
Cecilia Holden, president and CEO of myFutureNC, on the state of educational attainment
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Show Notes

Cecilia Holden, president and CEO of myFutureNC (Courtesy photo)
How is North Carolina doing in building a workforce with the necessary degrees and job credentials for the 21st Century economy?
While the challenges here are huge, this is one area in which state policymakers have created a nonprofit that’s charged with monitoring our progress and, where it can, helping to move things in a positive direction. The group is called myFutureNC, and recently it released its latest update on the headway we’re making. And earlier this month, NC Newsline caught up with the group’s President and CEO, Cecelia Holden.
In Part One of our conversation, we checked in and heard some encouraging news related to how well our state is doing in meeting its decade-long goal of building a workforce in which two-million residents hold a post-secondary degree or industry-valued credential by 2030.
In Part Two of our conversation, we dug deeper into the issue and reviewed some of the major challenges we face, including the reading and math scores of younger students, the lasting impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the disparities in how different regions of the state are faring. And we also examined what many see as a major elephant in the economic room and future employment trends: artificial intelligence.
Click here to listen to the full interview with Cecilia Holden, president and CEO of myFutureNC.