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Study Shows Teen Gamers Like Tech, But Don't All Crave IT Jobs

CIStud writes "If you think playing endless hours of Dungeons & Dragons will create a desire to get into the information technology, think again. A new study by CompTIA of teens and young adults shows that only 17% want to pursue a technology career despite the fact that 97% say they 'love' technology." This can't be any more surprising than that most concert-goers don't intend to be professional musicians, can it? 17% actually sounds like a pretty high figure to me. The article goes on to soften even that number, though: "[I]nterest levels jump when teens and young adults are presented with options for specific jobs. Nearly half of the respondents can see themselves potentially designing video games; 41 percent envision creating applications for mobile devices; 39 percent, designing web pages; and 34 percent, applying technology in fields such as healthcare or education."

8 of 227 comments (clear)

  1. Stupid article is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I like pizza, but I don't want to be a cook at the local pizza joint.

    1. Re:Stupid article is stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm not exactly in "get off my lawn" territory, but when I was a kid, if you liked computers at all it just made sense to pursue a tech career. Then the 90's boom happened, the market flooded with people that weren't really that interested who wanted the pay day, etc. I've bounced around a bit over the years doing web and winforms development, sys/net/tel admin, etc., but you learn a few things about peoples' perceptions of what various careers mean.

      Developing video games isn't sitting around playing retro video games all day and dreaming up awesome shit for an amazing new product. Not in a place that actually ships. It's work.

      Being a sysadmin doesn't usually mean reading others email and goofing off on facebook all day, it means stress and deadlines and working on shit hardware you wish you could pitch in a lake, while someone who doesn't understand the job breathes down your neck.

      Making websites isn't like playing with ideas on construction paper all day, it's about fighting with bizarre customer requirements, broken browsers, legibility, accessibility, viewer device support, etc. We're largely past the days of Frontpage (or god help us, MS Word) goofs knocking out awful, broken shit for huge sums of money.

      Most other kinds of regular programming aren't Matrix-style uberhaxoring in a back alley club somewhere. They're people in polo shirts and khakis, in cubes, with a short stack of reference books, wondering how long that next awful meeting is going to last and if they're going to fall asleep in front of the boss.

      For most, jobs are jobs. It's hard to get pumped about doing them unless you just really like what you do.

  2. users vs producers by tverbeek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This should be obvious that gamers would be mostly uninterested in tech careers. It'd be like people who watch television all wanting to go into theater, or people who like to drive going into automotive mechanics, or people who like to eat pursuing a career in culinary arts. Liking to use something is very different from wanting to be one of the people who make it work.

    --
    http://alternatives.rzero.com/
  3. D&D! by KatchooNJ · · Score: 5, Funny

    Let's roll to determine your career path. Roll a d20!

    --
    "Never give up, for that is just the time and place when the tide will change." -Harriet Beecher Stowe ^_^
    1. Re:D&D! by kenj0418 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Let's roll to determine your career path. Roll a d20!

      Ooo, sorry. You rolled a 1. It looks like it's help desk for you.

  4. I bet they don't want to be janitors either. by pathological+liar · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why go into the white collar equivalent?

    I (sometimes) enjoy my work, but glamorous it ain't.

  5. Different world now, tech-wise by ErichTheRed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think this is just natural considering what's happened with technology in the last 20 or so years. Tweeting, blogging or posting a status update to Facebook is not a difficult, cumbersome task. The user interface is intuitive, you don't have to do too much magic to get Internet access, and the results are immediate. Someone on the back end did all the magic to make this possible -- you're just a user.

    Contrast that with being interested in PCs around the early to mid 1990s. The cohort who "loves technology" was limited because loving technology meant you loved to mess around with arcane, strange concepts that most of the population didn't understand. Today's "love technology" crowd actually loves using technology someone else built for the most part. Do you think your average Facebook using teenager would want to go back to, say, 1993 and spend hours fiddling with driver parameters to get a video card working in Windows, or OS/2, or DOS, or Linux? Or figuring out the magic incantations to get your 14.4 kbps modem to dial into an ISP?

    Unlike a lot of people, I still actually enjoy my systems engineering/architect job. I get to solve interesting problems and come up with workarounds for strange situations all the time. I wouldn't want a traditional corporate job, or project management, or whatever, just because those jobs aren't intellectually stimulating IMO -- mindless paper shuffling. However, I have seen my share of people who tried to force themselves to love IT jobs, and they're disappointed. The fact remains that you have to have the "figure it out" mindset and the discipline to sit and work through a complex problem. I'm also one of those people who is interested in all the crazy stuff going on under the hood to deliver data around the world, so I guess I "love technology" too. That said, with things like ITIL and process-driven IT, there are a lot of IT jobs that are very boring now...the key is to get yourself one of the interesting ones. As far as software dev goes, sure, everyone thinks they'd love to program video games because playing them is fun. Doing boring, predictable, corporate software development is different -- just connect parts from different toolsets. I can't tell you how many CRUD web interface applications I've seen -- businesses need this stuff a lot more than they need video games. Someone has to do the unsexy work.

    So, the group of people who "love building things with technology" is much smaller than the "love using technology to stay in contact with my social circle" group -- same as always.

  6. Re:I could "see myself" as an astronaut as well by rossdee · · Score: 5, Funny

    But Firemen aren't the good guys these days. Their wages and benefits are costing the government money that could be better used giving to the rich as tax cuts.