Nebuchanezzar said:
That depends on a few things.
a) That these apprenticeships are easy to get into, and provide employment prospects equal to that which university offers
b) That they won't favour the wealthy, or those within a certain geographic area
c) That those who still want to go to university, could do so anyway.
A – Yeah most likely, seeing those jobs are likely to be filled anyway, it probably doesn’t matter that much that people go to uni first or not, firms still need workers so it’s pretty likely they’d be willing to provide white-collar apprenticeships. This change would happen partially BECAUSE less people are able to afford university as well as because of the new 'irrelevancy' of uni so firms would have to be willing to take the kids on to get workers.
B – Imo, these apprenticeships would be even BETTER at discriminating based on skill rather than discriminating based on wealth. To get offered an apprenticeship/job you have to do an interview and sell yourself to an employer, where money doesn’t really help you that much. On the other hand, money DOES help you get into uni.
Given there are way more firms than unis, it’d be easier for this system to allow people who don’t live near a uni to get some kind of training and experience. So this helps in the geographic sense too.
C – Given that we have more apprenticeship type positions available, there won’t be such a need for university degrees, they would be rendered somewhat irrelevant. So the only people who go to uni would be the ones who are ready and willing to pay for it, the rest can get jobs. As university becomes irrelevant though, it’s not a bad thing that more people go into jobs, they’ll be being productive (our economy will be better for it, with less people taking time out to go to uni), learning AND earning money for themselves!
Nebuchanezzar said:
Quite frankly, I don't understand how your proposal depends on the privatisation of schooling. Does it at all, or can it be achieved currently?
I actually raised the whole thing because you were talking about how vital you thought uni(and therefore getting into uni in the first place) was to people being prosperous, and I’m saying that we could just render the university system less relevant and get people into jobs and let them prosper that way instead.
This way, how rich you are matters LESS, and it’s more about your skill and how you present yourself to the employer.
Nebuchanezzar said:
While we're on this subject, I think that more people going to university is a great thing. Universities (the good ones at least) are regarded as places where knowledge is built, and where your thoughts on life take shape. If we weed people out of universities and put them into training that shapes them to become a silent member of the working class, we're decreasing our enlightenment collectively. Once more, many minds working together are far more beneficial than a select few. Many enlightened, university educated minds who also happen to learn service skills (whether that be in medicine, accounting or teaching) are certainly better than people who are taken right out of school and put into jobs.
I don’t really think this stuff is relevant anyway. Becoming a member of the labour force does not in any way make you ‘silent’(look at the number of bloggers, look at the number of people who write letters to the editor, look at all the protests that happen these days, surely these people didn't ALL go to uni), and as for ‘your thoughts on life’(a pretty vague statement I have to say), you don’t need to go to university to develop ‘thoughts on life’. Do you really think the “gen ed” courses(I go to UNSW, supposedly one of the better universities in Sydney) I have to do help me to develop my ‘thoughts on life’ ? They’re a couple of bludge subjects for god’s sake, nobody learns anything good in them! And certainly nothing you couldn’t have already learned if you wanted to learn it outside of school/uni.
Other than gen eds, all that UNSW'ers learn is the technical stuff related to their degree. So why is it that going to university helps us really learn anything broader than technical skills? If it is social skills and ideas you want kids to learn, people are more than capable of joining clubs (like young liberals or labor or sports clubs or whatever takes your fancy) to ‘develop their thoughts in life’.
I think you're really clutching at straws with this argument.
Nebuchanezzar said:
So I guess my main point is that your suggestion, isn't one that I like. It seems far too elitist for my liking, and elitism, ESPECIALLY elitism which is based upon wealth (rather than intelligence, athleticism etc.) isn't really a good thing.
It is somewhat elitist, but it is based on skills not wealth. If you have a problem with better skilled people getting paid more, I'd like to hear why.