Future Partners with Home Depot’s Path To Pro

Pearson Futures

To Give Students a Head Start in the Trades

The Partnership

Path to Pro is an initiative created by Home Depot and its Home Depot Pro contractors as a way to connect students interested in trade work to employers in the construction industry, an industry with a projected 640,000 openings each year. The program offers free, online training in a number of skills and then puts trained talent in front of professionals in its network.

It does this through several important steps:

1.

Introducing students to trade work and outlining the benefits of a career in the trades

2.

Training students in valuable hard and soft skills

3.

Connecting to professionals looking to hire, via an online profile and extensive job board

4.

Providing opportunities for apprenticeships and one-on-one mentorships

5.

Providing pathways to both earn-while-you-learn programs and technical school

Why it matters

Path to Pro is an initiative created by Home Depot and its Home Depot Pro contractors as a way to connect students interested in trade work to employers in the construction industry—an industry with a projected 640,000 openings each year. The program offers free, online training in a number of skills and then puts trained talent in front of professionals in its network. It does this through several important steps:

1. Low Cost

Path to Pro is an initiative created by Home Depot and its Home Depot Pro contractors as a way to connect students interested in trade work to employers in the construction industry—an industry with a projected 640,000 openings each year.

3. Quick Start

Path to Pro is an initiative created by Home Depot and its Home Depot Pro contractors as a way to connect students interested in trade work to employers in the construction industry—an industry with a projected 640,000 openings each year.

2. High Demand

Path to Pro is an initiative created by Home Depot and its Home Depot Pro contractors as a way to connect students interested in trade work to employers in the construction industry—an industry with a projected 640,000 openings each year.

4. Gateway to Entrepreneurship

Path to Pro is an initiative created by Home Depot and its Home Depot Pro contractors as a way to connect students interested in trade work to employers in the construction industry—an industry with a projected 640,000 openings each year.

Get Involved

Path to Pro is just one of many options geared towards giving early talent a leg up. By minimizing debt and uncertainty, and maximizing experience, skills, and a strategic pathway to success, PTP and Futures are working together to increase opportunities for the next generation. Click here to find out more about Path to Pro, and here to see more ways that we’re connecting early talent to their future.

Learn More

Explore More Articles

  • Our Partnership with SEMI Will Help You Find Your Future in Microelectronics
    By Pearson Futures

    SEMI is the major industry association for the microelectronics industry. It represents over 3,000 high-tech businesses focused on creating a broad range of electronic products that we use and depend on every day. Microelectronics are the tiny computers and silicon chips (also known as semiconductors) found in ubiquitous items like phones, watches, cars, laptops, really any piece of electronic equipment you can think of. The semiconductor is essentially the brain of the device.

    One of SEMI’s goals is to help electronics manufacturers and businesses develop the next generation of talent. Demand for microelectronics is massive, which means the industry offers numerous career opportunities for young people. The key is to help a new generation of talent learn about these many and varied careers, and to put young jobseekers in touch with the resources they can use to get a meaningful start.

    Why it matters

    Investments in the domestic production of microelectronics have grown tremendously over the past few years, indicating that many businesses in this sector are in dire need of talent of almost every conceivable type: engineering, production, construction, distribution, business operations, and more. Every major industry sector you can think of—from tech to communications to healthcare to the military to transportation to energy to manufacturing—needs LOTS of microelectronics.

    Many of these businesses also realize that today’s junior high, high school, and college students are not aware of either the high demand for new talent or the varied and interesting types of work within the industry. So they are working hard to get in front of young people and raise awareness of these jobs.To get started, check out SEMI’s career site. There you will find:

  • When it Comes to Figuring out College and Career, the Digital Generation Still Prefers Mom and Dad
    By Pearson Futures

    Who are high school students turning to for guidance?

    We can all remember that time in high school when the future felt blurry and like an ever-moving target. And what was true for previous generations is now even more true for Gen Z, given the incredible amount of technological, cultural, social, and economic upheaval they’ve experienced since 2020. Further, in a world where the internet plays such a substantial role, the vast sea of information can often make decisions tougher. ‘Who do I ask for help?’ is now a question with a million answers. 

    To better understand how today’s students feel about their post high school life, we surveyed Connections Academy students. Perhaps most interestingly, Gen Z, the generation with the greatest exposure to the greatest wealth of technology the world has ever seen, is still completely reliant on their parents for guidance about the future. And for all the current popularity of AI, it plays virtually no role in how students are making decisions. 

    For instance, when it comes to making choices about college, 85% of the students we asked said that they rely primarily on mom and dad. The next closest answer percentage-wise was ‘other family members’ at 46%. Only 25% said that they would turn to social media. 

    Of course, the internet still plays a role: 42% of students said they use online sources and other forms of online education for help making college choices. But familial relationships had the clear priority, and digital or more remote sources were only a secondary source.