"If
we are lending money that ostensibly we don't have to kids who have no
hope of making it back in order to train them for jobs that clearly
don't exist, I might suggest that we've gone around the bend a little
bit," says TV personality Mike Rowe, best known as the longtime host of
Discovery Channel's Dirty Jobs.
"There is a real disconnect in the way that we educate vis-a-vis the opportunities that are available. You have - right now - about 3 million jobs that can't be filled," he says, talking about openings in traditional trades ranging from construction to welding to plumbing. "Jobs that typically parents' don't sit down with their kids and say, 'Look, if all goes well, this is what you are going to do.'"
"There is a real disconnect in the way that we educate vis-a-vis the opportunities that are available. You have - right now - about 3 million jobs that can't be filled," he says, talking about openings in traditional trades ranging from construction to welding to plumbing. "Jobs that typically parents' don't sit down with their kids and say, 'Look, if all goes well, this is what you are going to do.'"
Rowe, who once sang for the Baltimore Opera and worked as an on-air
pitchman for QVC, worries that traditional K-12 education demonizes
blue-collar fields that pay well and are begging for workers while
insisting that everyone get a college degree. He stresses that he's "got
nothing against college" but believes it's a huge mistake to push
everyone in the same direction regardless of interest or ability.
Between Mike Rowe Foundation and Profoundly Disconnected, a venture
between Rowe and the heavy equipment manufacturer Caterpillar, Rowe is
hoping both to help people find new careers and publicize what he calls
"the diploma dilemma."
Mike
Rowe’s new program, “Somebody’s Gotta Do It,” premiered on CNN this
week. “In each episode,” according to the CNN website, “Rowe
reason.com
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