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Event

Helping Youth Navigate Transitions: Highlights from the 2024 Passport to Careers State Conference

July 11, 2024February 26, 2025

On Tuesday, May 14, the Washington Passport Network hosted the 16th annual Passport to Careers State Conference. This virtual event was attended by more than 180 network members from across the state, representing schools and school districts, community-based organizations and government agencies. Attendees spent the day connecting with fellow professionals and direct service providers, participating in interactive workshops and hearing from an array of speakers.

May is National Foster Care Month, so the conference theme, “Navigating Transitions,” was especially fitting. Speakers with lived experience in foster care talked about the challenges that transitions present to systems-involved youth and how service providers can ease those transitions. “The abrupt and often destabilizing changes ingrained in the experience of foster care leave lasting wounds that add complexity to the process of transitions for the rest of our lives,” said Neveah Brewer, a service provider at Treehouse and alumna of foster care. “I hope that if you gain anything from the conference today, it’s a newfound understanding of why transitions are so important—and how you as a provider can make navigating transitions easier, and more successful, for the youth you serve.”

Dawn Cypriano-McAferty, assistant director at the Washington Student Achievement Council, echoed that sentiment. “Part of young adulthood is figuring out who we are, gaining our independence, finding our freedom, and standing on wobbly legs as we step into adulthood,” she said. “People who shepherd us through transitional times are pivotal to our success.”

Keynote speaker Dr. Adam Starks, founder and CEO at MNDYRR and award-winning author, presented a framework for empowering foster youth to navigate paths to success in college and careers. Building on insights from his own time in foster care, Dr. Starks emphasized the importance of helping students set goals, prepare for transitions and build support networks, as well as maintain a positive mindset and develop resilience. “[Foster care] is only part of their story,” he said. “They can do anything that a child that had normal or less traumatic circumstances can do.”

In addition to hearing from speakers, attendees participated in workshops on topics including supporting LGBTQIA+ youth in foster care, curriculum design, preparing systems-involved youth for adulthood, supporting students experiencing homelessness, and exploring apprenticeships. Notably, members of the Westat team presented a preview of findings and recommendations from the “Passport to Careers Implementation and Outcome Evaluation” report. Attendees had the opportunity to provide feedback on the report, which is now publicly available, after delivery to the legislature in June.

The day ended with a lived experience panel featuring Jessica Griffiths, Nancy Correa and Kady Titus, all of whom have lived experience with foster care. By sharing their powerful personal stories, they provided a real-world view of how direct service providers can provide advocacy, stability, empathetic guidance and hope to foster youth. “[My social worker] would always ask me, ‘What are you going to do, what’s your next step, where are you going to go?’” said Griffiths. “She didn’t push me to make a decision, but she helped me make my own decisions. She just gave me opportunity after opportunity.”

Attendees noted that the lived experience panelists’ heartfelt stories reminded them why they do this work and inspired them to persist in reaching out to students, even when it’s complicated or time-consuming. “Thank you for helping us understand how we can show up and hold space for our young folks,” said Halley Shriber, apprenticeship outreach navigator at ANEW.

The Washington Passport Network would like to thank all of our network members who attended and presented at the 2024 conference. We’re excited to share that we’ll be back in person next year, so save the date for the 2025 conference, which will take place on May 6 and 7, 2025, at the Doubletree by Hilton Hotel Seattle Airport

Post Tags: #conference#foster care#homelessness#LBGTQAI#passport to careers#Washington Passport Network

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