Texas CC Tests Career Exploration VR with Middle Schoolers

Coastal Bend College, a community college serving five counties in the Coastal Bend region of Texas along the Gulf of Mexico, turned to virtual reality to help middle schoolers in the region figure out what careers they should declare for themselves as they enter high school, as well as to promote career and technical education (CTE). The institution piloted the use of a career exploration program that uses VR with local school districts and found the results promising.

The state of Texas requires schools to expose their students to career options in grades 7 and 8. The college worked with TRANSFR, which produces TRANSFRVR, to create a training program local middle schools could use with their students in exploring careers.

TRANSFR's simulations provide an immersive learning environment that places students inside various career paths and allows them to try tasks. Guided by a digital coach, students receive instruction that introduces them to different careers, teaches them how to perform essential tasks, gives feedback based on their specific actions and assesses progress toward mastery of skills in real time. Among the careers featured were manufacturing; architecture and construction; transportation and logistics; and hospitality and tourism.

Based on student surveys and feedback from participating schools, initial results from the pilot with K-12 schools in the region showed that 83% of students could choose a career path upon completion. According to project participants, the use of the program reduced "the strain on district and educator resources" required to address the career readiness requirement.

"In recent years, the growth of good jobs has actually been greatest for workers who have an associate's degree. Against that backdrop, community colleges play an increasingly important role in preparing students for highly skilled roles that offer career and economic stability and advancement," said Braden Becknell, director of Workforce Development & Continuing Education for the college, in a statement. "This collaboration transforms the traditional curriculum and paper-based tests used for career exploration into a more interactive, relevant and meaningful experience. It's helping students experience these career options and fulfill the state career readiness requirements. The initial results are incredibly promising."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • two large brackets facing each other with various arrows, circles, and rectangles flowing between them

    1EdTech Partners with DXtera to Support Ed Tech Interoperability

    1EdTech Consortium and DXtera Institute have announced a partnership aimed at improving access to learning data in postsecondary and higher education.

  • Abstract geometric shapes including hexagons, circles, and triangles in blue, silver, and white

    Google Launches Its Most Advanced AI Model Yet

    Google has introduced Gemini 2.5 Pro Experimental, a new artificial intelligence model designed to reason through problems before delivering answers, a shift that marks a major leap in AI capability, according to the company.

  •  laptop on a clean desk with digital padlock icon on the screen

    Study: Data Privacy a Top Concern as Orgs Scale Up AI Agents

    As organizations race to integrate AI agents into their cloud operations and business workflows, they face a crucial reality: while enthusiasm is high, major adoption barriers remain, according to a new Cloudera report. Chief among them is the challenge of safeguarding sensitive data.

  • stylized AI code and a neural network symbol, paired with glitching code and a red warning triangle

    New Anthropic AI Models Demonstrate Coding Prowess, Behavior Risks

    Anthropic has released Claude Opus 4 and Claude Sonnet 4, its most advanced artificial intelligence models to date, boasting a significant leap in autonomous coding capabilities while simultaneously revealing troubling tendencies toward self-preservation that include attempted blackmail.