Overview:

The Big Tex NexT Fest, hosted by the State Fair of Texas in partnership with Mentor Connector and other community leaders, provided mentorship, financial literacy, workforce exposure, and real-world preparation to over 450 high school students in North Texas. The event emphasized choice, with students exploring universities, community colleges, trade programs, military pathways, entrepreneurship, and workforce opportunities. The Frost Bank Reality Fair taught students how to budget, manage expenses, and understand the financial realities of adulthood, while professional headshots, haircuts, and donated suit jackets helped boost their confidence.

A Day That Changed the Way Students See Their Futures

For 454 high school juniors and seniors across North Texas, 2025’s Big Tex NexT Fest signified a turning point in their young lives. Hosted by the State Fair of Texas in partnership with Mentor Connector and a coalition of community leaders, the one-day experience brought mentorship, financial literacy, workforce exposure, and real-world preparation into one powerful space.

Students walked away saying something organizers don’t hear often enough: this was the first time they truly felt prepared for what comes after graduation. In a moment when teens are navigating uncertainty, pressure, and limited access to guidance, NexT Fest offered something tangible: clarity, confidence, and connection.

Image Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest

Mentorship That Meets Students Where They Are

At the heart of NexT Fest is mentorship, led by Dallas-based initiative Mentor Connector, founded by Air Force veteran King David Reeves and Sylvia Reeves. Through speed mentoring sessions, students sat face-to-face with professionals, entrepreneurs, educators, creatives, and civic leaders who didn’t talk at them, but talked with them.

Image Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest

“These students don’t need theory,” Reeves said about the event’s mission. “They need access. They need to see people who look like them, who’ve walked different paths, and who are willing to pour back into them.”

That intentional approach resonated. For many students, it was their first opportunity to ask honest questions about careers, college, money, and purpose, without judgment.

Beyond College Fairs: Exposure to Real Options

Unlike traditional college fairs, NexT Fest emphasized choice. Students explored universities, community colleges, trade programs, military pathways, entrepreneurship, and workforce opportunities—many for the first time.

Image Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest

Workforce partners were on-site offering job connections, while Dallas College leaders, trade schools, and military representatives showed students that success doesn’t follow one narrow route. Civic engagement organizations like ACP and LULAC also helped students understand voter registration and the importance of participating in democracy.

“It’s about exposure,” said Jessica Vitela, Community Affairs Director for the State Fair of Texas. “Whether it’s art, business, careers, or civic leadership, we want students to see all the possibilities in front of them.”

The Big 3: Financial Literacy, Confidence and Life Skills

One of the most impactful activities of NexT Fest was the Frost Bank Reality Fair, where students learned how to budget, manage expenses, and understand the financial realities of adulthood. For teens preparing to step into independence, these lessons filled a critical gap often missing in classrooms.

Image Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest

The preparation master class didn’t stop there. Students received professional headshots, haircuts, and- thanks to King’s Accountability Group- over 150 donated suit jackets and ties.

Image Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest

“When students realized the jackets were theirs to keep, you could see their posture change,” organizers shared. “Confidence showed up instantly,” Reeves said.

A Full-Circle Community Effort

This year’s NexT Fest was presented by the State Fair of Texas in partnership with Mentor Connector, Frost Bank, Workforce Solutions Greater Dallas, Dallas Parks and Recreation, Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Dallas, Success Partners, and Dallas ISD Work Ready—along with dozens of supporting organizations.

High schools from Dallas ISD, Garland ISD, and DeSoto ISD were represented, reflecting regional investment in student success. Community members who once attended NexT Fest as students have now returned as mentors—proof of the long-term impact mentorship can create.

Image Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest

The State Fair of Texas, a nonprofit organization, continues to reinvest fair proceeds into scholarships, education, and South Dallas community programming—aligning NexT Fest with its pillars of education, economic development, and capacity building.

Why This Matters for Dallas

In a city where opportunity is often unevenly distributed, NexT Fest stands out as a model of what’s possible when collaboration replaces competition. It demonstrates that mentorship isn’t a “nice-to-have,” it’s essential infrastructure for youth success.

Image Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest Credit: Courtesy of Big Tex NexT Fest

As Mentor Connector continues bringing mentorship directly into schools year-round, and as NexT Fest grows toward becoming one of the largest college and career fairs in the state, one thing is clear: when students feel seen, supported, and guided, they thrive.

And for hundreds of Dallas-area students, NexT Fest planted something powerful: the belief that their goals are not only possible, but within reach.

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