5 stars for a thoroughly researched and presented argument for a broad increase of apprenticeships (earn and learn) in the US to fill both experience and skills gaps, provide social mobility, and generally shrug off the outdated (his argument) push to 4 year college which has become horribly misaligned with actual career pathways, includes ineffective "college career services" as one stop career service via Handshake app that nationalized entry level positions that only work for elite colleges wealthy students who have other assistance to reach careers and
He wants to end career services and replace faculty led connections to jobs/career.
One critique of course of the kinds of preparation and array of study paths that do not lead to a neat career link, is that those students become our creatives, entrepreneurs, innovators, etc
In fact there are many arguments to make for 4 year college, but I give a 5 for a focused, data rich, passionate, humorous and effective work promoting apprenticeahips as a great solution for youth, companies, and the global post chatGPT economy.
He has a plethora of great ideas for ways to make these apprenticeships effective, following a Australian midel over German model which has students tracked from middle school. Also policies to incentivize companies to offer apprenticeships..
So much!
Highly recommend to folks interested in a future America where career ladders provide social mobility, reduce debt, and expand our skilled workforce in technical fields as well as the traditional vocational fields.
I remain a fan of 4 year college for those for whom it is the right path. I wholeheartedly am convinced that we should aim to join most advanced economic nations who have 30-50% of positions from apprenticeship pathways.
Degree programs need to be modified to support this, and again, tons of ideas, I may return later and list my favs.