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To: ManyMoose who wrote (471868)2/15/2012 1:10:00 AM
From: simplicity6 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793991
 
The skilled trades will always be with us, but a lot of people will have to rethink their career options. Sending everybody to college is not it.

Well said!

One of the most wonderful essays/articles I have read in recent memory was one entitled 'The Case for Working With Your Hands'. I wish I could post the entire article here, but it is very long (link at bottom, should anyone be interested in reading it).

A couple of brief excerpts:

High-school shop-class programs were widely dismantled in the 1990s as educators prepared students to become “knowledge workers.” The imperative of the last 20 years to round up every warm body and send it to college, then to the cubicle, was tied to a vision of the future in which we somehow take leave of material reality and glide about in a pure information economy. This has not come to pass. To begin with, such work often feels more enervating than gliding. More fundamentally, now as ever, somebody has to actually do things: fix our cars, unclog our toilets, build our houses ...

... If the goal is to earn a living, then, maybe it isn’t really true that 18-year-olds need to be imparted with a sense of panic about getting into college (though they certainly need to learn). Some people are hustled off to college, then to the cubicle, against their own inclinations and natural bents, when they would rather be learning to build things or fix things. One shop teacher suggested to me that “in schools, we create artificial learning environments for our children that they know to be contrived and undeserving of their full attention and engagement. Without the opportunity to learn through the hands, the world remains abstract and distant, and the passions for learning will not be engaged.”

jfk17.com



To: ManyMoose who wrote (471868)2/15/2012 11:11:48 AM
From: sm1th  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793991
 
a lot of people will have to rethink their career options. Sending everybody to college is not it.

Agreed. The biggest challenge for many is going to be the need to reinvent yourself and start a new career several times. The days when you could master something by your mid 20's and then work at it for 40 years are long gone for most people. Unfortunately, the low skill workers displaced by automation ware likely to be the least able to adapt. And no, I don't have the solution, just struggling to stay employed for a few more years in my 3rd career, busily automating people into unemployment.