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Trade School Stories: Kenneth “Kenny” Alli

Employed Before Graduation: One Electrician鈥檚 Path Through NCST

Kenneth “Kenny” Alli grew up in Youngstown, Ohio, surrounded by family members who had built their livelihoods with their hands. Trade work wasn鈥檛 a fallback where he came from; it was a respected, well-established path. So when it came time to plan for life after high school, Kenny didn鈥檛 hesitate.

He enrolled in NCST鈥檚 Electrical Technology program after graduating from Valley Christian High School in 2022. By the time he was halfway through the program, employers were already calling.

WATCH: Kenny discusses his experience at NCST and what it鈥檚 like to enter the workforce as an electrician.

Choosing a Direction

High school gave Kenny his first real taste of routine: keeping up with grades, planning the next semester, adjusting to a schedule. He appreciated the structure, but he was still working out what came next. College crossed his mind, but it never quite the right fit.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think college was the right route for me,鈥 he said. 鈥淲here I come from, working a trade is a respected and normal path. That is what brought me to NCST.鈥

He had briefly considered programming before settling on electrical. The appeal was straightforward: a focused, shorter path to a career with consistent demand. 鈥淭hat felt like a soft but solid landing for me,鈥 he said, 鈥渉elping me get my footing and start building toward what I want for my career.鈥

Why NCST

NCST had been on Kenny’s radar long before he was ready to enroll. He drove past the sign on the highway regularly, and the school came up often in conversations around him. The more he learned about it, the more it seemed like the obvious next step. His family background reinforced the decision. Almost everyone around him had come out of a trade or a hands-on job. When he visited NCST, the environment confirmed what he already suspected.

He also noted how efficiently the enrollment process moved. He had previously explored apprenticeships, and while they were upfront about next steps, the timeline dragged. NCST was different.

鈥淲hen I applied to NCST, every step of the enrollment process was done within the same week,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here was no waiting list, no months of wondering if it was the right call. It was almost immediate, and I was able to just dive in.鈥

Kenneth and instructor standing at electric circuit panels

Learning by Doing

Textbooks never quite worked for Kenny. He understood things through his hands, through the act of doing. Trade school gave him exactly that. 鈥淭he administration makes it easy to focus on your work and focus on your own improvement,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he environment pushes your learning forward rather than pulling you away from it.鈥

He also values the transparency of trade school. In his view, one of the clearest advantages over a traditional degree is that you know what you鈥檙e getting into from day one.

鈥淲ith trade school, they tell you the job description up front,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey tell you what you are getting into. There are no surprises. They鈥檙e just straight up forward with you and lead you to what you may be doing for the rest of your life.鈥

Employed Before Graduation

Before Kenny finished his third quarter, he was already working in the field. He took a position on a residential job site on the south side of Youngstown, and showed up wearing his school attire since there was no required uniform.

The transition from classroom to job site was smoother than he expected. The work was familiar because the training had prepared him for it. New situations came up, but they didn鈥檛 feel foreign.

鈥淚t showed me just how close the classroom experience is to real field work,鈥 he said. 鈥淥nce you dive in, new things come fast because they are already familiar.鈥

Getting hired before graduation also confirmed something important for Kenny: the training he was receiving had real market value.

鈥淚 was employable before I even finished my third quarter,鈥 he said. 鈥淧eople were interested in me while I was still in school. They wanted to see me work in real time, and I proved myself in an area I plan to be in for a long time.鈥

Closeup of Kenneth smiling and working on electric circuit panels

A Trade Built to Last

Kenny thinks about the long-term picture too. Electrical work isn鈥檛 going anywhere. As technology becomes more central to daily life, the need for skilled electricians grows alongside it, not in competition with it.

鈥淓lectricity is becoming more and more important,鈥 he said. 鈥淏eing in the trades and working with electricity, it will always be needed. I鈥檓 comfortable knowing that I鈥檒l always be able to do my job, really, not have that threatened.鈥

Kenny’s message to anyone unsure about life after high school is straightforward: trades are transparent. You know what the job looks like before you commit.

鈥淭he best way to show someone how something works is to prove it to them,鈥 he said. 鈥淲ith a trade, you can show a person exactly what they will be doing.鈥

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