馃攳
Jeff Livingston: The Most Neglected Skills | Big Think - YouTube
Channel: Big Think
[0]
In my life as a professional engaged in the
business of education I frequently find myself
[7]
involved in conversations about college and
career readiness.
[13]
Almost always that phrase - college and career
readiness - precedes a conversation between
[19]
two people, both of whom went to college -- a
particular kind of college even.
[25]
And the conversation is usually about college.
[30]
I think our society hasn't been serious enough
about the career part of that equation.
[38]
There is a presumption among some people that
the body of knowledge necessary to be ready
[43]
for college level work and the body of knowledge
necessary to enter a career with prospects
[51]
for promotion are exactly the same.
[53]
I believe that there are students, in fact,
the vast majority of students, whose education
[60]
after high school will look nothing like mine.
[65]
I left my public high school in South Carolina
and moved to Massachusetts and went to an
[71]
Ivy League university and spent four years
there, graduated and went on with my career.
[78]
That is now an unusual experience to a ridiculous
extent except among education policy people.
[86]
There are going to be many more students who
leave high school and go directly to work
[90]
and start on a path of learning from work
that's going to lead in very different directions
[98]
than my career has led.
[100]
And I don't believe that we have done enough
at the policy level to explore what those
[106]
different pathways might look like.
[108]
And if you ask employers, industry leaders
-- they tend to agree with me on that.
[115]
We are not thinking enough about middle skill
jobs.
[119]
We are not thinking enough about technical
jobs below the level of engineer.
[124]
And I think our society and its policymakers
really need to pay some careful attention
[130]
to that.
[132]
Probably if and when we start to pay attention,
we will come upon the tragic absence of apprenticeships
[141]
in our American society.
[144]
In Europe as many as a quarter to a half of
any group of teenagers at any point is pursuing
[154]
an apprenticeship which means that they are
getting both academic training and work training
[161]
while being paid by an employer.
[164]
They're learning on the job to pursue a particular
career.
[168]
And that can be an apprenticeship in software
development.
[172]
It could be an apprenticeship in hotel management.
[175]
It could be an apprenticeship in any number
of things.
[178]
In the United States we have shamefully convinced
most high school students that they either
[184]
need to go to Harvard or they need to go to
McDonald's.
[188]
And the truth is significantly more complicated
than that.
[193]
In the middle are where job growth is, where
there are jobs that are not being filled today
[200]
and too few people in our public policy community
are really focused on what students who are
[207]
going to pursue a career as their pathway
out of poverty, for example, really need to
[213]
be getting from their education -- really
need to be getting from the public policy
[218]
people who are dedicated to creating opportunities
for them.
[223]
And allowing them to pursue pathways that
look nothing like what we think is traditional.
[229]
Because the reality is the notion that you
go off to college, live in a dorm, go to some
[236]
football games, graduate in four years and
go on with your life is a persistent myth
[241]
that has very little to do with the lives
of most people pursuing a degree after high
[248]
school right now.
[250]
And the sooner we get to the point that we
take the career side of the college and career
[254]
readiness equation much more seriously, the
better off our society will be, the fewer
[261]
young people we will have who are in a position
of not being in school or at work and the
[267]
better off we will be in terms of filling
existing jobs requiring high levels of skills
[274]
for which there are no employees today.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





