Learning a trade is a practical alternative to racking up college debt
In
the classic 1960s movie The Graduate, a family friend offers Dustin
Hoffman, the recent graduate, one word of advice: “plastics.”
My
advice for today’s high school graduates: “learn a trade.”
Unfortunately,
there’s a historic stigma about “voc-ed,” the result of snobbery toward certain
occupations.
Yes,
there’s also the shameful practice of tracking low-income whites and people of
color into blue-collar jobs while encouraging wealthier white students to
attend college. But now there are millions of rewarding, high-paying trade jobs
sitting empty.
Instead
of training for those, tens of millions of high school graduates are on college
autopilot, loading up an average of $37,000 in debt, and graduating without any
practical skills.
Not
only is our economy suffering for lack of skilled workers, but also a huge
number of workers are unhappy and earning below their financial potential.
There are legions of depressed Dilberts out there in cubicle land, sitting in front of computer screens, wondering who will be laid off next. And there are millions of young people sitting in college classrooms dreaming of being somewhere else.
Put
these same people in an apprenticeship with a skilled adult and they’ll thrive.
Instead of wasting their intelligence in an office, they could deploy it in a
bicycle or auto repair garage, woodworking shop, or on a farm or construction
site.
Princeton
economist Alan Blinder says the job market of the future won’t be divided
between people with college degrees and those without, but between work that
can be outsourced and work that can’t.
“You can’t hammer a nail over the internet,” he observed. “Nor can you fix a car transmission, rewire a house, install solar panels, or give a patient an injection.”
“You can’t hammer a nail over the internet,” he observed. “Nor can you fix a car transmission, rewire a house, install solar panels, or give a patient an injection.”
The
value of a liberal arts college education is exposure to a wide range of ideas
and knowledge, along with social networks. But college is certainly not the
only path to such learning. And four-year residential college today has more in
common with a party on a luxury cruise ship than a platform for learning a
vocation.
True,
today the lifelong earnings of college graduates exceed those who don’t attend
college. But there’s no evidence this will be the case going forward. Have you
paid an electrician or a plumber anytime lately? There’s a reason they’re hard
to find and can command a high wage. It’s called scarcity.
Millions
more “green collar” jobs are emerging in our transition to the renewable energy
economy. And at some point, our nation will have to repair our aging bridges,
roads, and transportation facilities and retrofit buildings to be more energy
efficient.
According
to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, one third of all new jobs through 2022 will
be in construction, health care, and personal care.
The fastest growing occupations are solar and wind energy technicians, followed by plumbers, machine tool programmers, HVAC mechanics, and iron and steel workers.
The fastest growing occupations are solar and wind energy technicians, followed by plumbers, machine tool programmers, HVAC mechanics, and iron and steel workers.
Changing
attitudes about different occupations is part of the challenge.
Parents
and guidance counselors can start by respectfully talking about the opportunities
in trades. They can introduce students to people with satisfying careers in the
trades and steer them to useful web resources on the path to
trades.
Congress
could help by making Pell grants available for short-term job training courses,
not just college tuition. It could also restore funding for Tech-Prep, a
neglected federal program that supports vocational education.
Let’s
dump the old class-biased stereotypes. It takes all kinds of intelligence and
advanced training to do a trade. And it can be financially rewarding and
enormously satisfying.
Chuck
Collins directs the Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute
for Policy Studies. Distributed by OtherWords.org.