A compelling appeal to center the perspectives of young people to support them in mapping pathways to future success In How We See Us , Michaela Leslie-Rule amplifies the voices of young people approaching adulthood as they consider their experiences, needs, and goals for their education, early careers, and lives. Leslie-Rule encourages adults who support young people to listen more closely to youth voices so that their perspectives are centered in interventions made on their behalf. Based on the findings of a research project of remarkable breadth and scale, with in-depth interviews, surveys, and focus groups of nearly 4,000 students from Black and Hispanic communities and low-income households in both urban and rural regions across the United States, the book finds thoughtful self-reflection and an optimistic mindset in the stories of the youths’ successes and challenges. The rich accounts of how they experience their identities, communities, education, and employment refute dominant narratives that so often frame their abilities in terms of deficits and that suggest that young people, and students of color especially, live in a perpetual state of crisis. Leslie-Rule advocates for listening more deeply to young people and provides a framework, as well as tools, prompts, worksheets, and other resources, to improve practice. Such consideration, she argues, enables educators, policymakers, and researchers to better address the barriers students experience in building and navigating pathways to education, career, and adulthood. “Education change efforts frequently focus on scalability and structure—patching gaps and deficits in career preparation. By listening to young adults and understanding their aspirations and experiences, Leslie-Rule creates critically complementary frameworks, not formulas, for supporting their agency to strive toward thriving visions for their lives, including meaningful work.”― Joel Vargas, vice president of education, Jobs for the Future “How do young people see themselves in relation to where they want to go and how they plan to get there? This is arguably the fundamental question of late adolescence and emerging adulthood. Leslie-Rule offers answers from young people themselves and shares their responses in a framework that will prove immensely helpful to those who want to support this critical life transition. Her narrative is deeply attuned without being paternalistic, practical without being simplistic, and thought-provoking throughout.”― Michael Nakkula, Penn Graduate School of Education, and coauthor of Understanding Youth: Adolescent Development for Educators Michaela M. Leslie-Rule is a researcher, cultural strategist, and storyteller. For over two decades, she has supported communities, nonprofit leaders, and philanthropic institutions to advance racial and gender justice by leveraging the power of stories.