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- 25 July 2010
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LOL! nice one. In all seriousness, even with career specific degrees, the promise of a career, good money and job security are no longer a given. Don't know of any jobs that will get you to 100K out of uni and not many that will get you even close 3-4 yrs in.
Maybe it's just me but the whole go to uni get paid well thing is on its head in Oz.
There aren't any that will get you 100k out of uni (and there shouldn't be), but 3-4 years in you can definitely get it.
I can honestly say IT offers more than this after 3-4 years.
The problem arises when you study a course that has no future. How does someone who studies an Arts offer a service worth $100k a year? (I'm talking about the majority, not a couple outliers)
I think we should agree to disagree on this. I gather you are very young if your preceding generation was educated in the 70's. You might have some quite different views after a couple more decades of experience.I still think the main reason we're seeing declining outcome levels is due to parenting, and home life in general, rather than the quality of our teachers. Next most significant reason is changing expectations/workloads of teachers. I think any change in the quality of our teachers over the last few decades is of least significance. Still important, and they have tried to address that with the entrance exam (in QLD at least) implemented 3 or 4 years ago, but still not the greatest determining factor.
I think we should agree to disagree on this. I gather you are very young if your preceding generation was educated in the 70's. You might have some quite different views after a couple more decades of experience.
Thanks, anyway, for the discussion.
2. Increased workload of teachers
3. Decrease in literacy and numeracy skills of teachers
If we're going to agree to disagree could you at least clear up in what order of significance you place the blame vs my own opinions of:
1. Decrease in parenting (ie. encouraging the practice of literacy and numeracy skills at home)
2. Increased workload of teachers
3. Decrease in literacy and numeracy skills of teachers
Not at all. And I'm not 'throwing your age in your face'. Be glad you still have most of your life ahead of you. I know how little I appreciated that reality when I was your age. Ask anyone in the baby boomer generation if their views about much have altered since they were 20 and I doubt too many will say no.Always the ageist Julia.
I'm not a researcher or a sociologist so I can't say. My recent experience (over the last decade) has only been in mentoring programs in public schools, both primary and secondary, where I'm seeing children already determined to be disadvantaged. I've certainly not found any of these kids to have come from a stable, two parent family where education was highly valued and some of them have been fighting massive disadvantage with single parents who have multiple addictions and almost zero parenting skills.I think we both agree there's been a decline in average literacy and numeracy standards.
If we're going to agree to disagree could you at least clear up in what order of significance you place the blame vs my own opinions of:
1. Decrease in parenting (ie. encouraging the practice of literacy and numeracy skills at home)
2. Increased workload of teachers
3. Decrease in literacy and numeracy skills of teachers
QANTAS engineers have slammed the airline's decision to close its maintenance base at Avalon next year, saying it will rip $50 million out of the Victorian economy.
Qantas Domestic chief executive Lyall Strambi announced today that the airline plans to close the heavy engineering base near Melbourne from next March at the cost of up to 300 jobs because there is not enough work to keep it going.
Technology giant IBM has quietly slashed its Australian workforce, with anxious staff preparing for up to 1,000 more redundancies, the ABC understands.
TOYOTA will axe up to 100 jobs and must slash the cost of building cars in Australia to ensure the future of its local manufacturing operations.
The Simplot vegetable processing facilities at Bathurst, NSW, and Devonport, Tasmania, will both remain open for at least three years.
However, the Bathurst plant will have the amount of vegetables it processes slashed by 50 per cent after this growing season.
The Bathurst plant will also see 110 of its 170 jobs cut in an effort to restrict operations to normal working hours.
Household appliances company Electrolux has announced it will close its factory at Orange in the central west of New South Wales in 2016.
The decision, made by the Swedish company in Stockholm, will mean the loss of around 544 jobs at what is the last refrigerator manufacturing operation in Australia.
STAFF at a major Bathurst employer face an uncertain future after Downer EDI yesterday announced a major review of its operations.
About 100 employees could be out of work before Christmas if the company goes ahead with plans to close its Bathurst facility.
Our politicians are asleep at the wheel again - what's it gonna take for them to do something about this!
Etc Etc!!
QANTAS engineers have slammed the airline's decision to close its maintenance base at Avalon next year, saying it will rip $50 million out of the Victorian economy.
Qantas Domestic chief executive Lyall Strambi announced today that the airline plans to close the heavy engineering base near Melbourne from next March at the cost of up to 300 jobs because there is not enough work to keep it going.
Such an errant, simplistic view of the local labor market and the usual vilification of unions is all to typical. The real problem is globalization and the labor arbitrage opportunities it delivers to an amoral business community intent on maximizing profit by reducing costs.Too many unions have been pricing their own workers out of a job for too long. You will notice that these industries that shut down like Auto workers or Airliner maintenance workers end up on extremely comfortable salaries as their employer shuts up shop and offshores their jobs! Gee, maybe we could have forgone that last pay hike?
The consequences for countries like Australia are clear, innovate and educate or suffer the inevitible decline in living standards we have grown accustomed to.
Such an errant, simplistic view of the local labor market and the usual vilification of unions is all to typical. The real problem is globalization and the labor arbitrage opportunities it delivers to an amoral business community intent on maximizing profit by reducing costs.
Plenty of non-union members of the workforce are losing their jobs to offshoring since it's so much cheaper to pay an Indian, Filipino, Chinese etc. worker to provide skilled labor at wages that would in many cases condemn one to poverty here. This is a mega trend that has been transforming the world economy into a wonderland for the exploitation of cheap labor and wealth transfer to the 1%. The consequences for countries like Australia are clear, innovate and educate or suffer the inevitible decline in living standards we have grown accustomed to.
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