An honours degree couldn’t land Max a job so he’s going back to Uni

mellowyellow

Well-known Member
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UNSW engineering graduate Max Kaplan is planning to go back to university to get his master's degree.(ABC News: Justin Huntsdale)


Max Kaplan hadn't had any luck landing a job after completing his engineering degree at the University of New South Wales. Throughout 2020, he applied for several jobs a week, but to no avail.

"It was a little bit crushing at times when I was facing rejection after rejection," Mr Kaplan said. "You go through five years of uni, a year of work, and still can't find anything … it feels like you've wasted your time."

Despite graduating with honours from a university placed third in the nation for employment, he is now preparing to study a masters of mechatronic engineering at the University of Melbourne…….

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-01-25/postgraduate-enrolments-spike-during-pandemic/13057628
 

While job markets due to lock downs etc are bad in many spots ...

I personally have witnessed a trend in jobs around my area ....... Degrees and education does not guarantee a job..........

We have some people at my job (bio -pharmacology) floundering ....
they have the masters in chemical engineering but ................. have zero interpersonal skills ......and team work is difficult for them as they feel they are the smartest in the room. why listen to anyone else.............
SO even if on paper they look great they are not cutting it in real world applications...

Another item with those who spent tons of time in university........... Expecting to walk into a cushy job........ they won't settle for anything below (X) amount of salary and perks................... and the job has to meet all the points they think it should have...... MANY of these 'educated" are on the sidelines.
 
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Things must be quite different in the UK than the US with regard to the job market. We hear all the time around these parts that a degree does not guarantee a job. While this is true, and always has been, it depends now more than ever on what field the degree is in and whether or not employers are hiring people with no experience.

In engineering, there are many jobs going unfilled in the USA due to a shortage of qualified engineers. The medical electronics company that I do some contract work for a few months a year, seems to hire many interns each year, and then they select those they consider to be the best fit, to hire upon graduation. I get emails from recruiters all over the country every week, and nearly every day with engineering job openings.

On the other hand, somebody with a degree in English Literature or something along those lines might have a tough time finding a job. When investing in a 4 year degree program, the potential student must do his or her due diligence as would any consumer making a large purchase, to determine the chances of finding enough employment to pay his or her student loans after graduation.

Degrees that avail the new graduate a job currently, may not necessarily be the degrees that yield a good job some years down the road, which simply means that any advice regarding fields to go into will change over time. Technology and medicine seem to have been holding rather strong for quite some time. Unfortunately, not everybody is suited to those kinds of work and may want to consider getting some other form of education, including consideration for trade schools, for skills elsewhere in the job market.

What I am saying here holds true for the USA, but I have no idea what the job market is outside the USA. It is a sad thing for anyone graduating from college to be unable to find employment. That person has spent at least 4 years and a lot of money to get that degree, and on graduation, has to begin to pay it all back.

Tony
 


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