Coffee with the County - A Generational Difference
My 8-year-old son loves to make money. Truth be told, I think he is more eager to spend his money than he is to work for it. He loves finding the coolest lego set to purchase, or the book he doesn’t yet have on his bookshelf. If he sets his sights on the “next big thing” to purchase, he works very hard to find a side job to earn enough money.
Oftentimes, he nabs my phone to call one of his grandmas, asking if there are any jobs that need done around their house worthy of some cash. One summer, he got very creative and collected rocks from our “rock garden” (see last week’s column) and sold them at a very reasonable price. (And to those of you who supported his short-term entrepreneurial journey, thank you for investing in his excitement and initiative.)
My son is not often ready to chore or help with work around the house, but when money is involved, it is a serious motivator for him and usually, it gets the job done. I think most of us have had a stage or two in our lives similar to my son’s. (And if we’re being honest with ourselves, that stage evolves into a lifelong motivator for most of us. Money makes the world go round, right?)
April 14-18 is National Student Employment Week. The commemoration is one commissioned by the National Student Employment Association, and largely, celebrates collegiate students who work while attending college. Because LaGrange County does not directly and geographically host college students in our communities on a college campus, our commemoration of Student Employment will take a local twist in this week’s column, focusing on the Chamber’s newest initiative: the LaGrange County Student Chamber.
If you’ve been reading my column for very long, you know that a lot of our Chamber work is in partnership with the three county school corporations. One of our three strategic focuses is “Next-Level Workforce,” founded on the belief that the future of LaGrange County workforce is being built today, and these efforts intentionally focus on work that will generate a sustainable workforce for the future.
The LaGrange County Student Chamber has officially launched and is open for student applications, specific to LaGrange County students who will be 11th or 12th grade students during the 2025-2026 school year. The program is a fast pass for students to secure the best work-based learning experiences and internships in LaGrange County, in order to develop, connect, and plant workforce-ready students for a lifetime in our communities.
Depending on the graduation track a student embarks on, our local public school youth will be charged with completing (literally) hundreds of hours of work-based learning experience. What does this mean? In short, students will be required to log hours in workplaces that offer high-quality, meaningful experiences that align with the student’s career ambitions. (In other words, a student can’t be accepted as an intern only to file papers away for 8 hours. The position must offer opportunities to develop the student’s abilities, skills, and career goals.)
The angst in this new diploma requirement? Allow me to answer that question by painting a landscape. In LaGrange County alone, around 315 students are preparing to graduate this spring. Let’s earmark this amount of students as the consistent, annual countywide class size, and consider the potential of 630 LOCAL students (juniors and seniors collectively) who will be looking for work-based learning placement starting next year. Now, consider this need on a statewide basis, and take the total graduating seniors (approximately 67,000) plus a statewide class of juniors (sum now to 134,000) looking for the same quality placements.
The point of this picture? A lot of students will need work-based learning opportunities, and the student-to-employer ratio across Indiana scales by population size. There is statewide worry about how this will unfold, and how we’ll find enough placements for the surplus of student experiences needed. In the end, it falls on these conclusions: Schools will need the support and assistance of their communities, and it will take all of us–businesses large and small, non-profit organizations, and everything in between–to ensure that this future-workforce-development opportunity becomes a reality.
That’s where the Student Chamber comes into play. This application-based, competitive program provides students a simplified fast track to some of the best work-based learning opportunities in our county. It intends to build a pipeline of young talent straight to local businesses, all while helping students expedite the process of achieving work-based learning requirements for high school graduation.
Why is this valuable to businesses? I have heard so many times in my LaGrange County lifetime that our younger generations are moving out of the community. What better way to showcase to our future workforce that they are valuable and needed than to open the door now for a lifelong partnership with your business? Today’s easy investment of time and space for our local students will make a generational difference in the LaGrange County workforce.
We’d love to tell you more about the Student Chamber, and even more so, would love to partner with you in these efforts. Do you have short-term projects in your business that you don’t seem to have enough time for (i.e., social media marketing, maintenance and construction projects, administrative projects, and the like)? Consider how inviting an intern into your workspace might make a difference much larger than a one-time school-year-investment. Your partnership today can make a world of a difference for our local economy tomorrow. To learn more, visit www.lagrangechamber.org/student-chamber.