Quote:
Originally Posted by blankall
It would make more sense to have people simply put more emphasis on technical writing courses and care less about degrees. Technical writing courses that would be applicable to every field already exist. A four year program, where these same skills are learned tangentially, is a total waste of resources.
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See, I totally disagree with your last point.
The modern economy requires flexibility. Many young people entering the work force now will have 3 to 5 different careers. Note, I didn't say jobs, but entirely different careers. I myself am already on my 3rd one and I'm not yet 40. University education creates people who are very well-rounded and can adapt to a changing market place. When one job goes away due to automation, they can transfer their variety of skills and knowledge to other fields and still be successful with a small amount of additional training.
You are advocating for industry-specific, or even job-specific, training and education, which is great for that one job or industry, but what happens when the economy shifts and you only have one very specific set of skills? You will struggle to find work, or the work you get will be very low skill and low paying.
Basically you end up as Michael Scott when he quits his job as the manager of a paper company. What does he do next for work? He starts his own paper company, mostly because he doesn't know how to do anything else.