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In this episode, we sit down with Will Castro—former Guam Senator and current Principal of Career Tech High Academy Charter School—to talk about one of the most uncomfortable questions facing the island today: Is Guam’s education system actually preparing students for real jobs, or just for paper credentials?
Drawing from his experience both inside the Legislature and now on the front lines of education, Will offers a candid look at how policy decisions, cultural expectations, and funding priorities have shaped a system that often funnels students toward white-collar ideals—while quietly neglecting the trades, technical skills, and career pathways Guam urgently needs.
This conversation isn’t theoretical. It’s about outcomes: who wins, who gets left behind, and why so many students graduate without a clear line to opportunity.
We cover:
Why Guam still overvalues degrees—and undervalues skilled labor, trades, and technical careers
The real difference between education for status vs education for employability
How charter schools challenge traditional DOE models—and why that makes people uncomfortable
What Career Tech education gets right that conventional systems often miss
Why many students aren’t “unmotivated,” but simply mismatched to the system they’re placed in
The policy blind spots that make workforce shortages worse, not better
How cultural expectations shape what success “looks like” on Guam—and who pays the price
What it would take to align education, industry, and economic development on the island
Why blue-collar and white-collar shouldn’t be rivals—but complementary paths
What parents, policymakers, and students misunderstand most about career-based education
If you’ve ever questioned whether Guam’s education system is serving students—or just maintaining appearances—this episode offers a rare, grounded perspective from someone who’s seen both the political side and the classroom side, and is now trying to build something different.
Data Points is presented by Pinpoint, Guam’s leading real estate data company. Our mission is to help you make informed decisions on real property purchases through detailed market analysis and insights.
By ryanqpIn this episode, we sit down with Will Castro—former Guam Senator and current Principal of Career Tech High Academy Charter School—to talk about one of the most uncomfortable questions facing the island today: Is Guam’s education system actually preparing students for real jobs, or just for paper credentials?
Drawing from his experience both inside the Legislature and now on the front lines of education, Will offers a candid look at how policy decisions, cultural expectations, and funding priorities have shaped a system that often funnels students toward white-collar ideals—while quietly neglecting the trades, technical skills, and career pathways Guam urgently needs.
This conversation isn’t theoretical. It’s about outcomes: who wins, who gets left behind, and why so many students graduate without a clear line to opportunity.
We cover:
Why Guam still overvalues degrees—and undervalues skilled labor, trades, and technical careers
The real difference between education for status vs education for employability
How charter schools challenge traditional DOE models—and why that makes people uncomfortable
What Career Tech education gets right that conventional systems often miss
Why many students aren’t “unmotivated,” but simply mismatched to the system they’re placed in
The policy blind spots that make workforce shortages worse, not better
How cultural expectations shape what success “looks like” on Guam—and who pays the price
What it would take to align education, industry, and economic development on the island
Why blue-collar and white-collar shouldn’t be rivals—but complementary paths
What parents, policymakers, and students misunderstand most about career-based education
If you’ve ever questioned whether Guam’s education system is serving students—or just maintaining appearances—this episode offers a rare, grounded perspective from someone who’s seen both the political side and the classroom side, and is now trying to build something different.
Data Points is presented by Pinpoint, Guam’s leading real estate data company. Our mission is to help you make informed decisions on real property purchases through detailed market analysis and insights.