Rynar wrote:
Khross wrote:
If she's fluent in Mandarin and French, has a remotely tolerable personality, and an acceptable work ethic, then I can get her a $85,000 a year in 15 minutes.
She doesn't sound very resourcful, that's for damn sure.
I think this is the key to understanding at least some of the anxiety among unemployed college grads, and frankly, I think it highlights a significant failing in our current higher education system. I would wager this girl has no idea how to find that $85k job, or any other decent job in which her skills might be useful. Her entire life has been lived on rails - class schedules, grades, organized sports and extracurriculars, etc. She has no idea how to chart her own course or to find opportunities that aren't laid out in a student handbook. And while I agree she would be better off recognizing that and doing something about it rather than complaining, I think it's worth noting that she did everything the establishment told her would lead to success, and now she's discovering that there's no end-game to it; they just cut you lose when you graduate, and there's no clear path laid out from there. That's pretty disillusioning and more than a little scary if she's saddled (as she probably is) with a buttload of debt. Now that I think about it, it's sort of like when Brooksie got out of prison in The Shawshank Redemption - he'd become "institutionalized" and had no idea how to function in the real world. Same goes for a lot of college grads.
In my view, one of the big-picture lessons this girl's situation illustrates is the need for colleges to do a better job of transitioning students from classroom to workplace - e.g. internships that are more than just resume fluff, networking and career-search counseling services that actually teach people how and where to find jobs on their own rather than simply hosting some on-campus interviews and handing out pamphlets, etc. Also, I think it highlights the fact that college in general just isn't that great at preparing people for life, and many folks would be better served by a few years out working and/or apprenticing after high school rather than going straight from one institutional setting to the next.
To be honest, I can empathize with her situation, since I'm the same way. I have no idea how to find white collar jobs (which is all I'm qualified for) outside of law. Indeed, the straight-line career path of the legal profession was a huge factor in my decision to become a lawyer - you go to a good law school, attend on-campus interviews, get a job with a big firm, surrender your every waking moment to that firm, make partner after 8-10 years, earn lots of money, then retire or have a heart attack somewhere along the way. Nice and simple. Outside of that, though, I still have no idea how to translate a non-specific skill set (i.e. not a doctor, lawyer, engineer, etc.) into a well-paid job. Short of just mailing one's resume to hundreds of HR departments (which is pretty much useless), I would be every bit as clueless as this girl, though at this point I realize such cluelessness is a correctable deficiency on my part.