The Education Road

Mike Biocchi

This podcast will talk to interesting people who will share their journey from the classroom to where they are now. How did their education play a role in who they are today and where they ended up? The education road is windy because there isn’t necessarily one path that leads you on your journey.

  1. 2 ngày trước

    Interview with Hope Thompson

    Night School, etcetera In this episode of The Education Road, we chat with Hope Thompson, a Toronto-based screenwriter, author, and instructor who describes her unique academic and professional journey as mysterious. Hope shares how her lifelong dream of being an artist led her to a classic fine arts undergraduate degree at Mount Allison University. However, the reality of making a living in the arts prompted her to weave a thread of continuous learning through her life, relying heavily on night school courses in graphic and computer design to build a sustainable career while staying connected to her creative drive. Over time, Hope transitioned from visual arts into the world of storytelling, exploring theater, filmmaking, and ultimately screenwriting. This evolution was supported by prestigious writing residencies in Italy and Banff, as well as a remote master's degree in creative writing from the University of British Columbia. These experiences helped her build a strong community of fellow artists, landing her exciting opportunities like working in the writer's room for a CBC comedy series. Currently, Hope is channeling her love for classic film noir and crime fiction into prose writing, with a true crime book co-written alongside a private investigator set to release next spring. She balances this heavy creative load with a strict discipline of writing one thousand words a day and teaching screenwriting online for OCAD. Check out her previous novel, Dark Thoughts & Other Stories!

    47 phút
  2. 11 thg 5

    Interview with Julian Nasielski

    The Name of the Game! In this episode of The Education Road, we connect with Julian Nasielski, a level designer at Ubisoft Montreal whose career path was defined by what he describes as a "bumpy road with a couple of detours". Julian shares how his childhood passion for games, sparked by surreal and whimsical titles like Earthworm Jim and Rayman 2, eventually transformed from a hobby into a professional mission. Despite knowing he wanted to design games since he was eight years old, he reveals the internal and external pressures that nearly led him toward a career in medicine before he fully committed to his creative roots. The conversation dives into Julian's academic transition at John Abbott College, where he initially struggled with sciences like calculus and chemistry before finding his stride in the Creative Arts program. He reflects on the formative power of the CEGEP system in Quebec, which allowed him to experiment with everything from radio production and filmmaking to horror film classes and digital media. This period of exploration was crucial in helping him to see behind the curtain of the gaming industry, moving him closer to the specialized field of level design as he realized that the industry was much more vast and varied than he had initially understood as a child. Beyond his personal history, Julian offers a candid look at the modern landscape of game development, discussing the differences between what makes for a great level and what doesn't. He emphasizes the accessibility of the industry today, noting that free tools and Game Jams provide a low barrier to entry for those willing to persevere. The episode concludes with advice for aspiring creators to never give up and to keep making games, serving as an inspiring roadmap for anyone navigating their own non-linear path into the technical and creative arts.

    57 phút
  3. 24 thg 4

    Interview with Ross Lazerowitz

    The Journey from Staples to Founder In this episode, we explore the career journey of Ross, co-founder and CEO of Mirage Security. Ross traces his origins from his early days as a local IT handyman and a retail associate at Staples. He emphasizes the value of retail work for anyone entering the tech field, arguing that it builds essential empathy and a first-hand understanding of the corporate structures that dominate the professional world. This early exposure to the human side of technology eventually led him to Syracuse University, where a cybersecurity internship at JP Morgan Chase convinced him to switch from a general IT track to more rigorous software engineering. Ross explains how his unconventional academic background, which paired software engineering with a minor in cognitive science and entrepreneurship, became a unique professional asset. Today, his work at Mirage Security focuses on defending the "human element" against sophisticated social engineering and AI-generated deepfakes, recognizing that while technology has deterministic controls, people remain the final and most vulnerable path for modern attackers. The conversation concludes with a deep dive into the AI revolution and its disruptive impact on both the workforce and the classroom. Ross shares his perspective on AI as a "universal tutor" capable of providing individualized instruction, while also addressing the growing challenge for junior developers who now find themselves mentoring AI agents rather than learning through traditional boilerplate tasks. He reflects on the rigor of academic weed-out courses like functional programming in Haskell and offers a final piece of advice for the next generation: in an era of generalist AI, specialized expertise in technical fields like engineering or math is a far more secure foundation than a general business degree.

    47 phút
  4. 12 thg 2

    Interview with Michael Shulman

    Thinking about going into sales? Listen to this podcast! In this episode of The Education Road, we sit down with Michael Shulman, whose career path is rooted in sales! Michael’s academic road began at York University, where he completed an Honours BA in Business Economics with a specialization in finance. Along the way, he discovered a strong aptitude for accounting and economics, skills that would later prove invaluable. Although he originally envisioned a future in investment banking, his career took a different turn. After starting in corporate finance at Bombardier, a moment reviewing sales commission structures sparked a realization: he wanted to be on the revenue-generating side of the business. That decision launched him into tech sales, first through finance roles in major organizations like Sun Microsystems, then progressively closer to end-user enterprise sales. Throughout the conversation, Michael breaks down what sales really looks like at the enterprise level. It’s not quick transactions or movie-style theatrics. It’s long sales cycles, strategic account planning, navigating budget cycles, building C-level relationships, and sometimes waiting years to close a deal. He shares how understanding accounting, balance sheets, international economics, and stakeholder dynamics allows him to have meaningful conversations with CFOs, CIOs, and CISOs. The episode also pulls back the curtain on compensation structures (base + commission, quotas, accelerators), the realities of prospecting, and the discipline required to consistently perform. One lesson that stuck with Michael from his mentor: “Always be prospecting.” In enterprise sales, if you’re not planting seeds today, you won’t be harvesting deals tomorrow. For students curious about sales, Michael offers candid advice: there’s no single required degree, but understanding business fundamentals helps. And if you want to get into sales, there is a more conventional path than the one he took, starting as an SDR and building from there. At its core, this episode explores how an education in finance and global affairs can translate into a high-impact career in enterprise technology sales and why the ability to understand systems, incentives, and people is what ultimately drives success.

    46 phút
  5. 29 thg 1

    Interview with Christin Gadsby

    Diversified education and the non-traditional education path to career! In this episode of The Education Road, we speak with Christine Gadsby, Chief Security Advisor at BlackBerry, whose education road is, in her own words, “non-traditional and very bumpy.” Christine’s story is a powerful reminder that learning paths are unique and often not expected. Christine begins by sharing the reality of her childhood. In high school, her focus wasn’t on a future career, but on getting through the day. As a teenage mother, survival became the priority, and higher education wasn’t immediately part of the picture. Her path into post-secondary education came later and in pieces. Christine took classes at the University of Washington, but ultimately completed her degree at Western Governors University, earning credentials in information technology and business management. She then worked her way into technology and security roles, gradually building expertise through hands-on experience. Over time, that foundation led her to BlackBerry, where she grew through multiple roles before becoming Chief Security Advisor. Throughout the conversation, Christine emphasizes how different her reality was from the traditional “college-to-career” narrative. She speaks candidly about what it means to learn without safety nets. Her story challenges the idea that success requires early clarity or privilege, and instead highlights resilience, grit, and the willingness to keep going. Mike and Christine also discuss how background shapes leadership. Christine reflects on how her experiences inform the way she approaches security, risk, and decision-making today. This episode won't touch upon polished resumes or perfect plans. Instead, we'll talk about building something meaningful from unstable ground, and recognizing that education often happens in fragments, including late nights, second chances, and hard-earned confidence.

    46 phút
  6. 18/12/2025

    Interview with Ali Crawford

    It’s okay to pursue passions and don’t be afraid to chase the unknown In this episode, we sit down with Ali Crawford, a Senior Research Analyst at the Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET) at Georgetown University. Ali shares her continuous and unexpected journey, taking listeners from the starting blocks of collegiate track and field to the complex world of national security and cyber policy. The conversation begins with Ali’s background as a Division II sprinter and hurdler at West Virginia Wesleyan College. She discusses the discipline required to balance academics with athletics and the transition to becoming a "NARP" (Non-Athletic Regular Person) after graduation. Ali reveals how a fascination with international business and a pivotal class taught by a former FBI agent during her Master’s program led her to carve out a niche in intelligence and cyber policy. Mike and Ali then dive deep into the current state of the cybersecurity workforce. They explore the "broken first rung" of the career ladder, debating why entry-level talent struggles to find work despite the reported massive labor shortages. Ali offers expert insights into the disconnect between higher education and workforce demands, the rise of "ghost postings," and the critical need for skills-based learning over purely theoretical degrees. For listeners who worry that they haven't found their "calling" yet, Ali’s story offers a powerful reassurance: you don't need a perfect plan to end up in a place your younger self would admire. Her journey underscores that progress is rarely a straight line. It's "continuous and unexpected," often shaped by the detours we take and the mentors we meet along the way. At its heart, this episode proves that education extends far beyond the classroom; it is found in the courage to embrace uncertainty and the willingness to simply chase the unknown.

    59 phút

Giới Thiệu

This podcast will talk to interesting people who will share their journey from the classroom to where they are now. How did their education play a role in who they are today and where they ended up? The education road is windy because there isn’t necessarily one path that leads you on your journey.