Education for Employment
September 8, 2011, 12:00 pmEducation is, ultimately, the process of  acquiring the knowledge  and the skills that are required for us to  survive as a species. But we humans  are too advanced and sophisticated  to be satisfied with an education that is  just adequate to meet this  elementary need. Every human society, except for a  few forest dwelling  tribes, has an infinity of needs in addition to the very  basics of life  such as food, clothing, and shelter: accessories for physical  comfort,  health, entertainment, leisure, travel, schooling for children, and so   on. The fulfilment of these needs calls for a workforce with the  necessary  knowledge and skills to provide the goods and services  required. In modern  times, an efficient workforce must be equipped with  not only basic knowledge and  practical skills, but a whole host of  other resources such as managerial  capacity, organizational finesse,  familiarity with information technology, and  professional values. It’s a  major aim of education to enable the young to  acquire these abilities,  which qualify them for gainful employment.
But  let me start with a sweeping look back at the past. The  generation  born around the time of independence are now in their sixties. Due to   the political and economic reforms introduced after independence in the  interest  of the common masses, they were able to grow up in somewhat  better circumstances  than their parents had had any chance to (in terms  of education, health,  employment, standard of living, etc for  instance). The present day young are the  children of this  post-independence generation. The younger generation have had  the  opportunity to grow up in a generally more egalitarian, independent, and   materially less insecure atmosphere than their elders, even though  amidst  occasional political instability, corruption, and other setbacks  exacerbated by  internal and external vested interests, all of which  appear to be inevitable  concomitants of ‘democracy’.
Times  have changed, changed utterly. For the masses, that is.  The changes  have been mostly for the better, and are most conspicuous in the   political, economic, social, and cultural spheres. These are naturally  more  evident to the older generation than to the younger, who might  tend to take the  status quo for granted: we have, hopefully, put behind  us almost a lifetime of  mainly destructive ‘struggles’ and are  embarking on an age of goodwill and  cooperation between sections of the  body politic determined to move towards a  common destiny as a young  nation. Liberalised economic policies, despite certain  limitations,  have largely benefited the people. Social stratification is less   severe; class, caste, rank divisions have begun to count for little.  Culturally,  our people are adopting more accommodative and adaptive  attitudes than before.
Though positive changes  have taken place in the educational  domain as elsewhere since  independence, such as free education for all the  children of the  country, the change of the medium of education from English to  the  mother tongue which benefited children from the Sinhala and Tamil  speaking  homes, the narrowly utilitarian literary character of general  education  inherited from colonial times hasn’t changed to the extent it  should. In other  words, changes in education have not kept pace with  changes in other fields;  education has remained largely irrelevant to  the actual needs of the country.
The idea that  education should involve preparing the students  for a life of work as  much as training them for a life of the mind is not new.  In fact, all  the various educational reforms introduced so far have drawn  attention  to the real problem of a lack of balance in our education system   between book-learning and practical skills acquisition. Yet the bookish  bias in  education still remains. One reason for this is that work that  demands manual  exertion is considered inferior to work that requires  mental effort. Practical  skills mastery is looked down upon as suitable  only for the ‘mentally less  endowed’ in terms of traditional  intelligence (IQ) testing which usually focuses  on a general linguistic  and mathematical ability. In the society at large the  same attitude  prevails. Other economically productive jobs such as agriculture,   carpentry, various types of crafts, etc are reserved for the  academically less  promising. (However, this manual-mental distinction  is more evidently  unsupportable today.) Though there is a great demand  for skilled professionals  in these fields, there are a large number of  educated youth who won’t fancy a  career in any of them, and therefore  are not interested in acquiring those  skills. This is unfortunate. The  bias against ‘manual labour’ is wrong, for  whatever work people do also  invariably involves knowledge and mental effort  appropriate to it;  this fact is more conspicuous in today’s knowledge world than  before.
The  downgrading of jobs in the most vital fields such as  agriculture,  building construction, manufacture of utility goods, food  technology,  handicrafts, woodwork, (to name just a few out of hundreds of  possible  examples) is a problem that must be addressed in the interest of the   country’s economic wellbeing among other things. The main point is that  it is  partly a matter of misconceiving what is meant by ‘dignity of  work’. Many of our  people cannot get rid of traditional class-bound  ways of thinking according to  which certain jobs are considered to be  of a higher rank than others. In  education, this faulty attitude is  reflected as a bias in favour of ‘academic’  subjects such as science,  mathematics, and languages as opposed to technical  subjects such as  carpentry, plumbing, and dressmaking.
To  promote vocational education among the secondary students in  schools  such harmful misconceptions need to be eliminated. The way to do this is   to convince them of the fact that all forms of work are of equal  dignity. What  matters is not the public recognition that a person gets  for belonging to a  particular profession but the meaning it has for the  worker and the society at  large. Let’s teach our young to see work as  an opportunity in the same way as  the great American inventor,  scientist, and businessman Thomas Alva Edison  (1847-1931) did (and he  warned others lest they miss it): "Opportunity is missed  by most people  because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work". Edison is  also  remembered for having said "Genius is 1% inspiration, 99%  perspiration".
When education is not employment  oriented, many educated young  people are left without jobs even where  jobs are found aplenty, but where  persons with the necessary skills to  take them up are few. This kind of  structural unemployment accounts for  a substantial part of the problem of  joblessness in Sri Lanka. In this  context, the importance of vocational  education at the secondary  school level need hardly be stressed. Secondary  school graduates should  be given a basic mastery of technical skills including  computer  knowledge that enables them to find gainful employment, if they so   choose, instead of going to university, but still qualify themselves  further  academically while working. It is encouraging to see that a  trend is now  emerging where many young school leavers seem to think it  wiser to enrol for  vocational courses or find direct employment if  possible and pursue higher  studies autonomously. This is no drawback  for students particularly in some  fields such as business, banking,  agriculture, motor mechanism, etc. Actually, a  work environment is very  helpful for focusing the mind. Work and study: each  becomes a way to  relax for employed students when the other tires them out.
The  availability of such an option can be very attractive to  many students  and parents. It will naturally ease the pressure on the existing   university system. It is true that university graduates, if successful  in  finding a job commensurate with their qualifications, do better than   non-university graduates. But, in the case of many Sri Lankan graduate  employees  their education is often irrelevant to the work they are  actually required to  do.
Close cooperation between the education and industrial sectors is a vital economic factor for any country, for the most important asset it has is its youth. A country’s education sector is responsible for equipping the young people with the knowledge and skills that industrialists and business people demand.
 
 
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