Habitat for Aviation White Paper Release

Executive Summary

Habitat for Aviation is a pioneering nonprofit dedicated to creating inclusive pathways into aviation careers, particularly for historically underrepresented groups. Rooted in the principles of interests, relationships, and practice, the organization provides hands-on apprenticeship opportunities for youth in aviation maintenance and avionics, supporting both conventional and electric aircraft industries.

With the U.S. aviation industry facing a significant workforce shortage—projected at 14,400 aviation mechanic openings per year—Habitat for Aviation aims to bridge the gap by fostering early exposure, mentorship, and real-world experience. The WOMEN BUILD PLANES initiative, a groundbreaking all-female and gender-expansive aircraft assembly program, is a key focus, designed to combat the “compounding barriers” identified in the FAA’s Women in Aviation Advisory Board Report (2022) that hinder recruitment, retention, and advancement in the field.

Supported by research from Big Picture Learning and the Harbor Freight Leadership Lab, the initiative leverages apprenticeships, mentorship, and community-based learning to create a sustainable model for skilled trades education. The program has already demonstrated measurable success in building confidence, expanding social capital, and preparing youth for FAA certifications and high-wage aviation careers.

By redefining aviation education through real-world practice and mentorship, Habitat for Aviation serves as a scalable blueprint for workforce development, ensuring a more diverse and inclusive future in aerospace.

Beth White

Education Possibilitarian, Artist, Writer, Doula, Mentor, Aviatrix, Breast Cancer Survivor, Pilot-in-Command at Habitat for Aviation


In the spring of 2022, Beth White emerged from a 10-month battle with breast cancer with an idea: to create an apprenticeship program at Franklin County State Airport where youth work alongside adult mentors servicing conventional and electric aircraft. A pilot and airplane mechanic apprentice herself, and with family roots in the trades, Habitat for Aviation provides an taxilane for world learning opportunities for youth and adults who love to work with their hands to enter the FAA’s apprenticeship certification track. Each day she puts systems in place that make real John Dewey’s philosophy that we “learn best what we live” – a deep throughline from her time at Antioch University New England and as Regional Director for Big Picture Learning. Each learning experience is grounded in relationships, relevance, and practice. In October, 2023, Habitat for Aviation launched its Women Build Planes program, where an all-female team of Modern Day Rosies is building an airplane at Franklin County Airport, in northwestern Vermont, to show folks everywhere that despite the fact that only 2.6% of airplane mechanics are female, women BUILD, FLY, and FIX airplanes.

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Build, Fix, Fly Article in Aviation for Girls Magazine

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