Why We Desperately Need To Bring Back Vocational Training In Schools

Yet despite the growing evidence that four-year college programs serve fewer and fewer of our students, states continue to cut vocational programs. ….The justification, of course, is budgetary; these programs (which include auto body technology, aviation maintenance, audio production, real estate and photography) are expensive to operate. But in a situation where 70% of high school students do not go to college, nearly half of those who do go fail to graduate, and over half of the graduates are unemployed or underemployed, is vocational education really expendable? 

…The U.S. economy has changed. The manufacturing sector is growing and modernizing, creating a wealth of challenging, well-paying, highly skilled jobs for those with the skills to do them. The demise of vocational education at the high school level has bred a skills shortage in manufacturing today, and with it a wealth of career opportunities for both under-employed college grads and high school students looking for direct pathways to interesting, lucrative careers. Many of the jobs in manufacturing are attainable through apprenticeships, on-the-job training, and vocational programs offered at community colleges. They don’t require expensive, four-year degrees for which many students are not suited.

Source: Why We Desperately Need To Bring Back Vocational Training In Schools – Forbes

Although I think the point could be better made by focusing on costs of tuition and student loan debt instead of the dubiously worded, “not suited” concern, this is issue is an important consideration looking forward.

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