why would he not? Surely you're not suggesting that one needs to go to college (and pay $$ for) to pursue those things, right? What an odd comment. |
| Thanks for the post, OP. My 18 year old also entered the skilled trades and landed a very well paying position with a local specialty contractor and couldn't be happier! Plus he is 18 and contributing to a 401k - how cool is that! |
+1. We are insisting on DD getting at least an associates degree from community college before going to chef school. A college degree today is what a high school degree was forty years ago. We need an educated populace. |
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Doing real jobs, good income, No outsourcing potential and can start business in the field.
This makes it excellent choice. |
What do you mean? Fixing submarine ? |
Or the underside of ships in port. Or bridge structures, pipelines, etc…. Lots of stuff underwater might need welding. |
But, highly subject to automation. |
It is the hardest. Think of plumbing, electrician and Heating/cooling. |
I'm not suggesting that at all. I wonder why you assumed this since I don't mention going to college anywhere in my post. What I am saying is that everyone deserve the opportunity to pursue purely intellectual passions unrelated to work. That can be accomplished in many ways that don't involve getting a BA/BS. |
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You’re a snob and a half. What part of “traditional education isn’t ‘for’ some people” doesn’t make sense to you? You’d enforce a two year stint of possible misery if your kid didn’t thrive in academic learning? To what end? I have three kids, none at this age yet, but so far two of them are good scholastic students and one really does not thrive in school. If he finds a trade, I’m not going to force him to be miserable at college. And your worldview could be flipped as follows: why did you quit learning about your world when you graduated? |