Skill Sets are Important
I had an interesting talk with the daughter of a highly successful engineer and was interested in her response to a question about whether her father was hiring. In the last four years, his company went from 350 staff to 80 as the bottom fell out of the housing market and large commercial construction got put on hold.
Now the market is beginning to turn around and he is finding that the new hires, recent college graduates, are missing some skills that he feels are important. They have the engineering abilities, where the schools let them down was in personal skills. They could not put together a single presentation or communicate (play well) with others. Their ability to work in a group on a project was non-existent. They had poor, if any, presentation skills. And did not have the ability to handle a question in a group meeting session.
Why are we focusing so much on technical skills without providing them the ability to bid for jobs, present in a competitive setting, or use available tools to visualize projects.
Students with high GPAs were among the worst, expecting to hit the ground running out of college, only to stumble and fall when the reality of the workplace smacks them between the eyes.
We need more critical thinking and interpersonal skills taught at the college level, this is really showing the difference between the coddled university environment and the real world.
Who Killed Vocational Education in America
Monday, October 8, 2012
Sunday, September 23, 2012
Hello all!
I ran across an interesting post on the BBC about how the Middle East is offering vocational education programs due to a lack of people to fill these types of positions. As they grow, they are having to import workers for these positions and want home grown experts.
A friend of mine took a job with with Al Jazerra for the same reason, lack of qualified people in the country. Too many of the children do not want to do the labor intensive jobs and it is causing problems in the countries. Sound familiar? Lots of college graduates, few jobs, no one wants to turn the wrench because it is below them. Not everyone can be white collar, how many blue collar workers do you know that own Mercedes! Most earn at least as much as a college graduate doing jobs no one else wants to. Think about it.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19690260
Steve Burhoe
I ran across an interesting post on the BBC about how the Middle East is offering vocational education programs due to a lack of people to fill these types of positions. As they grow, they are having to import workers for these positions and want home grown experts.
A friend of mine took a job with with Al Jazerra for the same reason, lack of qualified people in the country. Too many of the children do not want to do the labor intensive jobs and it is causing problems in the countries. Sound familiar? Lots of college graduates, few jobs, no one wants to turn the wrench because it is below them. Not everyone can be white collar, how many blue collar workers do you know that own Mercedes! Most earn at least as much as a college graduate doing jobs no one else wants to. Think about it.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-19690260
Steve Burhoe
Sunday, September 2, 2012
And What About the Underemployed?
There has been a lot of talk about the underemployed in America and how they are not being counted in the unemployment numbers. How are you supposed to count these people?
I just finished an economic plan for an airport in South Carolina and they had a plethora of skilled and semi-skilled workers in the community because of a large industry base. With the coming of Boeing nearby, the goal was to grab some of that business for the community making use of the existing facilities. But how to grab that business?
We formed an alliance with the local college and community college to establish a transportation center on the airport. We looked at the hiring schedule for Boeing and its subcontractors to find a fit to the local community. Being off the main transportation route which has multiple locations available, we targeted the subcontractors to become subcontractors to them.
Logistics today is the key to successful growth. You need that successful infrastructure and the strong support of the community to properly prepare the businesses for the task at hand. The support of the local education facilities is the key to providing the talent for the particular situation. This community got behind the initiative and kickstarted the businesses in the area.
There has been a lot of talk about the underemployed in America and how they are not being counted in the unemployment numbers. How are you supposed to count these people?
I just finished an economic plan for an airport in South Carolina and they had a plethora of skilled and semi-skilled workers in the community because of a large industry base. With the coming of Boeing nearby, the goal was to grab some of that business for the community making use of the existing facilities. But how to grab that business?
We formed an alliance with the local college and community college to establish a transportation center on the airport. We looked at the hiring schedule for Boeing and its subcontractors to find a fit to the local community. Being off the main transportation route which has multiple locations available, we targeted the subcontractors to become subcontractors to them.
Logistics today is the key to successful growth. You need that successful infrastructure and the strong support of the community to properly prepare the businesses for the task at hand. The support of the local education facilities is the key to providing the talent for the particular situation. This community got behind the initiative and kickstarted the businesses in the area.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
POTUS on Voc Ed
POTUS gets it wrong and right at the same time. At a vocational school in Iowa, POTUS announced the funding of a billion dollars for post-secondary vocational programs, great news, but he was doing it at a community college, the funding needs to go in at a much lower level. The magic age for our youth is about 16, this is when they lose interest in academics and need direction, not after graduating from HS. Lets get it right.
The world on Vocational Education
Been doing a little research on vocational programs around the world. Here are some interesting links:
Germany supports education
Italian University in English
Polish educational system
Qatar educational system
Singapore education
The Nation looks at vocational education programs in US
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
When I was growing up, I had the opportunity to travel the world with my father who was an Army officer. While in Germany in the 1960s I was exposed to their education system and was interested in how they channel their students post-elementary school into professional or technical schools for their high school educations. This provided Germany with a steady supply of both professional and technically trained individuals for their growing industries. Not only were they trained in most technical areas, but they were also bilingual from an early age. We could learn from these systems instead of turning out unskilled workers from our high schools. This is the foundation of having an industrialized society, skilled workers to replace those retiring into good paying jobs.
Where do we get most of them now? The Military! Something needs to change.
Where do we get most of them now? The Military! Something needs to change.
Friday, April 20, 2012
I was appalled when I saw several articles in the Boston and New York papers and an article by Steve Marino of home-tech.com about POTUS' plan to cut ANOTHER 20% from the vocational education budget while increasing the Education budget another 11% to $51 billion, less than 2% of the budget goes to vocational program. In 1975 the education department budget was $17 billion, has education really improved? And the President wants to cut it another 20% in 2012! While raising spending on education 11%, how many unskilled people can the economy absorb? Less than a third of all students actually go to and complete college. The unskilled rely on their youth and brawn to get jobs, and most of these unskilled jobs have gone away with the economic downturn, primarily in construction.
Not everyone needs or wants a college education, why can't our government and educational system see this?
Plus, there has been an all out attack on for profit schools that do turn out skilled workers. Don't throw out the baby with the bathwater just because of a few opportunists. It needs to be back in the public school system. Screw the liability issues, the labeling of students as non-college material, heck 2/3's of them are already, lets start building skills again so our youth is employable beyond saying: "Would you like fries with that?"
Not everyone needs or wants a college education, why can't our government and educational system see this?
Plus, there has been an all out attack on for profit schools that do turn out skilled workers. Don't throw out the baby with the bathwater just because of a few opportunists. It needs to be back in the public school system. Screw the liability issues, the labeling of students as non-college material, heck 2/3's of them are already, lets start building skills again so our youth is employable beyond saying: "Would you like fries with that?"
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)