Anonymous wrote:Why should a teen do the same work and get paid less? Unless it involves a tuition break from the university that sounds like a bad deal for teens.
Anonymous wrote:Food service is a way to expose young teens to elicit drug use, one less hurdle to confront in college.
Anonymous wrote:Supposedly, colleges do value this. For the obvious reasons of learning responsibility and general work ethic.
I have not seen it help much myself.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of teens who are working at are actually working because their families need the money. Why should they have to suffer to help others get into college?
Anonymous wrote:This is just Fox News rambling nonsense about minimum wage and promoting child labor to increase corporate profits. Akansas and Florida recently passed anti-education child labor laws to keep people impoverished.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Get OP that cheap burger.
actually, fast food and dish washing jobs is one of the central arguments to keeping min wage low in some states.
we have "lower pay for same work" already .. all over. It's just called being a woman.
AND we have made exceptions before based on age. You can do seasonal agricultural work when you're 14 without working papers. I grew up in Illinois, we all did that as soon as we turned 14.
I'd like to see it. Bonus points if you wait tables. So many skills flow from that
Anonymous wrote:I wonder what would happen if colleges came right out and said, volunteering is great and having a passion is important, but working a min wage job brings it's own set of skills.
Which is true.
And colleges asked for a form that your boss from McDonalds to fill out that was simple and became standard. How many hours they worked would be enough for me. Reference better. Maybe a W2 solves this.
Also, as a country, I think our min wage is messed up bcs of these fast food jobs. We all get paying 15/hr makes burgers cost more.
Maybe we could have a teen wage for 15-17 year olds that's 10/hr.
Anyone who works with people in their 20s knows that young people could learn a lot by working a public facing job before they get into the work force. Kids are lacking some basic skills iMO
If the top 100 colleges said they wanted to see it and word got out they don't mean working in mom's law firm, I'd love to see what would happen.
Anonymous wrote:Exactly. We discounted elitist schools that do not value jobs or even consider them on the application.