Introducing NextUp: CompTIA’s new initiative

Thibodeaux explained how they learned that, in general, kids in middle school and early high school are in a very aspirational phase when it comes to thinking about their futures. In short, they’re dreamers. They aren’t yet thinking about the practicalities of a career, money or security. Their world has endless possibilities. Along with that discovery emerged these five key lessons:
The college dream is powerful: It is a dream for both students and parents, regardless of socioeconomic status, gender, or ethnicity.
High school curriculum has to be college prep: This means that programs that focus on hands-on trades or hardware-focused tech skills are minimized or eliminated from high school curriculum because they aren’t perceived as preparing kids for college.
There is no silver bullet: There is no single source of information or website that will draw kids to tech. Even if there were, it would be competing with countless other sites from other industries.
Kids are passion-driven: They have bought into the “follow your passion” message.
Role models rule: The most important lesson we’ve learned through the research is the importance of role models in the process of choosing a career.
More Info: jobs with comptia a+

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