The US educational system is either getting worse at training people to handle new jobs, or getting so much more expensive that people can’t afford retraining, for various other reasons. (Plus, we are really stunningly stupid about matching educational supply to labor demand. How completely ridiculous is it to ask high school students to decide what they want to do with the rest of their lives and give them nearly no support in doing so? Support like, say, spending a day apiece watching twenty different jobs and then another week at their top three choices, with salary charts and projections and probabilities of graduating that subject given their test scores? The more so considering this is a central allocation question for the entire economy? But I have no particular reason to believe this part has gotten worse since 1960.)
I always think teachers giving careers advice is a bit like prests giving sex advice—uselss at best, dangerous at worst
I always think teachers giving careers advice is a bit like prests giving sex advice—uselss at best, dangerous at worst
This the idea of exposing students to actual workplaces. That would provide much better information than full time teachers could.