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Former Daniels Student Paves Way for Young People to Succeed in Professional Settings Through Apprenticeships

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Nika Anschuetz

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Nika.Anschuetz@du.edu

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At 16, Lanna Hernandez wanted more than the typical teenage job; she wanted a career. Under the recommendation of her guidance counselor, Hernandez applied to CareerWise鈥檚 apprenticeship program鈥攚hich offers a modern twist on classic apprenticeships.

Noel Ginsburg, founder of knows the feeling. When Ginsburg was a teenager, he worked at a manufacturing plant and, during his senior year as a student at the 快活app鈥檚 he had started his own custom plastics business.听

Noel Ginsburg

鈥淢y experience at 快活app was life-changing and opened the door for me to be able to start multiple businesses over the years,鈥 Ginsburg says.

Intertech Plastics was not only a passion of Ginsburg鈥檚 but also a vehicle to do good.

鈥淚 wanted the company to serve as a platform for me to give back to the community,鈥 he says.

Early in the business, Ginsburg ran into a consistent problem鈥攈e couldn鈥檛 find the talent to fill open positions. At first, he blamed the school system for not better preparing students, but after visiting nearby Montbello High School in Denver, he realized the problem was much more nuanced.

鈥淪chools are not like businesses,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f I had raw materials that came in out of spec, I sent them back. You don鈥檛 do that in schools. In schools, kids come from all backgrounds, all different academic levels. You put them in a class, and it is hard.鈥

But Ginsburg pressed on and came up with a way to connect the learning of necessary skills to real-world projects: apprenticeships. He created a partnership between Montbello and Intertech Plastics, the first of many.

As Intertech Plastics continued to succeed, Ginsburg looked at more avenues to give back and meaningfully impact the lives of young people. He founded , and he and his wife Leslie 鈥渁dopted鈥 a class of 42 elementary school students in a Denver metro community where the dropout rate was nearly 90%. For 10 years, with the help of a staff person, they embedded themselves into the community, going to parent-teacher conferences, paying for braces, doing what they could to help the kids succeed. Ultimately, they reversed course for those kids, with 90% of them graduating from high school.

鈥淭hat 10-year experience is why I do what I do today,鈥 Ginsburg says.

While he was thrilled with the success, Ginsburg knew adopting classes wasn鈥檛 a scalable idea. He spent years exploring other options and ended up visiting Switzerland through his work with Denver Public Schools to learn about the Swiss education system. Academically, the systems look similar, he says. But in Switzerland, there鈥檚 a heavy emphasis on professional education and training, which starts as early as middle school. Also, businesses there work alongside schools to create meaningful professional and post-secondary opportunities.

When Ginsburg returned to Denver, he had a vision. It wasn鈥檛 enough to tell other businesses about it; he wanted them to see it. He reached out to then-Governor John Hickenlooper and asked him to join a delegation of business executives to Switzerland.

鈥淭he missing partner was business. It wasn鈥檛 to stand on the outside to be a critic or an advisor; they are a part of the training system,鈥 Ginsburg says. 鈥淭he return on investment for business was the key to unlocking scale.鈥

And in 2016, CareerWise was born. CareerWise partners with businesses and schools, offering apprenticeships in careers like IT, marketing, accounting, sales, hospitality and financial services. To date, more than 1,400 apprentices have been hired by 120 companies.

Ginsburg looks at CareerWise as an 鈥渙ptions multiplier,鈥 and for former apprentices like Hernandez, it has been.

In March 2020, Hernandez, a student at Overland High School, began her marketing coordinator apprenticeship at CareerWise Colorado鈥檚 office. Shortly after, as the world grappled with the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, Hernandez wasn鈥檛 only a remote student but also a remote worker.

Because of a partnership between CareerWise and Overland, Hernandez was able to split her time between school and work, spending two days a week at home working. On track to graduate, Hernandez wanted to finish high school as soon as she could. She doubled up on English classes and graduated as a junior.

鈥淚t was kind of nerve-wracking. I knew the path I wanted to build for myself,鈥 Hernandez says. 鈥淚 was overwhelmed, but I was very driven.鈥

At 18, Hernandez is now a full-time marketing coordinator at CareerWise, a job she was offered after completing her apprenticeship. She鈥檚 since earned a certificate in project management, and she鈥檚 working toward obtaining a real estate license, utilizing the skills she鈥檚 gathered as a marketing professional.

Hernandez says all this wouldn鈥檛 be possible without CareerWise鈥檚 youth apprenticeship program. The company鈥檚 enthusiasm to work alongside young people motivated her to work hard.

鈥淒espite our age, despite our [lack of] experience, they thought there was power in the youth as long as they were given the same materials,鈥 Hernandez says. 鈥淭he program has benefitted so many people, and I鈥檓 just one person to live through it.鈥

While Hernandez and Ginsburg are at opposite ends of their careers, they both proved early that age is only a number.