For Businesses, the College Degree Is the New High School Diploma
Hugh Pickens writes "The NY Times reports that a college degree is becoming the new high school diploma: the new minimum requirement for getting even the lowest-level job. Many jobs that didn't require a diploma years ago — positions like dental hygienists, cargo agents, clerks and claims adjusters — increasingly requiring a college degree. From the point of view of business, with so many people going to college now, those who do not graduate are often assumed to be unambitious or less capable. 'When you get 800 résumés for every job ad, you need to weed them out somehow,' says Suzanne Manzagol. A study by Georgetown University's Center on Education and the Workforce found that more than 2.2 million jobs that require a minimum of a bachelor's degree have been created (PDF) since the 2007 start of the recession. At the same time, jobs that require only a high school diploma have decreased by 5.8 million in that same time. 'It is a tough job market for college graduates but far worse for those without a college education,' says Anthony P. Carnevale, co-author of the report. 'At a time when more and more people are debating the value of post-secondary education, this data shows that your chances of being unemployed increase dramatically without a college degree.' Even if they are not exactly applying the knowledge they gained in their political science, finance and fashion marketing classes, young graduates say they are grateful for even the rotest of rote office work they have been given. 'It sure beats washing cars,' says Georgia State University graduate Landon Crider, 24, an in-house courier who, for $10 an hour, ferries documents back and forth between the courthouse and his company's office."
Really, does it take 4 (or is it 5 now!) years to train people to be file clerks?
the real value of a degree is the signal it sends
Very true!
you are someone who at least can stick to something long enough to finish it.
That is not the message a modern degree sends.
The modern degree sends a message that you are a herd animal, to the point that you will stay with the herd even to the point of your own financial ruin.
There's no question that to some companies a docile herd animal with no instincts for self-preservation is a valuable resource. I'm just not sure I'd want to work for them given the likely expectations.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
I own businesses in the Midwest and South Florida. When I post a job listing (usually through Craigslist), I specifically request people with no degree apply.
In the past 9 years, 100% of people I've hired were undegreed. These were the people I wanted, because they specifically weren't indoctrinated into the college mentality. I want self-starters, people I can later on invite to become a business partner. I also don't want political correctness, feminism or any of the other progressive mindsets in any of my businesses. Those people can hit the road -- I don't even want them as customers.
I also hate having employees with major debt.
I pay better than average wages, and I purposely look through applications for the non-degreed folks.
I'd love to see a job search website that focuses on people bright enough to skip 4 years of college and just hit the employment roles.
Of course, I don't have HR departments, I would never hire an MBA, and I go out of my way to work with the millions of entrepreneurs out there who also didn't go to college but are earning bank.
Maybe with luck society will separate into two groups: the politically correct nauseated degreed folks and the self-driven and determined entrepreneurial type.
Actually, I graduated without a dime in student loan debt. I worked full time and went to school full time (with a very understanding employer). Now, I am a hiring manager in the world of IT. I value experience, but a degree shows that you have some soft skills to go with your knowledge. A degree with business courses also shows me that you will understand other functions of the company, and not just your own job. An engineering degree shows me you are able to solve complex problems and have learned to research well. Even a liberal arts degree at least shows me you are able to meet deadlines and focus. Certifications will get your foot in the door, whereas a degree will move your career path along.
It also signals you are likely loaded with student loan debt and are desperately in need of a job. This will gives you a disadvantage as the company will you see a hard-working, low payable employee. In other words, your ass will get ridden by management and subliminally reminded that they can easily let you go, which will effectively limit your career growth.
I see this in all types of careers.
Another source for the devaluation of the 4-year college degree are these Baccalaureate degrees from these for-profit universities.
Having a masters degree, even more debt, helps you grow in your career and in a few years from now, a masters will be considered a "diploma" in the math/science industry. These for-profit schools are beginning to push these degrees to unsuspecting victims.
Previewing comments are for sissies!
If you think $20 an hour is great wages, then you deserve to be underpaid for your whole life. Please never change. Come mow my lawn some time.
I went from $11.50 an hour before college to $25 an hour the day I graduated (in 2002). That's more than 100% increase. I graduated from Dartmouth, which is as expensive as any college in the country, with $20,000 in loans, which is 1,400 hours of marginal pay, meaning I earned all of what I made before PLUS enough to pay for college in less than a year after leaving college. At the same time, I enjoyed a more satisfying job and had a great time in college for four years. Today I earn $44 an hour -- 400% my pre-college income. Many people in my field make make up to double what I make. At your current pay you would net $5 an hour which would pay back an Ivy League education in two years and if you don't go to an expensive Ivy League school you can pay back your college expenses even faster than that.
My guess is that your high school education didn't teach you enough to run the numbers like that, or else you would have gotten up early to be first in line on college registration day.
So where should one obtain related work experience without already having related work experience?
This is what happens when you have created a pay-to-play society like here in the US.
Education these days is nothing more than another form of corporate profit and requiring college degrees for even menial jobs is nothing more than a method to force people into a form of indentured servitude.
How's that you say? Well debt == enslavement and where is most people's largest amount of debt outside of their home? Debt which can not be discharged by declaring bankruptcy? Student loans.
Now be a good slave and get in line to get your expensive degree so you can work at McCrapphole corporation.
Did you ever wake up in the morning, with a Zombie Woof behind your eyes? -- FZ