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There's no job guarantee
in a college degree
By Lucy
Lazarony Bankrate.com
Memo to parents and students: A four-year college
degree just isn't what it used to be.
That ornate college diploma still may look impressive,
but it has lost much of its clout in the career marketplace. Back
in the 1960s, a college degree was a virtual guarantee of professional
and managerial success.
It's not anymore.
These days, there are more people with four-year degrees
than commensurate employment. A bachelor's degree is no longer a
golden ticket to the good life.
Consider these statistics from Kenneth C. Gray, a
professor of work force education and development at Penn State
University:
- Only 23 percent of work in the
21st century requires a four-year academic degree or higher.
- Forty-three percent of four-year
college grads are underemployed, which means they have jobs that
do not utilize their degrees.
- Sixty-seven percent of college
grads with degrees in arts and sciences are underemployed.
Throw in the fact that job opportunities for people
with bachelor's degrees have remained flat in the past year, and
it's clear many recent college grads are in for some tough times
ahead.
And yet many teens and parents still view a four-year
college degree as the one-and-only path to career success.
"A bachelor's degree means a lot to a lot of
people even though a bachelor's degree may not give them as many
job opportunities as something else," says Linda Gooding, a
counselor at the student success center at North Harris College
in Houston.
Vocational degrees in demand
That "something else" could be a vocational technical
degree or certificate. More than 419,000 Americans with vocational
technical degrees landed new jobs in 2001, according to the Employment
Policy Foundation.
Health care and information technology are two of
the fastest-growing fields that require just two years of training
and study after high school. There are job openings for positions
from physical therapist assistants to dental hygienists to respiratory
therapists just about everywhere. Registered nurses are in particularly
high demand.
As for information technology, more than 490,000 new
positions for computer support specialists are expected by 2010,
according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. These jobs can pay
as much as $40,000 a year. Desktop publishers, which require vocational
certificates, make comparable salaries.
The demand for building construction, electrical and
technical workers, skilled craftspeople, welders, machinists and
auto technicians also remains strong.
Some college grads fed up with lackluster job prospects
head off to a community college or technical school for additional
courses and training.
"There are a lot of people who finish up and
decide that a community college is the place to learn the skills
they need to go out and get a job," says Steve Ackley, director
of communications at the Association for Career and Technical Education.
Ready to tear up that bachelor's degree and start
over? Not so fast.
The days of almost universal professional employment
for college grads may be over, but it's still possible to land a
good job straight out of university. Computer software engineers
are in huge demand. Accounting majors find jobs in good and bad
economic times.
Job opportunities are also on the rise for people
with post-baccalaureate degrees. A specialized skill will get you
noticed in today's job market. A bachelor's degree may be the first
step to the career you want.
"A B.A. is a good solid foundation," says
Ron Bird, chief economist at the Employment Policy Foundation. "It's
not as much of an end point as it was 20 or 30 years ago. It's more
of a starting point."
Fast-growing professions for people with advanced
degrees include speech language pathologists and mental health and
substance abuse social workers.
Job opportunities and starting salaries are important
things to consider when choosing a career. But they shouldn't be
the only things. You better like what you do.
Follow your bliss
"It's absolutely the most important thing I preach. You need
to find something that's going to fit you, your personality, the
best," Gooding says.
It's not a good idea to pursue a career that you may
have an aptitude for but don't enjoy.
Why would you want to do something 40 hours a week,
50 weeks a year, that you don't really like? That's 2,000 hours
a year spent in job misery. And that doesn't count overtime and
all the restless Sunday evenings you'll spend dreading work the
next day.
"Nobody is happy 100 percent of the time in their
job, but it sure beats being miserable all the time," Gooding
says.
Once you settle on a career path, focus on getting
the best training you can for the job you want. It could be a two-year
college, a four-year college or a technical school.
Whatever school you choose, try to get experience
in your field as a student. Participating in a co-op or internship
program could lead to a job offer at the completion of your degree.
And it could help you find out if the job you think you want is
really right for you. The sooner you find this out the better off
you'll be.
Gooding once counseled a student who completed an
internship in engineering and then promptly switched his major to
social work. He could have done well as an engineer, but he just
didn't like the work.
"He would have go on and got his engineering
degree and been miserable for a few years and then gone back to
school," Gooding says.
By switching majors when he did, he spared himself
a lot of misery.
-- Posted: May 20, 2002
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