10/31/2025
🚀 DAY 5 RECAP: Jonathon Modica on Building Critical Thinking & Taking Action
For our final day of Media Literacy Week, we heard from Jonathon Modica — U of A triple-grad (BA in Journalism, MA, EdD in Education) who went from Razorback basketball player to VP of Human Resources at Intuit. His message? ACT on your preparation, take calculated risks, and trust the process.
What we talked about:
🏀 His journey: Modica played basketball at U of A while studying broadcast journalism. He pursued graduate degrees not because he had it all figured out, but because he believed if he kept learning practical skills, things would eventually align. He was right.
đź’Ľ Transferable skills from journalism:
Project management: "Putting together a piece for a news segment is a mini project management process — get the material, edit the material, timeline, deadline. These are skills that don't care what environment you're in."
Poise & communication: "Whether you're a physicist, engineer, finance person, HR person, teacher — most jobs require you to stand up with poise, confidence and articulate your point in ways people can understand without losing the complexity."
📊 His career path: Started as a recruiter at Walmart, got promoted, then took a major risk in 2015 — moved his family from Bentonville (where both he and his wife had stable jobs and just bought a home) to the Bay Area to work in tech. He worked at Uber, Cisco, Adobe, Splunk and now Intuit.
đź§ On critical thinking:
"Critical thinking is even more important now with content overload from social media. Can we agree on facts anymore? Can we agree on what information is reliable?"
"I'm on Instagram, I see something presented as news, and the old school researcher in me says, 'Let me go do a little extra digging to corroborate if this is real.' Oftentimes it's not."
Final wisdom: "No matter where you're from or what you sound like, if you can help solve problems and people can learn from you, you can build the life you want. Silicon Valley is full of people from MIT, Harvard, Stanford — people who like constructive debate. Prepare yourself to compete at any level."