PPI - Radically Pragmatic
  • Donate
Skip to content
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Locations
    • Careers
  • People
  • Projects
  • Our Work
  • Events
  • Donate

Our Work

Preventing Failure to Launch: Creating More School-to-Work Pathways for Young Adults

  • April 6, 2021
  • Veronica Goodman
  • Tressa Pankovits
  • Tess Murphy
Download PDF

Today’s high school students and young adults face a difficult job market. The Covid pandemic has been particularly hard on less educated workers without a college degree. The 10 million jobs lost by Americans at the pandemic’s onset disproportionally impacted young adults between the ages of 16 and 24, and especially Black and Hispanic workers. Some estimate that as many as 25 percent of our youth will neither be in school nor working when the pandemic ends. 

Research shows that employers are less likely to hire workers with little to no experience for the “first jobs” that many younger workers rely on to build their skills and credentials. Without those first jobs, many will face fewer paths to enter the workforce. To help the non-college-bound, our education system needs to create alternative pathways to careers.

The Biden administration and Congress have the opportunity to create a revamped system that addresses inequality by building continuous pathways between high school and work. As part of his Build Back Better plan, President Biden has called for grants to states to accelerate students’ attainment of quality credentials, degrees, and opportunities in job training programs. As we discuss in this paper, there are promising existing models to draw on in thinking about how to provide more job opportunities to young adults.

This paper reviews several case studies to provide evidence-based examples of how to better connect students to careers. We first address the need for broad-based pathways to careers and then focus on four key themes across school−to−career models, including: (1) the importance of work-based learning that connects students to employers; (2) curriculums that emphasize soft skills and social capital to prepare young adults for their first jobs; (3) the need for supportive or wraparound services to help students get across the finish line; and, (4) high schools that help students earn credits toward postsecondary education along the way to graduation.

Read the full report here. 

 

Related Work

Trade Fact  |  July 15, 2026

America’s ‘industrial’ working class has shrunk by about a million since 2016

  • Ed Gresser
Press Release  |  July 14, 2026

Work-Based Learning Requires Support from Policymakers, Industry, PPI Highlights in New Report

  • Rachel Canter Bruno Manno
Publication  |  July 14, 2026

A Practical Guide to Work-Based Learning: Lessons from Six Programs at the Cutting-Edge of Career Education

  • Rachel Canter Bruno Manno
Op-Ed  |  July 7, 2026

Manno for Real Clear Education: School Absences Aren’t Created Equal: A Smarter Way to Fight Chronic Absenteeism

  • Bruno Manno
Op-Ed  |  July 6, 2026

Manno for The 74: The College Cost Fog Machine: We Need a New Transparency Compact

  • Bruno Manno
Op-Ed  |  July 3, 2026

Manno for Merion West: “Only in America”: Civic Memory at 250

  • Bruno Manno
  • Never miss an update:

  • Subscribe to our newsletter
PPI Logo
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Donate
  • Careers
  • © 2026 Progressive Policy Institute. All Rights Reserved.
  • |
  • Privacy Policy
  • |
  • Privacy Settings