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halfulglas

(1,654 posts)
3. Another problem is Degree Creep.
Mon Sep 6, 2021, 01:29 PM
Sep 2021

I'm in my 70's. The generation of my father and my friend's fathers could get a really good job right out of high school that could support a family very well. You could get an office job and rise into management ranks. (Of course it was mostly the men, not the women.)

Now so many employers require a degree for jobs that don't really need a degree. They need to acquire the knowledge that the job requires but not a degree in it and although many employers privately agree a degree isn't need are reluctant to even look at an application that doesn't have the degree or even a different degree than they are asking for - like a liberal arts major wanting to apply for a job posted for an engineer, but doesn't really really need an engineer. Back in the late 60s my ex got a job for which they originally only hired engineers but the company that hired him couldn't hire graduate engineers for the starting salary they were offering.

Today with resumes being electronically processed it's hard to get an interview for a job you can probably thrive in unless the company is flexible. And the fact is that once on the job you know things are changing and keep learning more to keep up with the changing job or even future job market.

Unfortunately some schools still have an academic track and the "other" (different school systems have different terms) track. They put so much of the money in the track that puts emphasis on preparing the kids for college but the other track just teaches job skills which don't include other than basic just enough to graduate math and English. So often they have to pay high prices for private "technical colleges" and go into debt before they can even join the job market. And with school counselors being in short supply, so many of them direct their efforts to what colleges their academic students are applying to, they often neglect working with the kids on the "other" track to direct them to some of the free or nearly free courses at the community colleges that will prepare them for working in today's competitive technical world.

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