Fareed Zakaria on the Knowledge Economy | Big Think - YouTube

Channel: Big Think

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It's something of a clich茅 to say this but we live in a knowledge economy.
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Increasingly a person's ability to command the high wage is going to depend upon having
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some skills, having skills that relate to perhaps technology.
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It doesn't always have to be technology but it has to be some kind of value add that you
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provide that allows you to command some pricing power in the labor market.
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How you do that is going to vary from industry to industry.
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In some cases it will be doing things that computers do well, a data analyst for example.
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In some cases it will be doing things that computers can't do.
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A human touch profession as in nursing and things like that.
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But whatever it is, you're going to have to focus very hard on those skills and the only
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way you can get those skills is through learning and through continuous learning.
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And any company hiring people will recognize that probably the trait they're looking for
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most is not a particular set of skills but the demonstrated ability to acquire skills.
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Because any company will realize, I think, that what's crucial is not the particular
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set of skills you have but that you demonstrate a capacity to acquire them now because a few
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years from now, a few months from now it might turn out that you have to acquire new ones.
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Look at software programmers for example.
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Any software programmer knows that within two or three years almost everything they're
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doing right now will be obsolete and they will have to learn a whole new language, depending
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on whether you're talking about mobile, whether you're talking about apps, whether you're
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talking about traditional computers.
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And, of course, depending on what the particular configuration of hardware and software you're
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using.
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So all that keeps changing in many, many worlds and I think that because of it the information
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revolution it's going happen even more so in worlds that we don't usually think of changing.
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Accreditation is in some way are the holy grail of education.
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The reason that American universities are able to charge the extraordinary price they
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charge is because employers around the world believe that this is the single best sorting
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mechanism they have to figure out whom to hire.
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So that if you have an undergraduate degree from Harvard or the University of Pennsylvania's
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Wharton School, a bank -- particularly if it's in majoring in economics -- a bank is
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going to think: "Of the 20,000 applications we get for our entry 300 positions, these
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are some very good filters."
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We look at the people who went to Harvard and Wharton and Stanford and things like that.
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If you're looking for people who are software programmers, if they have gone to a good computer
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science program at a good university you assume that's a very good way to filter down.
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And then you probably go through the interviews and things like that.
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But what is somebody came to a -- what if somebody came to a technology company or a
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bank and said, "Look, I don't have the degree that you're looking for but I did take 25
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courses online from these five online MOOCs, many of which are Stanford courses and Harvard
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courses and MIT courses.
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And here's how I did and here is a piece of paper or pieces of paper that prove, that
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demonstrate that I finished those courses, the grades I got on them, et cetera."
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If employers start treating those pieces of paper, those accreditations as worth a lot,
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that completely changes the nature of education because then you are not, you know, what you
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are being paid for is really outcome related.
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It is related to what skills have you acquired rather than process related.
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Did you go to a four-year bricks and mortar college and live in the dorms with other people.
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Some people may still value that latter one.
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By the way it may still be worthwhile for some people to pay that because of the network
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effect because of the people you meet at a Harvard or a Yale.
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But you could imagine that that would not be true at universities one tier down or certainly
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two tiers down.
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And in any case, it would place huge pressure on the pricing model because all of a sudden
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people are able to access many of the skills that you're being taught in top universities
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at a fraction of the price.
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So the key here is whether the employers begin to view accreditation as an outcome based
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process on skills as opposed to a kind of a process in which it's very important that
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you've spent the four years at the college and acquired the full rounded education that
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that college provides.