NextREADY GPS — Learning Navigation
Learning Navigation System

Three students.
Three futures.
One shared starting point.

NextREADY GPS helps students recognize the skills they already have, document where they are, and navigate toward careers that are already part of their community.

Three students.
One system that sees them all.

See how it works For Workforce Navigators
▶ Overview 6 min 39 sec
M
Maria
Licensed Practical Nurse · CNM
↳ her cousin is preparing to enroll
D
Diego
Software Developer · CNM
↳ his classmate enrolls next fall
E
Elena
Electrician · New Mexico
↳ her neighbor trained right here

At ASCEND, family is not a backdrop to learning — it is the starting point. Every NextREADY GPS journey begins with a conversation with a family member, friend, or neighbor whose career makes the path feel real. That same spirit runs through everything we do: students are always welcome to bring family members to our activities, our public gatherings are hosted in community schools so young parents can participate alongside their children, childcare is provided, and every event includes a shared meal before or after the work session. Learn more about our Family Learning approach →

Families, learning together
Step 1
Family, Friends
& Neighbors
Step 2
Penny Drop
Baseline
Step 3
Workforce
Vocabulary
Step 4
iCAN
Statements
Step 5
Quality
Iterations
Step 6
Navigator
+ SkillsBank

Every journey starts with someone you already know.

Before any assessment or activity, each student had a conversation. Maria's cousin is preparing to be a Licensed Practical Nurse at CNM. Diego's classmate enrolls in Software Development next fall. Elena's neighbor trained to be an Electrician right here in New Mexico.

That conversation — the Family, Friends & Neighbors activity — reveals something important: the path they're considering already exists in their community. Someone they trust has walked it. And some of the skills required? They're already using them.

Family learning together
Maria
Her cousin is preparing to become a Licensed Practical Nurse at CNM
"I already communicate with patients — I just didn't have the words for it."
Father and son learning together
Diego
His classmate enrolls in Software Development at CNM next fall
"I've been building things for years — this is just the next level."
Family sharing learning moment
Elena
Her neighbor trained to be an Electrician right here in New Mexico
"I'm already on job sites. I needed to document what I know."
Meet Maria 1:37
Maria's AI character will narrate her iCAN statements as she advances through the staircase. Diego and Elena's characters coming soon.
What the activity produces
🗺️
A career path that already exists in their community — made real by someone they know
🪙
Recognition of skills they already use in daily life that also show up in that career
🧭
A starting position on the NextREADY GPS learning staircase — their baseline
💬
The language to describe what they know — in Life, Learning, and Work skill domains

A penny shows you where you already stand.

The Penny Drop is a physical activity — simple by design. Students place a penny on a sheet that maps their Durable Life Skills across three domains: how they show up in Life, how they grow through Learning, and what they bring to Work.

Where the penny lands captures two things at once: how much experience a student has with a skill, and how deeply they understand it. That position — their starting point on the learning staircase — becomes their baseline for everything that follows.

Maria discovered she was already using communication skills every day that a nurse uses in a clinical setting. She just hadn't had language for it yet.

Durable Life Skills Penny Drop Example

Not textbook words. Workforce words.

Students learn the vocabulary that actually appears in job postings, interviews, and career conversations — organized across four interconnected domains. These aren't abstract concepts. They're the shared language that connects a student's daily experience to the world of work.

Workforce Words · English
Hand of Learning
Workforce Words · Español
6
Hand of Learning
Curiosity · Identity · Agency
Courage · Commitment · Trust
7
Life Skills
How you show up
in the world
7
Learning Skills
How you grow
and adapt
11
Work Skills
What employers
look for on the job
Depth of Knowledge · 67 Verbs
1
DOK 1 · 23 verbs
Recall & Reproduction
identify · define · list · recall · describe
2
DOK 2 · 21 verbs
Skills & Concepts
apply · summarize · compare · classify
3
DOK 3 · 15 verbs
Strategic Thinking
analyze · justify · construct · cite evidence
4
DOK 4 · 8 verbs
Extended Thinking
design · synthesize · formulate · connect

From vocabulary to evidence — in one sentence.

An iCAN statement combines a DOK verb, a skill, and a real-world context into a single sentence of evidence. It says exactly where a student is on the staircase — and becomes the foundation for every submission they make.

M
Maria · Licensed Practical Nurse
LPN · DOK 1 · E1 · New to Me
E1 · New to Me
"I can identify effective oral communication techniques when responding to patient questions and concerns when caring for patients."
D
Diego · Software Developer
Software Dev · DOK 1 · E2 · First Use
E2 · First Use
"I can define software development processes and methodology during software development."
E
Elena · Electrician
Electrician · DOK 2 · E1 · New to Me
E1 · New to Me (already at DOK 2)
"I can compare tools, machinery, equipment and supplies that match project requirements on a construction project."

The system doesn't punish mistakes. It uses them.

Every example a student submits is rated at one of four quality levels. Red and Yellow mean: keep going. Green and Blue mean: you're ready to advance. Students continue revising until they reach Green — then they decide where to move next on the staircase.

This is the learning, unlearning, and relearning cycle made visible. Each revision builds the evidence base. Each green unlocks the next step. Students navigate forward — not by passing a test, but by building a real body of work.

🔴 Restart
This example needs a fresh start. The foundation isn't there yet — and that's okay.
🟡 Revise
Good direction, needs more. Revise and resubmit before advancing.
🟢 Advance
Strong example. You've earned your next position on the staircase.
🔵 Extend
Exceptional. You're ready to extend your thinking to the next DOK level.
When Diego's first submission came back yellow, he didn't see it as failure — he saw it as navigation. He revised, resubmitted, and moved from DOK 1 to DOK 2.

Three students.
One system that sees them all.

NextREADY GPS helps students recognize the skills they already have, document where they are, and navigate toward careers that are already part of their community.