies like the exploratory major period and dual enrollment partnerships. He stresses the importance of both CTE and AP/academic rigor, ensuring that all students are challenged and graduate prepared for either college or a successful career. EJ’s “billboard” message: every student should graduate with a true understanding of the pathway they are choosing, so that they avoid spending unnecessary time and money finding their direction after high school.

    33min
  6. The New Millionaire Class is the CTE Student with Troy Long

    19 DE AGO.

    The New Millionaire Class is the CTE Student with Troy Long

    Our guest for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio is Troy Long. Troy Long’s journey from CTE student to district leader illustrates how career and technical education (CTE) energizes students—especially in urban settings—by connecting their interests and strengths to engaging, hands-on learning. CTE isn’t just a pathway to careers—it’s a powerful driver for college persistence and post-secondary success, busting myths about vocational education being a “lesser” option. Articulated agreements between high schools and colleges allow students to earn college credits through their CTE or academic classes—without additional tuition costs. These credits give students a leg up, enabling them to graduate college with less debt, more skills, and higher earning power. Troy emphasizes partnership with local colleges and universities (e.g. Thomas Edison State University, Rider, Mercer County) and the importance of curriculum alignment for valuable, transferable credits. He tells us that CTE can create a more attractive district, increase enrollment, and garner greater federal funding (e.g. Perkins allotments) for CTE programs. CTE courses scheduled at the start of the day motivate students to attend, boosting engagement and overall achievement—even in math and English. Troy says that top-performing schools show thriving CTE pathways correlate strongly with improved attendance and graduation rates. CTE gives students their “why” and “how,” driving enthusiasm and retention across comprehensive and vocational districts. CTE cultivates entrepreneurial mindsets, teaching business skills, marketing, and product development through dedicated pathways and competitions. Students experience the entire journey, from innovation (like alarm pillows for oversleepers) to pitching and selling—often with mentorship from entrepreneurs and industry partners. Career and Technical Student Organizations (CTSOs) like DECA and SkillsUSA provide competitions, leadership development, and invaluable experience aligned directly to students’ chosen pathways. Troy gets his industry partners involved in curriculum development and advisory boards, ensuring education remains current with evolving technologies like AI and guiding stackable, regionally-valued credentials. Credentials must align to local demands—schools often work with the Department of Labor and local employers to validate what matters most. Troy challenges outdated perceptions: CTE pathways are advanced, rigorous, and blend seamlessly with upper-level classes and college preparatory programs. Integrating CTE into scheduling and pathway design leads to meaningful and successful careers, not just jobs. Every school leader, counselor, and educator should take a hard look at expanding CTE offerings. Troy’s billboard message: “The new millionaire class is CTE students.” This should inspire all districts to reconsider CTE as central to college and career readiness. Set ambitious goals: 100% of students graduating with pathways, energized by CTE, and equipped for successful futures.

    30min
  7. Redefining Education for the New Economy with Dr. Kevin Fleming

    5 DE AGO.

    Redefining Education for the New Economy with Dr. Kevin Fleming

    Our guest for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio is Dr. Kevin Fleming. Dr. Kevin Fleming frames today’s workforce as flexible, transient, and tech-driven, with students now likely to hold 24 jobs across 5 industries in their lifetimes. Success in this new economy requires not only academic knowledge, but also adaptability, self-awareness, technical skills, executive functioning, and the ability to learn—and unlearn—throughout one’s career. Kevin emphasizes that traditional, linear career paths (one job for life) are now the exception, not the rule. The “factory bell” schedule and the Carnegie unit—foundations of the 20th-century school model—are no longer aligned with workforce realities. The future is in hybrid flexible modalities or “HyFlex” learning: education delivered simultaneously in-person, live virtual, and asynchronously recorded, allowing learners to access instruction however and whenever fits their individual needs. Change is iterative and never one-and-done. Preparing staff for continuous improvement is essential. Kevin discusses the “diffusion of innovation” theory: target at least 16% of educators as early adopters to build internal momentum and drive systemic change. He says to pilot HyFlex programs with willing staff and share successes to convince broader school communities. Kevin and our host, TJ, stress the “yes, and” approach: all students need strong academic foundations and at least one industry-valued, third-party credential by graduation. Credentials must be regionally relevant—what’s valued locally may not transfer elsewhere. Advisory boards and industry panels are critical for identifying which certifications carry real worth in local job markets. Schools should provide students with a “menu” of meaningful credential options and teach them to be savvy about their ongoing education and what’s truly valued by employers. Dr. Fleming encourages stackable credentials and foster relationships with local community colleges, so each credential also builds a bridge to further education and upward pathways. College and career readiness today, according to Kevin, means helping students discover pathways that fit who they are, not just which jobs pay the most. Leadership requires creating coalitions, supporting early adopters, and modeling a willingness to keep evolving for the sake of student success. The future of college and career readiness is about relevance, validation by local industry, and helping every learner find their purpose—on purpose. Books mentioned during the show: Diffusion of Innovations by Everett Rogers Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell Crossing the Chasm by Geoffrey Moore

    44min
  8. College and Career Counseling, Mitigating Stress and Burnout, and More with Dr. Melisa Marsh

    21 DE JUL.

    College and Career Counseling, Mitigating Stress and Burnout, and More with Dr. Melisa Marsh

    Our guest for this episode of College & Career Readiness Radio is Dr. Melisa Marsh, expert in both college and career counseling and stress and burnout in education. College and career readiness isn’t just about admissions anymore—it’s about multiple pathways. Dr. Marsh emphasizes validating every option: four-year colleges, technical schools, associate degrees, and direct workforce entry. Dual enrollment programs and articulated agreements between high schools and colleges save money and time, allowing students to earn valuable credits before graduation. The old stigma against two-year and technical colleges persists—often more among parents than students. Educators and counselors play a crucial role in reframing this narrative and promoting affordable, high-value state options. Schools can actively build partnerships with nearby institutions, bringing college and technical school reps to high school campuses and organizing visits so students see hands-on programs in action. Counselors should use interest inventories and aptitude assessments to help students align passions and talents with viable academic and career tracks. State-mandated assessments support this work, helping students discover strengths and explore related careers before committing time or money to a direction that may not fit. Strong partnerships between high schools, two- and four-year institutions, and workforce partners are critical. Establishing contacts and regular events creates real opportunities for students to connect their K–12 journey with post-secondary success. Counselors should proactively educate both students and families about every available pathway and state-sponsored opportunities, including tuition-free options for qualifying students. School counselors partner with local colleges to provide campus visits and information sessions, demystifying alternative pathways and their benefits. Dr. Marsh highlights alarming rates of stress and burnout among educators—especially school counselors who often operate as “certified yes people." Chronic stress is distinguished from acute stress; it’s the chronic kind that leads to true burnout, impairing the ability to support students. Dr. Marsh encourages educators to set professional boundaries, manage time effectively, and regulate their own emotions as well as those of staff. Research shows just five deep breaths can reset the nervous system; educators should take intentional “brain breaks” during the day. Dr. Marsh stresses the importance of shutting down after hours (e.g., 6 p.m. no email rule) and modeling this for staff, encouraging a “tech detox” in the evenings. School leaders can delay emails and messages, ensuring staff are not burdened with notifications outside work hours—unless an emergency arises. Scheduled fun and emotional check-ins are part of fostering positive faculty culture and retention. School leaders should prioritize giving staff the “gift of time,” especially during busy periods like pre-planning. Dr. Marsh’s final message to the field: Dream big and encourage students to do the same. Even if a path isn’t direct, there are always ways to reach your goals—never give up, and always seek the next step forward. If you want to learn more about tips and tricks for college and career counselors, book a time to see a demo of the MaiaLearning. If you want to talk to the host of the show about college and career readiness,book a time to meet.

    30min

Sobre

College & Career Readiness Radio with T.J. Vari A podcast about all things career and college readiness. Brought to you by MaiaLearning.

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