Wednesday, November 20, 2019
Why our old approach to college is putting a new generation at risk
Why our old approach to college is putting a new generation at risk Why our old approach to college is putting a new generation at risk Society has done a huge disservice to young people by relying on outdated educational and workforce training models developed 50 years ago. Our one-size-fits-all approach that promotes college as the single path to a profitable, high-skilled profession is putting both the economy and an entire generation at risk.We face a national crisis of rising college costs, decreasing degree-requiring jobs, and employer frustration with the younger generations in the workplace. Meanwhile, weâre pushing young people to obtain college degrees while simultaneously ignoring the importance of also acquiring valuable work skills. As a result, only 1 in 5 students feel prepared for todayâs job market. Weâre saddling them with enormous college debt for degrees that may not pay off.Todayâs emphasis should no longer be just about getting young people ready for college. It should be about preparing them for careers for which college is one of many available pathways. College is a great postsecondar y option â" if their career path requires it. Too many young people today go just to go, and too often, because of lack of forethought or direction, they choose a field of study where there either are no jobs available or they arenât adequately trained for a profession.Follow Ladders on Flipboard!Follow Laddersâ magazines on Flipboard covering Happiness, Productivity, Job Satisfaction, Neuroscience, and more!What young people donât often know â" because no one tells them before they venture into higher education â" is that there are great, living-wage careers to pursue that donât require them to go to college. Many of todayâs high-paying, high-skilled careers require a specialized industry credential or certification, not a college degree.Sending young people off to study for degrees without regard for whether theyâre actually being trained for a viable profession has resulted in an alarming skills gap in todayâs workforce. Employers are starving for people with han ds-on skills and experiences that come from certifications, apprenticeships, licensures, and career training programs. A recent study showed that by 2025, the United States will be short 11 million qualified workers to support the economy.Manufacturers around the country, for example, are in desperate need of precision machinists. But attracting the younger generation to the work is remarkably difficult because of the stigma that only lower-performing students choose this kind of career. Still, the field offers immediate employment, high wages, and advanced opportunities. Far from the old stereotype of a dead-end factory job, work in this field now ranges from a robot operator to a machine builder to a computer automated manufacturing engineer.Students in both middle and high schools need to be made aware of the plethora of career avenues available and their respective training and salary prospects. Intentional career planning early on will allow them to choose advanced education pu rposefully and give them a better chance of reaching their goals.Prioritizing early career exploration also:1. Gives young people a sense of directionOnce theyâre made aware that their interests can translate into exciting career opportunities, they can begin exploring the appropriate academic pre-requisites and early training opportunities that will catapult them into a promising future.2. Answers the âwhyâ behind their high school educationâBecause I said soâ is not enough of a reason for Gen Y and Zers who want to know the âwhyâ behind all of whatâs asked of them. Opening their eyes to the pathway toward their chosen career can spark enthusiasm to perform at a higher level. Theyâll understand the relevance of their education to the life and career they want to achieve.3. Invites more experiential learningWhen teachers, coaches, and counselors know what careers their students want to pursue, they can connect the coursework with the attainment of their studentsâ dreams. Assignments, field trips, guest speakers, service projects and more can allow students to explore their interests and prepare for their various career paths.4. Allows them to acquire skills and industry knowledge that can empower young entrepreneursInternships, apprenticeships, and other hands-on opportunities are just a few of the ways young people can begin to excel in their fields of interest. Studies show that students who are exposed to career options early on in their educational journey graduate high school in greater numbers (93% over the national average of 80%). Career-minded education gives students a distinct competitive advantage.5. Positions them to know their objectives before investing time and moneyMost young people have been taught to first pick a college to attend, then pick a major, and when they finally graduate, then decide what job they want to do. But reversing that order would help direct them toward purpose-driven education and save them from havin g to figure out life with that enormous financial clock ticking.Mark C. Perna is the author of the award-winning bestseller Answering Why: Unleashing Passion, Purpose, and Performance in Younger Generations that Publishers Weekly calls âperceptive ⦠reasonable and thought-provoking.â Mark is the founder and CEO of TFS and has over 20 years of experience in coaching educational organizations and businesses on todayâs unique intergenerational workforce and the hiring, training and retention of the newest generations. Follow @MarkPerna.You might also enjoy⦠New neuroscience reveals 4 rituals that will make you happy Strangers know your social class in the first seven words you say, study finds 10 lessons from Benjamin Franklinâs daily schedule that will double your productivity The worst mistakes you can make in an interview, according to 12 CEOs 10 habits of mentally strong people
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