New book on Gen Z workforce taps Blue Valley CAPS
April 12, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
A book dissecting the behaviors of “Generation Z” entering the workforce has featured a Kansas City-area education program for its innovative model.
Written by David and Jonah Stillman and published in March, Gen Z @ Work highlighted the Blue Valley Center for Advanced Professional Studies as a model that’s better preparing students for an evolving workforce. The book includes research from the first national study of Gen Z’s workplace attitudes and interviews with hundreds of CEOs, celebrities and thought leaders. Gen Z is defined as people born in the mid- to late-1990s to early 2000s.
CAPS executive director Corey Mohn was interviewed for the book and provided his perspective on the generation of students he’s helping to develop.
“Mainly, I shared that our goal at CAPS is to show students how what they are learning applies to their future,” Mohn said. “We do this through immersion into real-world scenarios instead of linear curriculum that may lack relevance.”
A Blue Valley CAPS graduate, Brady Simmons, was also interviewed for the book. Simmons shared that he didn’t always see a lot of value in high school and his mentality was to do enough to pass.
It wasn’t until joining Blue Valley Caps that Simmons started to see a connection between what he was learning and how it applied to the real world.
“(With CAPS) It was way more than getting a grade,” Simmons said. “If I failed a project, I was failing more than myself. I was impacting our project sponsor. I found myself truly loving school.”
Launched in 2009, the CAPS curriculum is focused on project-based learning and accelerating student knowledge using industry-standard tools and mentorship.
“CAPS fast forwards students into their future and fully immerses them in a professional culture, solving real world problems, using industry standard tools and are mentored by actual employers, all while receiving high school and college credit,” Mohn said. “CAPS is a powerful example of how business, community and public education can partner to produce personalized learning experiences that educate the workforce of tomorrow, especially in high-skill, high-demand jobs.”
In 2015, CAPS created a national consortium, banding schools together around the U.S., boosting its innovative education model. With programs in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Minnesota, Arkansas, Wisconsin, Utah and Arizona, the CAPS network currently spreads across nine states and 32 school districts.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
WonderWe acquires KC startup VolunteerMark
Andrew Stanley developed VolunteerMark to work with non-profit companies that align with his Christian faith. Lucky for Stanley and his business partner, they met someone who not only shared that passion, but also had the means to help them make it bigger. WonderWe, a software provider to nonprofits, acquired VolunteerMark and its technology to schedule…
Rock Chalk startup: KU offers pitch contest for students, faculty
The University of Kansas is gearing up for a new pitch competition set for Oct. 7. The inaugural ‘Celebration of Innovation: A Startup Showcase‘ will feature 10-minute pitches from six KU faculty-led startup companies and five that are student-created. The student startups will be ranked by a team of judges, and the company that clinches the…
