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View Full Version : When Some of you leave University you will have a Episodic Career


arista
09-03-2019, 04:19 PM
So do not pick one career
So Pick 5 careers


https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51zGy0Xq-jL._SX325_BO1,204,203,200_.jpg

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/jan/26/the-episodic-career-farai-chideya-financial-security-economy

Thats more than a back up
its is a better outlook.


This was on the SkyAtlanticHD/HBO
John Oliver "Last Week Tonight" show last week


Also in the newspaper today
Students going for jobs are no good
at communication
so they have a Degree but lack
work experience


Sign Of The Times

Oliver_W
09-03-2019, 05:43 PM
Probably. I'd never suggest to anyone that they don't get more education, but I'd say think very carefully about what kind of degree they take. Degrees with a definite career path are great (primary ed, nursing, medicine, pharmacy, engineering, etc), but if it's a "school subject" I'd wonder what they intended to do after, if not teaching.

user104658
09-03-2019, 07:23 PM
Probably. I'd never suggest to anyone that they don't get more education, but I'd say think very carefully about what kind of degree they take. Degrees with a definite career path are great (primary ed, nursing, medicine, pharmacy, engineering, etc), but if it's a "school subject" I'd wonder what they intended to do after, if not teaching.To be fair, the vast majority of non-mimimum-wage jobs that aren't trades require "a University education" (any degree) as a prerequisite to even applying these days. So arts faculty degrees aren't pointless; they're just unlikely to lead to a career in that specific area.

As always with these threads however, I *strongly* recommend that school-leavers don't go straight into higher education unless they have a specific career planned. Or are well off. Simply because you're unlikely to get funding more than once and its easy to "waste it", then hit 30, realise there's a career you want to pursue, but you have no funding available. Not a problem if you have a rich family and can just pay for it upfront, but for most people it's worth considering.

Oliver_W
09-03-2019, 09:39 PM
To be fair, the vast majority of non-mimimum-wage jobs that aren't trades require "a University education" (any degree) as a prerequisite to even applying these days. So arts faculty degrees aren't pointless; they're just unlikely to lead to a career in that specific area.

As always with these threads however, I *strongly* recommend that school-leavers don't go straight into higher education unless they have a specific career planned. Or are well off. Simply because you're unlikely to get funding more than once and its easy to "waste it", then hit 30, realise there's a career you want to pursue, but you have no funding available. Not a problem if you have a rich family and can just pay for it upfront, but for most people it's worth considering.

I agree with basically all of this. I'm so glad I didn't start university when I was 18, as I'd have probably pissed away the government funding on a media degree or something. Not that that'd be a waste for everyone - I animate as a hobby and sometimes for commissions, but I don't want to do it full time, and a degree wouldn't have helped me personally.

I doubt anyone cares - I did Primary Ed. I don't want to teach full time, so I work three days a week as an HLTA, and do supply work on the other two days. When it's summer and sometimes over Christmas I work in child protection for the BBC, and I have zero hours at an indoor softplay area, for when it's summer and I'm not getting work at the BBC, if I can be bothered with it.
That's four different jobs, so the o/p is kind of correct!