LCW Making Connections

M1 S2 Unit 1 Understanding My Progression Opportunities

Folens Season 1 Episode 5

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0:00 | 21:12
SPEAKER_00

You are sitting at like a family dinner. Or maybe you've just bumped into a well-meaning neighbor at the store.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, yeah, we've all been there.

SPEAKER_00

Right. And they lock eyes with you, put on this very serious face, and ask the ultimate dread-inducing question. So what are you doing after school?

SPEAKER_01

Ugh. It is just the single heaviest question you can face when you are somewhere between, you know, 15 and 19 years old. It really is. Because baked into that casual question is this massive assumption that you are supposed to have a fully articulated, totally foolproof plan for the next 40 years of your life.

SPEAKER_00

And if you don't have that plan, the panic just sets in. You feel this intense, um, suffocating pressure.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely.

SPEAKER_00

It's this illusion that the entire rest of your life hinges on one monolithic decision you have to make right now before graduation.

SPEAKER_01

Which is terrifying.

SPEAKER_00

It is. And if you are listening to this, you know that pressure. It can be completely paralyzing. So our mission for today's deep dive is to completely dismantle that paralysis.

SPEAKER_01

That is the goal.

SPEAKER_00

We are looking at this brilliant roadmap, a textbook called Life, Community, and Work. Making Connections by Caroline McHale.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, specifically focusing on a module called Exploring My Progression Opportunities.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. We want to take that terrifying, looming future and break it down into a highly strategic, totally manageable menu of options. Okay, let's unpack this.

SPEAKER_01

Well, the foundational shift we have to make right now is how we view the timeline of a career. Right. The traditional narrative treats leaving school as a bottleneck. Like it's a single finish line where everyone is forced onto the exact same highway.

SPEAKER_00

Which just isn't true.

SPEAKER_01

No, the reality, and what this source material meticulously lays out, is that leaving school is an open crossroads. There are multiple structurally different routes.

SPEAKER_00

But to navigate them, you have to stop looking at what everyone else is doing.

SPEAKER_01

Precisely. The text emphasizes that your primary navigation tool is self-auditing. You have to understand your own core values, your aptitudes, and, you know, your genuine interests.

SPEAKER_00

Because if you just blindly follow the default path without auditing yourself, you end up miserable.

SPEAKER_01

You really do.

SPEAKER_00

And I feel like the default path in a lot of people's minds is still, you know, finish secondary school, march straight into a traditional four-year university, get a degree, and sit at a desk.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Yeah, that's the classic expectation.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell We need to shatter that myth immediately. The modern economy just doesn't work like that anymore. And the progression opportunities available to you actually reflect that reality.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell They do. And the sheer variety of options is built by design. The textbook outlines several distinct structural pathways. Aaron Powell. Well, you have higher education, which is the traditional academic route, but then you have further education and training, or FAE T.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, Fae VT.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. These are highly practical, skills-focused courses designed to get you directly into a specific sector. You also have traineeships.

SPEAKER_00

Which are what exactly?

SPEAKER_01

They are essentially educational courses, but with a massive baked-in work placement component.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, nice.

SPEAKER_01

And then you have apprenticeships where the structure is completely flipped. You are fundamentally an employee earning a wage, but your training and education are integrated right into the job.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Okay, wait. When you say apprenticeship, my brain immediately goes to like a guy into a sink fixing pipes. Yeah. Or someone in a hard hat wiring a commercial building. Are we just talking about traditional manual trades here?

SPEAKER_01

I mean, that is the mental image most people have, but the mechanism of an apprenticeship has been completely overhauled for the modern workforce. Really? Oh, yeah. While those vital traditional trades are still a core part of the system, the apprenticeship model has expanded into entirely new sectors. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

Like what kind of sectors?

SPEAKER_01

You can now do an apprenticeship in international finance, advanced ICT support. Wow. Yeah. Hospitality management or software development. You are earning a competitive paycheck while simultaneously learning the architecture of complex computer networks or financial regulations.

SPEAKER_00

So you basically bypass the massive student debt, you get real-world corporate experience from day one, and you still end up fully qualified in a high-income tech or business field.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Precisely. And there is a massive macroeconomic reason why all these different routes exist. Society fundamentally requires this diversity.

SPEAKER_00

Right, because if everyone did the same thing.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. Think about the mechanics of a functioning city. If our entire education system was just a factory that only pumped out academic university graduates who wanted to work in management or research, the whole physical and digital infrastructure of society would collapse.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, you wouldn't have anyone to physically build the renewable energy grids or, you know, manage the logistics of the supply chain.

SPEAKER_01

Or maintain the server farms that keep the internet running. You need a highly varied mix of skills.

SPEAKER_00

That makes a lot of sense.

SPEAKER_01

But more importantly for you, the listener, this diversity of pathways caters to neurodiversity and different learning styles.

SPEAKER_00

Which is huge.

SPEAKER_01

It is. Some people cognitively thrive when they are sitting in a lecture hall absorbing abstract theory, but other people learn best kinetically.

SPEAKER_00

Like by actually doing it.

SPEAKER_01

Right, by physically doing the task, making a mistake, and correcting it in real time. If you force a kinetic learner into a four-year theoretical degree, they will lose all motivation.

SPEAKER_00

They'll just burn out.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The textbook makes the point that finding the pathway that matches your specific cognitive style is the key to maintaining long-term motivation.

SPEAKER_00

So you can go to a university, you can jump into a local FEHE course, you can take an apprenticeship, or you could even look into entrepreneurship.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, starting your own venture.

SPEAKER_00

Or taking structured time for travel and community work to build a global perspective. The one true path is officially busted.

SPEAKER_01

Completely busted.

SPEAKER_00

But knowing there are all these options kind of creates a new problem. The paradox of choice.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, it can be overwhelming.

SPEAKER_00

How do you actually filter down the entire world of work into something you can wrap your head around?

SPEAKER_01

The source material provides a really great cognitive filter for this. It separates the entire working world into two distinct categories, career fields and job roles.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, career fields and job roles.

SPEAKER_01

Understanding the mechanical difference between these two things is crucial for lowering your stress levels.

SPEAKER_00

Right. So a career field is a massive, broad umbrella. It encompasses dozens, sometimes hundreds, of jobs that all rely on a similar core set of skills or a shared environment.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

STEM, like science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, is a career field. Health and social care is a career field. Yes. But a job role is the hyper-specific daily execution of a task within that field. Software developer, physiotherapist, graphic designer, those are job roles.

SPEAKER_01

Right. That's a great breakdown.

SPEAKER_00

It's basically like picking a genre of music. So you realize your vibe is rock music. That is your career field. You know the general sound, you know the culture, you know the general environment you want to be in.

SPEAKER_01

I like that analogy. Trevor Burrus, Jr.

SPEAKER_00

But your job role is deciding whether you are going to be the lead guitarist sweating on stage, the sound engineer sitting quietly at the mixing board, or um the tour manager organizing the logistics.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

You are all working in the exact same genre, but your daily stress levels, your physical locations, and your daily tasks are wildly different.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell What's fascinating here is that identifying your genre first is a massive psychological relief. You don't need to know right now what specific instrument you want to play for the next 40 years.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell That takes so much pressure off.

SPEAKER_01

It really does. You just need to figure out what broad category of work aligns with your aptitudes. To do that, the textbook suggests a multi-layered audit.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. How does that work?

SPEAKER_01

First, look at the micro level, your school subjects. What classes do you actually look forward to? What do you do in your free time when no one is forcing you to work?

SPEAKER_00

And then you look at the macro level. What is happening in the global economy? Because your personal interests don't exist in a vacuum.

SPEAKER_01

Right. They intersect with the real world.

SPEAKER_00

If you are interested in technology, you have to look at the massive systemic rise in artificial intelligence. If you are interested in engineering, you look at the global pivot toward green jobs and renewable energy.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell Because those macro trends directly impact the security and earning potential of your chosen field. And it happens on a local level, too. Well, if you live in a region experiencing a severe housing shortage, the economic demand for urban planners, architects, construction managers, and civil engineers just skyrocket.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, makes sense.

SPEAKER_01

Or if your city is pouring money into a new tourism initiative, hospitality and event management become incredibly lucrative and secure, you have to layer your personal interests over the realities of the market.

SPEAKER_00

The textbook uses a case study that really illustrates how this layering works. There is this student named Olivia.

SPEAKER_01

Ah, yes, Olivia.

SPEAKER_00

She does her self-audit and isolates two core traits. She is highly creative and she gets a lot of energy from helping people. She is good at English and art, and she doesn't mind standing up and speaking in front of a room.

SPEAKER_01

Notice what she hasn't done though. She hasn't picked a job title.

SPEAKER_00

Right. She has just defined her core competencies. She has defined her genre.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And because she understands her core competencies, she's open to a massive variety of Job roles that utilize those exact same traits.

SPEAKER_00

What kind of roles?

SPEAKER_01

The text points out that Olivia could explore becoming a primary school teacher, working as a special needs assistant, or even pursuing a degree in media and communications.

SPEAKER_00

Those sounds so different.

SPEAKER_01

The daily mechanics of teaching a room full of children versus producing a radio segment are completely different, but they both fundamentally require a person who is creative, communicative, and focused on public service.

SPEAKER_00

Which naturally leads to the next massive question. Once Olivia has this list of potential jobs, like teaching, media, social work, how does she know which one will actually make her happy on a random Tuesday in November?

SPEAKER_01

That is the big question.

SPEAKER_00

You cannot commit four years and thousands of dollars to a degree in marine biology only to discover on your first day of work that you get chronically seasick.

SPEAKER_01

No, that would be a disaster.

SPEAKER_00

You have to test drive the reality of the job while you are still in senior cycle.

SPEAKER_01

And the concept of active research is heavily emphasized in the source material. We are not talking about passively scrolling through career websites.

SPEAKER_00

No, you have to get out there.

SPEAKER_01

We are talking about getting out into the physical world, attending career fairs with targeted questions, going to college open days, and actually walking the campus to see if you like the environment.

SPEAKER_00

Interviewing people in the role, too.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, interviewing professionals, and most importantly, work shadowing.

SPEAKER_00

Work shadowing is like the ultimate cheat code. You essentially follow someone around for a day or a week and just watch them operate.

SPEAKER_01

It's incredibly revealing.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But you have to know what to look for. You aren't just watching the tasks, you are analyzing the environment. Is the office dead silent? Or is it chaotic and loud?

SPEAKER_01

Exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Does this person sit at a screen for eight hours, or are they constantly moving and interacting with clients? Are they managing high-stakes crises, or are they doing methodical, predictable data entry?

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell, you are trying to see if your Nova system actually matches the daily reality of the role.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

Beyond shadowing, the text strongly advocates for accumulating actual certified skills while you are still in secondary school. This is about building a portfolio before you even graduate.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Like what kind of skills?

SPEAKER_01

We are looking at part-time work, strategic volunteering, short QQI courses, and industry-specific certificates.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, right.

SPEAKER_01

Taking a weekend to get a safe pass if you are interested in construction, or completing a free online Google digital marketing certification.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell There's a great practical example in the text about a student named Ben. Ben thinks he might want to go into healthcare, but he isn't totally sure.

SPEAKER_01

Right. He's just testing the waters.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Instead of just waiting until graduation to apply for a nursing degree, he actively signs up for a first aid course during his fifth year.

SPEAKER_01

Such a smart move.

SPEAKER_00

It is a low stakes, high reward experiment. It teaches him the raw basics of patient care. It proves to him that he doesn't faint at the sight of blood, and it gives him a massive confidence boost in emergency situations.

SPEAKER_01

It successfully validates his hypothesis that he belongs in healthcare.

SPEAKER_00

But wait, what if I take a first aid course or say shadow a graphic designer for a week and realize I absolutely hate it?

SPEAKER_01

This is where a lot of young people get stuck. What happens if you run the experiment and it fails?

SPEAKER_00

Right. Say you sit in the studio, you watch them argue with a client over the shade of blue on a logo, you watch them stare at a screen for nine hours straight, and you realize with absolute certainty that you would be miserable doing this. Isn't that a waste of time? Have you just wasted a week of your life?

SPEAKER_01

The exact opposite. You need to entirely rewire how you view a failed test drive.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, really?

SPEAKER_01

Discovering that you despise a certain work environment is an incredibly valuable piece of data. It is a massive victory because it just prevented you from sinking years of tuition money and time into the wrong progression pathway.

SPEAKER_00

Okay. Yeah, that makes sense.

SPEAKER_01

Finding out early is a systemic advantage.

SPEAKER_00

And beyond that, the time is never wasted because of the mechanics of transferable skills.

SPEAKER_01

Right, exactly.

SPEAKER_00

Even if you walk away knowing you never want to look at Adobe Illustrator again, you didn't leave empty-handed. While you were in that studio, you were absorbing how professionals manage difficult clients.

SPEAKER_01

You watched how they structure a project timeline to hit a deadline?

SPEAKER_00

You observed professional conflict resolution. Those are transferable skills. You take those client management and communication tools, pack them up, and carry them with you into whatever career field you test out next.

SPEAKER_01

And modern employers hire based on those adaptable skills just as much as technical knowledge.

SPEAKER_00

So assuming you have done the self-audit, you have narrowed down your career field, you have run a few test drives, and you have finally identified a job role that genuinely excites you.

SPEAKER_01

You're ready for the final phase.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The final phase of this process is execution. You have to select the specific provider that will give you the qualifications you need, and you have to weigh the systemic pros and cons of each option on the post school menu.

SPEAKER_01

Let's break down the mechanics of these providers, starting with further education and training, or FET.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, let's do it.

SPEAKER_01

The structural advantage of a FEFI course is that it is heavily practical, heavily focused on employability, and usually located right in your local community.

SPEAKER_00

Which drastically cuts down on living expenses. It is an incredible stunning stone.

SPEAKER_01

It is. The downside is that because they are local and specific, the highly sought-after courses can be surprisingly competitive to get into, and they don't offer the broad theoretical exploration of a university.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Then you look at higher education, the classic university or institute of technology route.

SPEAKER_01

The undeniable benefit here is that you walk away with a globally recognized standardized degree. You get access to massive research libraries, specialized laboratories, and the networking power of a large institution.

SPEAKER_00

However, the friction points are significant. You're dealing with the stress of high CAO point requirements, intensely demanding academic coursework, and the crushing financial reality of tuition, rent, and living costs if you have to relocate to a major city.

SPEAKER_01

You also have private colleges. The business model of a private college means they are highly responsive to the market.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell, which means what, practically?

SPEAKER_01

They often offer extremely flexible timetables, smaller class sizes, and curriculums that are directly tied to current industry needs.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell But the friction point there is purely financial.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Right. The tuition fees are generally much higher because they aren't state subsidized in the same way.

SPEAKER_00

Aaron Powell Finally, you have direct industry or professional training. This is like a surgical strike.

SPEAKER_01

Yes, exactly.

SPEAKER_00

You are going in to get a highly specific practical qualification quickly, like a specialized coaching award, a heavy machinery license, or a specific coding boot camp.

SPEAKER_01

It gets you into the workforce incredibly fast, but its scope is very narrow. It qualifies you for that one specific function, whereas a broader degree gives you more lateral mobility.

SPEAKER_00

The textbook grounds all of this in a scenario with a student named Sam.

SPEAKER_01

Sam's a great example.

SPEAKER_00

Sam knows his end goal. He wants to work in early years education, but he has to look at his current reality to choose his provider.

SPEAKER_01

So what are his options?

SPEAKER_00

Option one is his local FE Tabaschool. It is highly practical, he could live at home, and it includes a built-in work placement. But the places are capped and highly competitive. Option two is a traditional university degree. This gives him the highest level of qualification and opens doors for advanced management roles later. But the entry points are intimidating, the campus is three hours away, and the cost of renting a room is terrifying.

SPEAKER_01

That's a lot to weigh.

SPEAKER_00

And then option three is a private college, which would let him take evening classes so he can maintain his current part-time job, but the upfront fees are steep.

SPEAKER_01

Sam's scenario really highlights that there is no universal best path. The optimal choice is entirely dependent on his personal constraints and values. Right. If debt aversion is his primary driver, the FET college is the clear winner. If rapid career advancement is his priority and he can secure a loan or a grant, the university makes sense. He has to balance his long-term ambition against his short-term reality.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, so you have picked your provider, you know where you are going, but just saying I'm going to become a primary school teacher is not a plan. It is just a wish.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. You need a roadmap.

SPEAKER_00

The textbook introduces a highly specific framework to turn that abstract wish into a concrete, executable career progression plan. It is called the Smarter Framework, S-M-A-R-T-E-R.

SPEAKER_01

It stands for specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, time-bound, evaluated, and reviewed.

SPEAKER_00

Saying I want to be an engineer is just wishing. Using the Smarter framework is like putting an actual destination into your GPS. You get turn-by-turn directions.

SPEAKER_01

That's a perfect analogy. If we think about this like the scientific method for your life, it changes everything. You aren't just guessing, you are running a structured experiment.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, let's break it down. Specific. What exactly is the action? I'm going to apply for this specific FET course in childcare.

SPEAKER_01

Measurable. How do you prove it is done? I will have the application confirmation email in my inbox.

SPEAKER_00

Achievable. Do you actually meet the entry requirements right now, or do you need a bridging course?

SPEAKER_01

Relevant. Does taking this course actually move you closer to managing a childcare facility?

SPEAKER_00

And time bound. I will submit the application by 500 p.m. next Friday.

SPEAKER_01

The first five letters, SMART, they create the structural scaffolding of the goal. But the absolute most important part of this entire framework lies in the final two letters. Evaluated and reviewed.

SPEAKER_00

This is where most people fail, isn't it?

SPEAKER_01

Yes. They set a plan, they run into a wall, and they just blindly keep pushing or they quit entirely.

SPEAKER_00

Evaluated forces you to step back from the grind and critically analyze the data. You ask yourself, did that step actually work? I took the bridging course, but did it actually improve my understanding, or am I still struggling with the core concepts?

SPEAKER_01

And then reviewed is the behavioral pivot. This is the cognitive flexibility we talked about earlier.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

Based on your evaluation, do you need to change your hypothesis? Do you need to adjust your timeline? Do you need to seek out a tutor?

SPEAKER_00

A career plan is never a locked-in contract, right?

SPEAKER_01

Never. A career progression plan should never be treated as a legally binding contract that you sign in blood at age 17. It is a living, breathing document. As you age, as you gain more data about the world, and as the global economy shifts, your plan must adapt.

SPEAKER_00

The ultimate takeaway for you, listening to this right now, is to recognize the power you actually have. We started by looking at that heavy, suffocating pressure of what are you doing after school?

SPEAKER_01

And hopefully that pressure feels a bit lighter now.

SPEAKER_00

You now have the systemic knowledge to see that the pressure is based on a myth. There is no single train leaving the station. You have an entire landscape of options, apprenticeships where you earn while learning, practical fit T courses, flexible private colleges, and traditional degrees.

SPEAKER_01

You have choices.

SPEAKER_00

You navigate this landscape by relentlessly auditing your own interests and testing the waters with work shadowing in short courses. You gather data, you build transferable skills even when you fail, and you execute your next move using the SMART framework.

SPEAKER_01

You are the architect of this process. It is entirely acceptable, and in fact it is economically necessary, to choose a route, travel down it for a few years, gather new data about yourself, and purposefully pivot into a new lane. Continuous adaptation is the reality of the modern workforce.

SPEAKER_00

Think about the sheer velocity of technological change happening around you right now, AI integrating into every sector.

SPEAKER_01

The complete overhaul of global energy grids.

SPEAKER_00

The automation of logistics. What if the absolute perfect job for you, the exact role where your specific mix of creativity, logic, and empathy will thrive a decade from now, literally hasn't even been invented yet? How do you prepare for a job that doesn't exist?