Student Success & Engagement Specialist

Phalen Leadership AcademiesIndianapolis, IN
$60,000 - $65,000Onsite

About The Position

The Student Success & Engagement Specialist is the primary relationship, case-management, and support anchor for Skilled US participants, guiding each individual from intake through training, completion, and the post-program follow-up period. The role serves participants across the full Skilled US pathway: current high school students, exiting and recent high school graduates, adult learners pursuing a high school equivalency (HSE/GED), and young adults in workforce and YouthBuild programs, many of whom face significant barriers to education and employment. Through trauma-informed mentorship, social-emotional support, individualized goal-setting, and active barrier removal, the Specialist builds a culture where every participant feels valued, stays engaged, earns their credential, and transitions successfully into a durable, family-sustaining career. The Specialist works in close coordination with educators, career and job developers, work-site instructors, families, and community partners, and maintains the case-management infrastructure, Individual Development Plans (IDPs), case notes, and supportive-services tracking that drives Skilled US's high retention and completion outcomes.

Requirements

  • Bachelor's degree (or related expereince) in social work, counseling, education, psychology, human services, or a related field (LSW/LCSW — preferred).
  • Experience in case management, social work, youth or young-adult development, adult education, or workforce program settings, ideally serving participants who face significant barriers.
  • Familiarity with Individual Development Plans, trauma-informed care, motivational interviewing, restorative practices, and SEL frameworks.
  • Knowledge of supportive-services and community-resource navigation (mental health, housing, childcare, legal aid, substance use, food assistance).
  • Strong relationship-building, communication, organization, and documentation skills; comfort with data systems (e.g., Salesforce) and confidential recordkeeping.
  • Ability to collaborate across educators, job developers, instructors, families, and community and employer partners.
  • Passion for creating an inclusive, supportive learning environment and a genuine commitment to participant success and economic mobility.

Nice To Haves

  • LSW/LCSW

Responsibilities

  • Conduct intake interviews and ongoing assessments to identify each participant's strengths, goals, and barriers to completion.
  • Develop, maintain, and monitor Individual Development Plans (IDPs) that advance each participant's educational, credential, employment, and personal goals — updating them as strengths and needs evolve over time.
  • Carry a mentoring caseload, providing each assigned participant ongoing, individualized support toward their IDP and life goals.
  • Create and maintain accurate, confidential case files and case notes that are signed and dated, and monitor IDP outcomes through completion and the follow-up period.
  • Participate in a regular case-conferencing system with educators, job developers, and instructors to review each participant's progress and plan for their success, while respecting participant privacy.
  • Build trusting relationships that foster a sense of belonging and keep participants actively engaged through completion.
  • Provide one-on-one and group support to participants struggling with motivation, attendance, or engagement, intervening early when warning signs appear.
  • Schedule and facilitate regular one-on-one sessions and recurring peer-group sessions that meet at consistent intervals.
  • Help participants build resilience, self-advocacy, communication, and decision-making skills, and implement restorative practices to support behavior and conflict resolution.
  • Deliver trauma-informed support and motivational-interviewing techniques in one-on-one and group settings, with time and private space set aside for individual conversation.
  • Identify participants needing additional social-emotional or mental health support and connect them to a licensed professional — on staff or through a partner — and to appropriate community resources.
  • Embed life-skills and professional-skills sessions into the program's regular schedule.
  • Promote a positive program culture grounded in inclusion, respect, and participant voice, in partnership with the program director.
  • Assess participant needs and deliver allowable supportive services — transportation, PPE and uniforms, tools, testing and licensing fees, childcare, food, housing navigation, and emergency assistance — targeting grant funds on the barriers that most affect completion and placement.
  • Build and maintain a network of local partners and providers (mental health, substance-use counseling, legal aid, housing, childcare, food assistance) and a clear protocol for when and how to refer.
  • Connect participants to supportive services quickly in times of crisis to keep them on track toward their goals.
  • Help participants identify strengths and interests and explore credential, apprenticeship, and post-secondary pathways.
  • Support HSE/GED and adult-education participants with study skills, time management, and goal-setting toward their diploma or equivalency and their next credential.
  • Connect participants to work-based learning, internships, employer connections, and leadership opportunities that deepen engagement and skill development.
  • Support participants transitioning into the program, between phases, or back after an extended absence or intervention.
  • Check in regularly with participants during the follow-up period and use supportive services to encourage a successful transition into the workforce.
  • Track employment, retention, and wage-progression outcomes, and sustain engagement through an alumni network.
  • Encourage graduates to return as mentors and peer leaders, strengthening program culture and the pipeline of caring adults.
  • Serve as a liaison among participants, families, and staff to ensure clear, coordinated communication and support.
  • Organize workshops, events, and programs that encourage family involvement in participant success.
  • Build relationships with community organizations and employers that expand resources and opportunities for participants.
  • Maintain participant-level records of engagement, interventions, supportive-services spend, and outcomes in Salesforce and GPMS (Grantee Performance Management System) program reporting systems.
  • Use data-driven approaches to assess program effectiveness, flag at-risk participants early, and recommend improvements.
  • Keep case files and notes secure and confidential (locked or password-protected) and ensure documentation meets grant and program compliance requirements, including YouthBuild and other funder standards.
  • Stay current on best practices in case management, engagement, SEL, trauma-informed care, and youth and adult workforce development; use coaches and federal/program officers for compliance guidance.

Benefits

  • A base salary that is competitively aligned with the market.
  • Incentive and bonus opportunities
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