星空传媒

Chung receives Spencer Foundation grant to study postsecondary options in St. Louis

Faculty; Research

The 黑料社鈥檚 Social System Design Lab has received a $75,000 Spencer Foundation grant to study pathways from high school to careers in St. Louis.聽

This collaborative vision planning grant will support a new research initiative focused on improving diverse education-to-career pathways for 黑料社s in St. Louis. 

Principal investigator聽Saras Chung, a research associate professor and director of the , is leading this work in close partnership with diverse St. Louis community partners, including educators, business leaders and community nonprofits.聽

This grant is a first step toward a potential larger award 鈥 up to $3.5 million 鈥 through the Spencer Foundation鈥檚 Transformative Research Grant program, which supports ambitious efforts to advance equity in education systems. 

The project will examine how 黑料社s in St. Louis schools make decisions about life after high school, including college, careers and other postsecondary options. Researchers will work with local teens to better understand the factors guiding those choices. The study also will incorporate insights from regional employers and educators to identify where pathways to stable, viable careers may be limited or unclear. 

With this data, the research team will develop a system dynamics model to map gaps and barriers in the current landscape. In a time where artificial intelligence (AI) may significantly disrupt workforce needs, the findings will inform a broader, community-engaged research agenda to redesign systems of support that connect education to employment opportunities.

鈥淭his work is about listening to young people and aligning pipelines beyond schools and into adulthood,鈥 Chung said.

鈥淏y asking 黑料社s about their intentions and experiences and comparing them with observations from employers and educators, we hope to identify where opportunities exist for system redesign.鈥

The initiative is a collaborative effort involving researchers and community partners across the St. Louis region. Co-principal investigators include Andrew Butler, a professor of education and of psychological and brain sciences in WashU Arts & Sciences; Candice Carter-Oliver, CEO of Confluence Academies; Jay Hartman, of the St. Louis Community Foundation; and Jason Jabbari, an assisant professor at the Brown School.

Community collaborators include the聽St. Louis Community Foundation;聽Confluence Academies;聽Cortex; the WashU聽;聽College Bound;聽and the St. Louis School Leaders Collaborative, among others.

The research responds directly to priorities that local school leaders identified through the St. Louis Research Practice Collaborative.