Jobs for the Future names education-work model the Big Blur
Updated
Updated · Santa Fe New Mexican · May 10
Jobs for the Future names education-work model the Big Blur
4 articles · Updated · Santa Fe New Mexican · May 10
The nonprofit says New Mexico has one of the nation's lowest labour-force participation rates, while 10% of 16- to 19-year-olds are neither in school nor working.
Employers across the state are struggling to fill jobs in healthcare, manufacturing and energy as hiring managers increasingly expect young people to have meaningful work experience.
The model aims to connect classroom learning with career opportunities earlier by blending K-12, higher education and employment, reflecting a broader US push to address skilled-worker shortages.
With millions of youth seeking work, why do entry-level jobs now demand years of professional experience?
Employers want experience but hesitate to train. Is the 'skills gap' a myth hiding a corporate investment gap?
As AI transforms the workplace, are apprenticeships teaching durable skills or just filling today's empty jobs?