This isn’t intended to box students into early career choices. Just as the Little League participant probably won’t grow up to play professional baseball, the adolescent cybersecurity enthusiast might not follow that path for the rest of their life. The soft and hard skills they learn along the path of exploration, however, will benefit them no matter what career they choose. Critical thinking, complex problem-solving, data analysis—all of these skills would benefit any child, not just those who grow up to work in cybersecurity. As children develop a sense of possibility and the skill sets needed for these possibilities, their horizons expand exponentially. The benefits go both ways: kids grow into adults with a set of skills that can lead to careers that are satisfying and stimulating; corporations have developed the large and diverse pool of talent they need to expand their businesses. As in the youth sports pathway, there doesn’t need to be too much focus on who doesn’t end up pursuing a sports career. They see the value in heavily investing in a robust pipeline to identify and train future cybersecurity specialists, as well as in developing young people who can take their talents to many other fields.
To achieve this, we’d need to replicate the robust support infrastructure that accompanies skill development in sports, pulling together companies, schools, and trusted community organizations to create career pathways. My organization, Success Pathways Alliance, is already exploring this model in the greater Cleveland area through opportunities with the Cleveland Metropolitan School District and the Urban League of Greater Cleveland. In 2019, the Cleveland Foundation and Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) contracted with us to better understand the career pathway landscape within CMSD, and examine available job opportunities for students upon graduating high school. Our initial research revealed that developing an exemplar career pathway model within an urban school district is a systemic issue, and would take a systems approach.
Our results led CMSD and the Cleveland Foundation to exploring a K-12 systems approach to developing career pathways, which mirrors the youth sports model for talent development by leveraging community partnerships, and exploring multiple opportunities and access points. Working with the Urban League of Greater Cleveland, President Obama’s My Brother’s Keeper Alliance, the Cleveland Cavaliers and various school districts, we are building a middle school-to-high school program that incorporates aspects of the youth sports apprenticeship model, building structured career pathways across multiple industry sectors for underserved youth in the Greater Cleveland area. We are developing programs in information technology, supply chain and logistics, professional sales, health care, and sports, and are excited about the possibilities of what this partnership will yield for youth in Cleveland as we emerge out of the pandemic.
It’s important to note that neither apprenticeship nor sports offers a perfect career pathways model. When it comes to recognizing the value of apprenticeship, employers and industry leaders can be reluctant to invest in broad, accessible training programs without a promise of worker retention. And the Registered Apprenticeship system also suffers from many of the same racial wage and opportunity disparities of the broader workforce, and needs to be intentional and focused to change those. The professional sports industry, as any fan knows, also struggles with equity issues, particularly when it comes to gender, and racial disparities between player and owner populations.
Where youth sports undoubtedly succeeds, however, is in its cultural relevance. By creating a talent development and training system that feeds into more than just the single occupation of professional athletes, it also attracts workers to the business side of the industry and creates fans who will be long-term consumers of their products. Sports appreciation is a foundational piece of American culture, and sports participation is widely lauded by individuals, families, and educational systems as a key to a well-rounded upbringing. If we could give apprenticeship and career exploration that same boost—and give students the guidance and resources for joyful discovery—we could develop a generation of innovators, workers, and winners.