“…Third, when managing and delivering services, school counselors should use culturally responsive, postmodern career development approaches or instruments, like MCS, that allow Black youth to explore their career options (Albritton et al, 2020; ASCA, 2019; Busacca & Rehfuss, 2016; Day-Vines & Day-Hairston, 2005), infuse the advocacy competencies in career development-related group work (Cheatham & Mason, 2021), and consider Cheatham’s (1990) Heuristic Model of African American Students’ Career Development as a guide to infuse cultural values and an antiracist lens. As illustrated in this study, Black youth learn that the world of work will look different for them via social messages (i.e., family, media, and observing adults).…”