Why College Graduates are increasingly working low wage Jobs

Atlrocafella

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yeah but are they ready to move you? if not start looking for a vertical move to another company. NEVER horizontal...while except in rare cases.

Caveat is if you get in a really kick ass company

Oh yea, I wouldn't make a lateral move, either promotion from within(which is something they have mentioned to me earlier this year), or a higher position at another company.

I really want to work at Bloomberg, they are the google of the finance world as far as the culture and office environment.

Had an interview with them after I graduated and they didn't pick me :sadbron:, I'm gonna try again now that I have some real experience under my belt.
 

TLR Is Mental Poison

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I have been making lateral moves in responsibility with vertical moves in pay and skills

Ironically, one of the fastest growing + most secure fields does not require a college degree. Well, a bachelors' at least. Any idea what field that is???
 

88m3

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I have been making lateral moves in responsibility with vertical moves in pay and skills

Ironically, one of the fastest growing + most secure fields does not require a college degree. Well, a bachelors' at least. Any idea what field that is???

I'm thinking something in the service sector, prostitution?
 

88m3

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Need a Job? Invent It
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Published: March 30, 2013 80 Comments
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WHEN Tony Wagner, the Harvard education specialist, describes his job today, he says he’s “a translator between two hostile tribes” — the education world and the business world, the people who teach our kids and the people who give them jobs. Wagner’s argument in his book “Creating Innovators: The Making of Young People Who Will Change the World” is that our K-12 and college tracks are not consistently “adding the value and teaching the skills that matter most in the marketplace.”

Josh Haner/The New York Times
Thomas L. Friedman
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This is dangerous at a time when there is increasingly no such thing as a high-wage, middle-skilled job — the thing that sustained the middle class in the last generation. Now there is only a high-wage, high-skilled job. Every middle-class job today is being pulled up, out or down faster than ever. That is, it either requires more skill or can be done by more people around the world or is being buried — made obsolete — faster than ever. Which is why the goal of education today, argues Wagner, should not be to make every child “college ready” but “innovation ready” — ready to add value to whatever they do.

That is a tall task. I tracked Wagner down and asked him to elaborate. “Today,” he said via e-mail, “because knowledge is available on every Internet-connected device, what you know matters far less than what you can do with what you know. The capacity to innovate — the ability to solve problems creatively or bring new possibilities to life — and skills like critical thinking, communication and collaboration are far more important than academic knowledge. As one executive told me, ‘We can teach new hires the content, and we will have to because it continues to change, but we can’t teach them how to think — to ask the right questions — and to take initiative.’ ”

My generation had it easy. We got to “find” a job. But, more than ever, our kids will have to “invent” a job. (Fortunately, in today’s world, that’s easier and cheaper than ever before.) Sure, the lucky ones will find their first job, but, given the pace of change today, even they will have to reinvent, re-engineer and reimagine that job much more often than their parents if they want to advance in it. If that’s true, I asked Wagner, what do young people need to know today?

“Every young person will continue to need basic knowledge, of course,” he said. “But they will need skills and motivation even more. Of these three education goals, motivation is the most critical. Young people who are intrinsically motivated — curious, persistent, and willing to take risks — will learn new knowledge and skills continuously. They will be able to find new opportunities or create their own — a disposition that will be increasingly important as many traditional careers disappear.”

So what should be the focus of education reform today?

“We teach and test things most students have no interest in and will never need, and facts that they can Google and will forget as soon as the test is over,” said Wagner. “Because of this, the longer kids are in school, the less motivated they become. Gallup’s recent survey showed student engagement going from 80 percent in fifth grade to 40 percent in high school. More than a century ago, we ‘reinvented’ the one-room schoolhouse and created factory schools for the industrial economy. Reimagining schools for the 21st-century must be our highest priority. We need to focus more on teaching the skill and will to learn and to make a difference and bring the three most powerful ingredients of intrinsic motivation into the classroom: play, passion and purpose.”

What does that mean for teachers and principals?

“Teachers,” he said, “need to coach students to performance excellence, and principals must be instructional leaders who create the culture of collaboration required to innovate. But what gets tested is what gets taught, and so we need ‘Accountability 2.0.’ All students should have digital portfolios to show evidence of mastery of skills like critical thinking and communication, which they build up right through K-12 and postsecondary. Selective use of high-quality tests, like the College and Work Readiness Assessment, is important. Finally, teachers should be judged on evidence of improvement in students’ work through the year — instead of a score on a bubble test in May. We need lab schools where students earn a high school diploma by completing a series of skill-based ‘merit badges’ in things like entrepreneurship. And schools of education where all new teachers have ‘residencies’ with master teachers and performance standards — not content standards — must become the new normal throughout the system.”

Who is doing it right?

“Finland is one of the most innovative economies in the world,” he said, “and it is the only country where students leave high school ‘innovation-ready.’ They learn concepts and creativity more than facts, and have a choice of many electives — all with a shorter school day, little homework, and almost no testing. In the U.S., 500 K-12 schools affiliated with Hewlett Foundation’s Deeper Learning Initiative and a consortium of 100 school districts called EdLeader21 are developing new approaches to teaching 21st-century skills. There are also a growing number of ‘reinvented’ colleges like the Olin College of Engineering, the M.I.T. Media Lab and the ‘D-school’ at Stanford where students learn to innovate.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/31/opinion/sunday/friedman-need-a-job-invent-it.html

common sense right?
 

Brown_Pride

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hell yeah but it'll never happen on a mass scale. At least i don't see it happening. There are too many people with the "well we did it fine before" mentality. I can't stand that damn mentality. It's one of my pet peves "that's how we've always done it". GOD DAMN i can't stand that saying. I hear that all the time at work and it sickens me.

Shoot yourself if you say this please. Do us all a favor.

I'm checking in on that EdLeader21 to see if they have an available list of schools to get my kids into :smile:
 

Richard Wright

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:deadmanny: Who else just Jalen Rose refer to himself as one of the few people in america working in their major?
 
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