WORLDVIEW: No, universities shouldn’t “prepare students for jobs”

Often, I hear comments about how universities should be “doing more to prepare people for jobs” and how certain degrees are a “waste." This is false.
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All too often, I hear comments about how universities should be "doing more to prepare people for jobs" and how certain degrees are a "waste" because they don't impart job-relevant skills. This is an old-fashioned perspective that deserves debunking.

Jobs? What jobs?

First of all, there would be almost no point in a university degree tailored to a particular job. Even an accounts receivables clerk – who has a fairly well-defined job – would find that the specifics of their work, the software used, the systems, and the technology would vary from company to company. The problem is far more significant once the job gets more complex or less well-defined.

Designing a university curriculum to fit a particular job would only make sense if:

___STEADY_PAYWALL___

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