3
February 2013 –
Odds
‘n Ends
1.
As
many others prepare to watch the Super Bowl today, I ruminate on the idea that
professional football fanfare is a Sunday worship service. I couldn’t devise a religion that receives more
loyalty and devotion from its adherents yet rewards them with less meaningful
insight into life than does professional football fandom. Screen violence, beer, and a bunch of guys
transfixed on the replay. The
result? Nothing that improves them at
all. In fact, even the stats the game
produces do not hold the magic or hidden meaning of baseball stats. I am
glad the game lost whatever appeal it held for me years ago. I suppose I will hear the score on the news
tomorrow and promptly forget it.
2.
According
to a new report by the nonprofit Center for College Affordability and
Productivity 37% of employed college graduates are in jobs that require no more
than a high-school diploma, and 11 percent are in occupations requiring more
than a high-school diploma but less than a bachelor’s degree. About five million college graduates are in
jobs the Bureau of Labor Statistics says don’t even require a high school
education. The problem, the Center
purports, is an oversupply of college-educated Americans compared to the number
of jobs requiring a college education. See
the full article below. Hmm. I
ask myself a couple of questions:
a.
Like
all statistical displays, they don’t tell the whole story. How upwardly mobile are the people in these
jobs, after getting a college degree? Is
this group of over-qualified janitors, bartenders, and waitresses working in
temporary jobs until a more permanent job requiring their college skills
inevitably opens for them? Or, do these
same people stay in this group year after year, and for what reasons? Finally, how many people are in these jobs
because are retired from something else and don’t want to do more than be a
janitor. This would be people 45-65 or 70, who, for
whatever reason, are no longer teachers, scientists, or Air Force
colonels. I wonder. If the nearly half of college graduates in
the job market who are working in these jobs stay in these jobs for an extended
time for lack of a better job, then one could say that there truly is an
oversupply of college-educated Americans compared to the number of jobs
requiring a college degree.
b.
If
the only purpose for going to college is to be prepared for the job market,
then is college a waste of money in the light of these statistics? It probably is a waste of money.
c.
The
final question is a follow-on to my last question: Is college a waste of money for those who
arrive on campus to be educated in the finest liberal arts tradition? Given the incredible amount of educational
information available at a much cheaper cost on electronic media today, college
probably is a waste of money. This is
especially true at institutions where most classes on the lower levels, the
classes that form one’s initial ideas in a particular discipline, are rarely
taught by professors. These duties
usually are given to graduate students
while the professors do research or bask in the idleness of tenure. If you want to do is understand the world and
how it operates, then college will actually get in your way. If you want to learn to write, then, as my
brother told me forty years ago, you have to write. Buy the AP Style Guide,
books on how to write fiction, and a book or two on logical display of an
argument. Read them and write. I
suppose one could do that while holding down a job as a janitor—or in Central
Africa as a Government Technical Monitor.
d.
Again,
is college worth the ever-increasing costs?
If you want to work for a bureaucracy, whether it is government or
business or academia, then you have to show that you have enough discipline to
jump through the applicable hoops in the applicable college. I finished a Master’s in Public
Administration—otherwise known as a Master’s in Bureaucratic Crap—not because
wanted to know all about the rise of the bureaucratic state, but because I
wouldn’t have been promoted without a master’s degree. Now, I am a retired colonel with all sorts of
information on how bureaucracies become amorphic, throbbing masses of
inefficiency and no interested audience.
But, it was the best degree offered at the Yokota Air Base, Japan,
Education Center while we were stationed there.
Everybody has a story, I guess.
Mine includes working as a taxi driver, bartender, and laborer after
graduation and waiting to go on active duty.
REFERENCED ARTICLE AS IT WAS FOUND ON
NEWSMAX.COM
Nearly
half of employed college graduates in the United States hold down jobs that
don’t require a four-year college education — including 323,200 waiters and
waitresses, 115,520 janitors and cleaners, and 83,028 bartenders.
A
new report from the nonprofit Center for College Affordability and Productivity
discloses that 37 percent of employed college graduates are in jobs requiring
no more than a high-school diploma, and 11 percent are in occupations requiring
more than a high-school diploma but less than a bachelor’s degree.
About
five million college graduates are in jobs that the Bureau of Labor Statistics
says don’t even require a high-school education.
The
lead author of the report, Richard Vedder — an Ohio University economist and
founder of the Center — says the trend is likely to continue over the next decade.
“It’s
almost the new normal,” he declared.
The
problem is an oversupply of college-educated Americans compared to the number
of jobs requiring a college degree:
· The number of Americans whose highest academic
degree was a bachelor’s grew 25 percent to 41 million from 2002 to 2012,
according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
· The number with an associate degree rose 31
percent during that period.
· Americans with a master’s degree rose 45
percent, and those with a doctorate degree rose 43 percent.
· Labor Department data from 2010 show that
there were 41.7 million college graduates in the workforce, while the number of
jobs requiring a college degree was just 28.6 million.
· In 1970, about 10 percent of Americans over
age 25 had a college degree, while today the percentage has tripled to 30
percent.
According
to Vedder, that helps explain why 15 percent of cab drivers had a bachelor’s
degree in 2010 — compared to 1 percent in 1970 — as did 25 percent of retail
sales clerks and 15 percent of firefighters.
Vedder,
who is also an Adjunct Scholar with the American Enterprise Institute, added:
“There are going to be an awful lot of disappointed [graduates] because a lot
of them are going to end up as janitors.”
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