See My Path

Outline
LEAP Innovations personalized learning platform that helps middle school students discover career paths through mentoring and exploration.
In November 2022, Adam Blumenthal reached out to our Founder regarding the opportunity to transform LEAP Innovations See My Path platform, whose user experience and technology was built by Sean Zinsley in .net, to a design created by Jarrod Castaing in Photoshop. The scope would eventually expand to include design changes, upgrades and updates as well as back-end development.
See My Path is an online course designed by LEAP Innovations to introduce American middle-school students (ages 11 to 13) to career paths that may guide the students’ choice of courses in the future in territories that include Arts & Communications; Health Sciences and Technology; Manufacturing, Engineering, Technology and Trades as well as Information Technology.
See My Path invites students to select an avatar to embark with them on a journey that sees the students meet with career coaches; learn about career paths; dive deeper into career paths that the students would enjoy and carry out projects within those paths to truly understand what it means to work as a professional in those fields.
As part of See My Path, delasign would transform Jarrod's design into a responsive Figma design file. This design file implemented our design technology methodology which augments understanding and communication between team members whilst optimizing for efficiency and productivity. This helped the larger team align on the full picture and enabled Fernando Gomez Usandizaga and Gonzalo Cachon to swiftly understand project details, styleguide requirements and the components involved.
Subsequently, through an agile process that enabled multiple changes, over the course of 3 months, we provided visual design and full-stack development services that transformed Sean Zinsley's .net skeleton to the new visual design; delivering Mondo XR's vision on time to LEAP Innovation.

What We Did

Outcomes
Delivered the project ahead of time
Helped American middle school children in Chicago discover career paths
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