Making It. Stephanie Malia Krauss

Making It - Stephanie Malia Krauss


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racial equity and equal opportunity that will help build a future that works.

      Maria Flynn

      President and CEO

      JFF

      1 1 National Center for Education Statistics. “Certificates and Degrees Conferred by Race/Ethnicity,” The Condition of Education, 2017. https://nces.ed.gov/programs/coe/pdf/coe_svc.pdf.

      2 2 Emma Whitford, “People of Color, Disproportionately Affected by Pandemic, Expect to Need More Education If Laid Off, Survey Shows,” Inside Higher Ed, April 23, 2020. https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2020/04/23/people-color-disproportionately-affected-pandemic-expect-need-more-education-if-laid.

      This book explores how today's kids and the world are changing, and what that means for what young people need to be ready for adulthood. Most schools, curriculums, and youth programs were not designed for this new reality. Instead, systems like public schools operate from outdated models meant to prepare farm kids to work in factories. Beyond farms and factories, our public schools were also designed for a white student body. Consequently, our school system consistently advantages white students over their Black and brown peers.

      Today, young people are transitioning into an adult life full of rapid change and unpredictability. It is time for us to update our understanding of what young people need and upgrade their educational and preparatory experiences accordingly. Doing so gives us the opportunity to redesign education in ways that remove historic barriers to opportunity and harmful policies and practices; it also provides an opportunity to construct a more holistic approach to learning that is steeped in the real world and levels the playing field.

      When I taught and ran a school, I knew we were working off of outdated information, but I didn't have the time or resources to find what I needed to update our thinking and modernize practice. Knowing these real constraints, this book was designed to:

       Include information you need but don't have time to look for.

       Organize that information in ways that are easy to read and act on.

       Make this enjoyable to read, whether you take it on cover to cover or in pieces.

      In Chapter 1, we consider today's kids—how they are wired by their experiences, what they care about, and what makes them so different from the rest of us. We see what it means that they don't know a world without high-speed internet and smartphones. We meet the recession-resilient high school graduating class of 2020, who entered kindergarten during the Great Recession and graduated high school during COVID-19. We come face-to-face with a generation of kids who crave safety and stability and hope for a steady job and good life.

      In Chapter 2, we examine our rapidly changing world and workplace. We explore how machines, sheer momentum, and an evolving market are reshaping how we live, learn, and work. We consider the jobs and skills of the future, and the roles that artificial intelligence, augmented reality, and virtual reality will play in tomorrow's workplace. We wrap up with some predictions on what kinds of work young people will likely experience over their lifetimes.

      The first part of the book makes it clear that our de facto “checklist for adulthood”—finish high school, go to college, graduate, get a job, make money, get promoted (or find a better job), retire, and live comfortably—no longer holds. Tomorrow's world is a vast and ever-evolving opportunity marketplace that demands certain life currencies to make it. These currencies are competencies, connections, credentials, and cash.

      The final part of the book lays out five characteristics of currency-builders, that is, educators—inside and outside of the classroom—who transform the places and spaces where young people learn into currency-rich environments. You will find these characteristics work at home, at school, in the workplace, and in the community. They can be operationalized in-person, online, or both.

      These currencies can be learned, earned, or inherited. America's long history of racism has made it harder for Black, brown, indigenous, and immigrant families to build and pass down currencies to their children. Generations of discrimination and struggle mean that their families often don't start out with enough financial or social capital. These young people have to work hard to make up the difference and, because of continued exclusionary practices, work harder than their white peers to accrue more.

      Because of this, the currencies—along with the currency-building strategies presented in this book—must be viewed with a racial equity lens.

      Bottom line: it is hardest for young people of color to make it in America. Our schools, workplaces, hospitals, and other systems were not designed with them in mind. This is only compounded when those young people have other experiences that push them farther to the margins. This might include being disabled, poor, or undocumented, experiencing housing instability, or being systems-involved—or even several of these experiences at once. These young people are forced to endure the universal stresses and challenges of today's world, while also taking on a whole other set of race- and experience-related challenges that make it much harder to succeed overall.

      I was finishing the first draft of this book when a bat in a Chinese meat market got someone sick and infected the world. Overnight, many of our households became home schools, and we were all reminded that school is much more than where kids go to get academic content. The pandemic illustrated how closely young people's quality of learning is tied to their quality of life. Right away, we saw kids with the most social and financial resources doing much better than their more isolated and cash-strapped peers. The year 2020 exposed the many ways a crisis can affect young people's current and future life trajectories.

      Those growing up on America's social and economic fault lines—divides that continue to be marked by race and


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