Âé¶¹TV

Âé¶¹TV's Newest HBCU Cohort Learns Career Development Skills

Workforce Development
Published
HBCU Student Leadership Cohort Group
The 2024-25 HBCU Student Leadership cohort along with Student Chapter Advisory Board Chair Dr. Charner Rodgers (front right) and Vice Chair Myles Cardenas (front left).
HBCU Leadership Cohort Student
Jayson Mollett, a student at Morgan State University, listens to a guest lecturer.
HBCU Leadership Cohort Students Talking
Students Renee Perez (left) from St. Philip’s College and Junie Saint Juste (right) from Florida A&M converse. 
HBCU Student Leadership Cohort 2024
HBCU Student Leadership Cohort students listen to discussion from guest speakers. 

Cultivating, educating and inspiring the next generation of building professionals is a key priority for the industry. As part of those efforts, Âé¶¹TV’s second annual Historically Black College and University (HBCU) Student Leadership program held a three-day learning, networking and development meeting last month in Washington, D.C. 

Throughout the event, 20 students learned key lessons from industry professionals and Âé¶¹TV staff, including how to develop an actionable career plan, how to use social media as a career development tool, and how to network.

“I feel like this is a great experience so I can get a feel for residential construction, because I’m still deciding whether I want to pursue a career in residential or commercial construction,” said Radjae Reid, a student at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore.

The program was established in 2023 to equip diverse, young adults with the skills, knowledge and connections needed to thrive in the residential construction industry. It comprises a growing number of students from HBCUs including: Alabama A&M, Florida A&M, Lawson State Community College, Morgan State, Norfolk State, North Carolina A&T, Prairie View A&M, St. Phillip's College, Tuskegee and the University of Maryland Eastern Shore. 

During the D.C. event, the students also took a trip to visit a residential construction site in nearby Bethesda, Md., explored the African American History Smithsonian Museum and learned about the , which will be held Feb. 25-27 in Las Vegas. 

Junie Saint Juste, a Florida A&M University student, was encouraged to sign up for the HBCU Student Leadership program by an alumni from its inaugural session. Saint Juste was impressed with the presentations and grateful to get some additional insights about the upcoming Student Competition at IBS.

“I knew I needed to be in this cohort so I can learn some more about the construction industry and bring back the knowledge to my group for the competition,” Saint Juste said.

Learn more about what the program accomplished in its first year and see what an alumni of the program said regarding the importance of supporting the next generation of builders.

Learn more about the Student Competition, set to take place Feb. 24-26, 2025. 

Sponsors

Andersen Windows logo
Mitek logo

Subscribe to Âé¶¹TVNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from Âé¶¹TVNow

IBS

Feb 20, 2026

Âé¶¹TV Announces Best of IBS Winners at International Builders’ Show

The Âé¶¹TV (Âé¶¹TV) named the winners of its 13th annual Best of IBSâ„¢ Awards during the Âé¶¹TV International Builders’ Show® (IBS) in Orlando. The awards were presented during a ceremony held on the final day of the show.

Sponsored Content

Feb 20, 2026

How Land Developers are Leveraging AI to Move Faster

AI is helping today's leading land development teams operate differently. By connecting data across ownership, zoning, infrastructure, and development activity, AI can surface early signals of opportunity and support faster, more informed go/no-go decisions

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Feb 20, 2026

New home sales ended 2025 on a mixed but resilient note, signaling steady underlying demand despite ongoing affordability and supply constraints. The latest data released today (and delayed because of the government shutdown in fall of 2025) indicate that while month-to-month activity shows a small decline, sales remain stronger than a year ago, signaling that buyer interest in newly built homes has improved.

Economics

Feb 20, 2026

Real GDP growth slowed sharply in the fourth quarter of 2025 as the historic government shutdown weighed on economic activity. While consumer spending continued to drive growth, federal government spending subtracted over a full percentage point from overall growth.

Economics

Feb 19, 2026

Delinquent consumer loans have steadily increased as pandemic distortions fade, returning broadly to pre-pandemic levels. According to the latest Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 4.8% of outstanding household debt was delinquent at the end of 2025, 0.3 percentage points higher than the third quarter of 2025 and 1.2% higher from year-end 2024.