ChatGPD: Reimagining graduate career development in a disrupted education landscape
January 12, 2026Education, disrupted: Embedding career education in shifting learning pathways
January 12, 2026In Canada, post-secondary education is under growing pressure as employers prioritize skills over degrees, online courses and micro-credentials expand, and rising student debt adds strain (CERIC, 2024; Shaker, 2022). Micro-credentials are at the center of this change, with global companies like Google and IBM already accepting them as equal to a certain degree (Bariso, 2020), and Canadian governments promoting similar programs (CERIC, 2024). Yet credibility remains uncertain, and with 61% of workers worldwide expected to need retraining by 2027 (World Economic Forum, 2023), reliable systems are essential. For career development professionals (CDPs), this disruption presents both risk and opportunity as they help clients navigate fragmented pathways while ensuring equity and quality across schools, workplaces and communities (CERIC, 2024).
For CDPs, these changes bring both pressure and opportunity. They must help clients navigate countless programs while ensuring equity and quality. Career services, once limited to campuses, may need to become lifelong resources available in schools, workplaces, and communities (CERIC, 2024). But more than guidance alone is needed. A new kind of infrastructure could anchor the future of career development.
An innovative step forward would be an open-access national career development platform. This would be a secure digital system where every Canadian could keep a living record of their skills, credentials and experiences. Employers could verify competencies directly, students could track progress across diverse learning pathways, and CDPs could use the data to provide personalized advice. Unlike today’s fragmented system, a national platform would create transparency, ensuring that micro-credentials carry trusted value.
The benefits would extend across society. For newcomers, the platform could translate international experience into Canadian recognition, reducing underemployment. For mid-career workers, it would show how existing skills align with new industries, making retraining faster and more targeted. For youth, it would link school learning with future careers, offering a clearer roadmap. Most importantly, it would promote equity by giving everyone, regardless of background, a visible pathway to opportunity.
Such a system could also strengthen accountability. By connecting CDPs, employers and educators in one framework, it would help regulate quality and protect learners from poor-quality or misleading programs (Kury de Castillo, 2023). It would also reduce duplication, ensuring that training dollars are invested in programs with proven value. In this way, the platform would act not only as a record but as a guide for Canada’s evolving labour market.
Writing about this trend reminds me how essential adaptability has become. As an artist, educator and MFA student, I see how creative practice and lifelong learning share the same values: flexibility, resilience and openness to change. For me, disruption is not only a challenge. It is also a chance to build more inclusive and imaginative systems for the future.
Alicia Tian is an MFA candidate at OCAD University. She is an illustrator and painter with experience teaching workshops and pursuing sustainable art practices. Alicia brings a creative and interdisciplinary perspective to rethinking the future of learning and work in Canada.
References
Bariso, J. (2020, August 19). Google has a plan to disrupt the college degree. Inc. Magazine. https://www.inc.com
CERIC. (2024). Career development in 2040: Trends report. CERIC.
Kury de Castillo, C. (2023, May 12). Calgary students warn of private career college misinformation, sales tactics. Global News. https://globalnews.ca
Shaker, E. (2022, August 11). What to know about student debt. Maclean’s Magazine. https://www.macleans.ca
World Economic Forum. (2023). Future of Jobs Report 2023. World Economic Forum. https://www.weforum.org
