May 8, 2025, The Wall Street Journal — “Companies with shortages of skilled workers look to shop class to recruit future hires,” explains reporter Te-Ping Chen in the May 7, 2025 issue of The Wall Street Journal.
For example: At a Catholic high school in Philadelphia, shop teacher Father Judge works closely with companies looking for workers in the skilled trades.
The reason for the trend: Employers are dealing with a shortage of such workers as baby boomers retire. They have increasingly begun courting high-school students like Rios—a hiring strategy they say is likely to become even more crucial in the coming years.
“Employers ranging from the local transit system to submarine manufacturers make regular visits to Father Judge’s welding classrooms every year, bringing branded swag and pitching students on their workplaces. When Rios graduates next year, he plans to work as a fabricator at a local equipment maker for nuclear, recycling and other sectors, a job that pays $24 an hour, plus regular overtime and paid vacations,” Chen writes in today’s article.
“Increased efforts to recruit high-schoolers into professions such as plumbing, electrical work and welding have helped spur a revitalization of shop classes in many districts. More businesses are teaming up with high schools to enable students to work part-time, earning money as well as academic credit. More employers are showing up at high school career days and turning to creative recruiting strategies, as well.”
One company embracing the idea: Constellation Energy, an operator of U.S. nuclear power plants based in Baltimore, offers maintenance technician and equipment-operator roles that are open to high-school graduates without four-year college degrees, and pay as much as six figures. “These are family-sustaining careers,” says Ray Stringer, a vice president overseeing workforce development at the company. Last year, Constellation launched a work-based learning program outside Chicago that invites high-school students to shadow workers at the company’s nuclear facilities while also earning community-college credit.
Click here to read more about it: www.wsj.com/lifestyle/careers/skilled-trades-high-school-recruitment
