That’s the IQ2 national debate with National Centre for Vocational Education Research. Its Managing director, Dr Tom Karmel, says that while a university education is useful, there are other paths to consider as well.
His opinion comes on the back of a Federal Government proposal for 40 per cent of Australians aged between 25 and 34 to have a bachelor degree by 2020.
Editor of Lip Magazine Zoya Patel says:
Here’s something they rarely tell you when you’re leaving university – the real world may not give a shit about your degree.
Graduating from university no longer seems to hold the import it once did. I assume there was a time when tertiary education was like a job guarantee. It set you ahead of the pack, put you in a different class of worker. Surely that’s why my parents pushed me to go to uni pretty much from when I could grasp a pen, right?
Now, it seems that a degree is just another trait expected of applicants in the job market – not an extra, desired quality, but an assumed one.
I’m speaking from personal experience – I’m a recent graduate and I have to say, finding a job after leaving uni was no easy feat.
I graduated from the Australian National University with a Bachelor of Arts degree (known to be the least useful degree available to mankind). I started applying for jobs pretty much as soon as I was sure I would be graduating. For months, I applied for every admin or Communications role I could find.
Although I got called, and interviewed, and eventually found a great position as a Communications Officer for a small not-for-profit, it struck me that at no time did anyone ask to see my academic transcript. I could have been lying about my grade averages, and no one would have known or cared.
Really, what people were interested in were my extra curriculars, and the outside work I had done (such as editing a magazine, and writing for a range of online and print publications). Ironically, my week-long internship at a local newspaper was of more value than my four years of university.
Top Comments
I want to go into culinary art but I'm stuck into a university program that i've never wanted to go into. Help. This degree is feeling so useless and depressing right now.
Have an honors Electronic and Computer engineering degree. Took 4 years to complete and a lot of hard work. When applying for jobs I was asked did I have ITIL qualification or any Microsoft qualifications. Have got them since. But can't understand how 5 day study, multiple choice tests, for which the answers to all the questions are supplied in the mock exams word for word, and these are regarded as an industry requirement over a degree. Should have just joined the work force 4 years sooner. I'd have been on a better pay grade by now.