WiccanLiberal
02-10-2013, 10:49 AM
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/businessdesk/2013/02/the-youth-unemployment-crisis.html
"What if I told you that a U.S. public-private initiative could reduce youth unemployment, improve the transition from school-to-careers, upgrade skills, raise wages of young adults, strengthen a young worker's identity, increase U.S. productivity, achieve positive returns for employers and workers, and reduce government spending?
After you asked me what I've been smoking, you might think it another pie-in-the-sky scheme put forward by some airhead academic. In fact, the initiative I have in mind is feasible to implement. It addresses what may be the most pressing labor market issue at the moment, and in the coming years: no good jobs for young people. Most important, it has been well-tested and it demonstrably works.
So what is it? To expand apprenticeship training, expand it significantly enough to become a viable alternative for most young people and a common method of recruitment and training by employers."
We have had multiple sources telling us degrees are not the value we thought they were. From personal experience, I know that an academic degree is not the best path for all students. (My nephew is doing a 2 year hands on program that he may extend to a 4 year degree or not.) So is apprenticeship going to make a come back? It used to be the most common way to learn a new trade. We still see traces of the concept in some skilled professions with new workers mentored by more experienced employees. Seems like a double win. An inexperienced individual learns the skills needed, getting paid while doing so, and the company has the benefit of an employee trained to their specific standards. Add a contract that the person has to give the company a set term of employment after the apprenticeship and they are sure of getting the investment back.
"What if I told you that a U.S. public-private initiative could reduce youth unemployment, improve the transition from school-to-careers, upgrade skills, raise wages of young adults, strengthen a young worker's identity, increase U.S. productivity, achieve positive returns for employers and workers, and reduce government spending?
After you asked me what I've been smoking, you might think it another pie-in-the-sky scheme put forward by some airhead academic. In fact, the initiative I have in mind is feasible to implement. It addresses what may be the most pressing labor market issue at the moment, and in the coming years: no good jobs for young people. Most important, it has been well-tested and it demonstrably works.
So what is it? To expand apprenticeship training, expand it significantly enough to become a viable alternative for most young people and a common method of recruitment and training by employers."
We have had multiple sources telling us degrees are not the value we thought they were. From personal experience, I know that an academic degree is not the best path for all students. (My nephew is doing a 2 year hands on program that he may extend to a 4 year degree or not.) So is apprenticeship going to make a come back? It used to be the most common way to learn a new trade. We still see traces of the concept in some skilled professions with new workers mentored by more experienced employees. Seems like a double win. An inexperienced individual learns the skills needed, getting paid while doing so, and the company has the benefit of an employee trained to their specific standards. Add a contract that the person has to give the company a set term of employment after the apprenticeship and they are sure of getting the investment back.