Grow & Leap Marks 5 Years with Activity Report Showing Career Planning Gains
The report provides measurable evidence that a dialogue-based mentoring program can improve students' career planning skills and sense of safety, as the organization scales up with formal partnerships.
Reporting from 1 source: ASCII.jp.
The Nagoya-based nonprofit Grow & Leap released its 2025 fiscal year activity report to mark its fifth anniversary. Its My Story Project career education program has now served over 100 junior high and high school students across five cohorts. The report cites 556 individual mentoring sessions and survey results showing gains in career planning ability and psychological safety. The organization plans to expand through a new collaborative partnership system under a co-creation theme.
In the 2025 fiscal year survey, participants rated the My Story Project 4.50 out of 5 for being a safe space to talk about themselves and 4.68 for gaining new perspectives through dialogue. The scores are part of the activity report Grow & Leap released for its fifth anniversary. The nonprofit's career education program has now served over 100 students across five cohorts, with 556 individual mentoring sessions conducted annually. Career planning ability improved by 3.17 points. The organization is now moving into its next five years under a co-creation theme, having launched an annual collaborative partnership system in fiscal 2025 to support career design for students across society.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.