Applications open for this paid healthcare exploration program for Bay Area teens from low-income backgrounds

Graphic with group of students in healthcare office learning with text for applications now open for this program that connects students with mentors and healthcare careers

Four-day paid learning experience connects Contra Costa County students with skills, mentors, and high-wage healthcare careers

Making Waves Education Foundation is launching Pathways to Health: Paid Career Program, a new four-day, earn-and-learn experience designed to help Bay Area high school juniors and seniors explore in-demand healthcare careers while gaining hands-on skills, mentorship, and a stipend of up to $400. 

The program is open to 11th and 12th graders who go to school or live in Contra Costa County and are from low-income backgrounds. It will run from March 25 to March 28, 2026, with evening sessions on Wednesday through Friday at the Community Youth Center, or CYC, in Concord, California, and a full-day experience on Saturday at the Kaiser Permanente School of Allied Health Sciences in Richmond. 

The Making Waves program offers students the opportunity to connect directly with healthcare professionals, build career-readiness skills, and tackle an authentic challenge in nuclear medicine, a specialized field of medical imaging that helps doctors visualize what is happening inside the body in real time. 

Exploring healthcare careers that drive economic opportunity

“Pathways to Health is about opening doors to meaningful careers,” said Aiyana Mourtos (she/her), chief program officer at Making Waves Education Foundation. “By offering paid opportunities that build skills and confidence, we’re helping students take steps toward long-term economic mobility.” 

Healthcare is one of the fastest-growing industries in the Bay Area and across the nation, offering a range of well-paying, in-demand jobs that can be access through a range of degree and credential pathways, including bachelor’s and associate’s degrees and industry recognized credentials combined with clinical experience. Yet for many young people, these careers can feel out of reach due to limited exposure, experience, or connections. 

Making Waves’ Pathways to Health program introduces students to career pathways within nuclear medicine – including roles like nuclear medicine technologist and radiation therapist – that offer both job security and strong earning potential. In the Bay Area, starting wages for these positions can exceed $145,000 annually and typically require completion of an associate or bachelor’s degree plus specialized certification. 

“Too often, high school students don’t know what options exist beyond doctors and nurses in healthcare,” said Daisy Han (she/her), VP of career launch at Making Waves. “This program helps students explore those lesser-known but vital healthcare careers that can lead to family-sustaining wages and a strong sense of purpose.” 

Participation is open to high school juniors and seniors in the Bay Area’s Contra Costa County, and no prior experience or GPA requirement is needed. To remove barriers to participation, Making Waves will provide paid stipends. 

A step forward in Making Waves’ strategic vision, blurring the lines between high school, college, and career 

The launch of Pathways to Health is part of Making Waves’ evolving vision to redesign the handoff between high school, college, and career. Historically, Making Waves has focused on helping students from underrepresented backgrounds get to and through college with little to no debt. Today, the organization is deepening its investment in bridging the gap between education and employment by integrating career-connected learning into both high school and college. 

“At Making Waves, we believe economic mobility comes from both education and career opportunities,” shared Patrick O’Donnell (he/him), CEO at Making Waves Education Foundation. “That means equipping students not only with degrees, but with the work experience, durable skills, and networks to thrive in the workforce,” O’Donnell said.

With support from partners and funders, Making Waves is building a new 11–14 pathway model that focuses on the last two years of high school and the first two years after graduation. Developed in partnership with employers, colleges, and high schools, the model aims to blur the lines between K–12, higher education and career by connecting exploration, work-based learning, and credential attainment into one coherent sequence that leads to high-wage jobs. 

“Programs like HealthX and Pathways to Health are testing how career exploration, durable skill-building, social capital development and industry-recognized credentials can help high school students envision and achieve meaningful careers. We’re learning what it takes to build flexible, equitable pathways from high school into high-wage careers — and how those pathways can strengthen communities,” O’Donnell shared.

As part of this broader approach, Pathways to Health offers an early on-ramp – a short, hands-on experience that introduces students to the healthcare field while they practice durable skills and build connections with professionals. For many students, it provides an entry point into deeper pathway experiences like the HealthX Fellowship, a six-month paid program that builds credentials, mentorship, and career preparation in partnership with the Kaiser Permanente School of Allied Health Sciences and Contra Costa College. 

Together, these pilots are testing what it looks like to connect education and employment more seamlessly –giving students a clearer sense of purpose, real-world experience, and a direct path into high-demand, high-wage careers. 

Special thanks to community and philanthropic partners 

Making Waves’ Pathways to Health: Paid Career Program is made possible thanks to the generous support of philanthropic funders, donors, and community partners, including the Workforce Development Board of Contra Costa County, the Payette River Foundation, Kaiser Permanente School of Allied Health Sciences, the Community Youth Center, and Earn and Learn.

“Partnerships make it possible for us to design programs that meet both student and employer needs,” shared Han. “By working together, we can create models that prepare young people for success and respond to the region’s growing workforce demands.” 

Applications now open!  

Applications for Pathways to Health: Paid Career Program are now open. High school students in 11th or 12th grade from the Bay Area’s Contra Costa County are encouraged to apply by the January 28, 2026 deadline.   

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About Making Waves Education Foundation

At Making Waves, we are committed to educational equity. Making Waves Education Foundation is a Bay Area nonprofit that supports Making Waves Academy – a public charter school with more than 1,100 5th through 12th grade students – and leads college and career programming with more than 430 college students.​

Knowing the opportunities that come with a college degree, we partner with historically underrepresented and underserved students to help make college affordable and graduation attainable. Centering the journeys of our students, our personalized approach includes college and career coaching, scholarships, and financial planning.​

Our alumni network includes more than 730 college graduates, who earn their degrees and land jobs at more than twice the rate of their first-generation, low-income peers, with 85% graduating debt-free.