When I was in school, I was always told “If you get a college degree you’ll on average make 500k more over the life time of your career regardless of what you get your degree in!”

Then as I finishing school, it was all about “If you get into tech you’ll make big bucks and always have jobs!”

Both of those have turned out not great for a lot of people.

Then whenever women say they’re struggling with money online, they get pointed to OF… which pays nothing to 99% of creators. Also very presumptive to suggest that, but we don’t even need to get into that.

So is there a field/career strategy that you feel like is currently being over pushed?

(My examples are USA, Nevada/Utah is where I grew up, if maybe it’s different in other parts of USA even.)

  • dohpaz42@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    I tell my kids that a) they must graduate high school, and then either go to college or learn a trade. Regardless, they need to be educated.

  • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    “Go to trade school” is my guess. I’ve even suggested it. I’m not sure it’s really being over pushed, but maybe it is. Easy answers to complex questions are a trope.

    • Subtracty@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      I haven’t met any parents telling their kids to go into the trades aside from one dad who is already in the trades and knows the life.

      Most of the parents of high/middle schoolers I speak to are pushing STEM and entrepreneurship. I coach this age group, and the parents still want their kid to go on to higher education. They just are more aggressive about it being a meaningful degree.

      There is also more discussion of the cost of schools. A degree from a local school with in state tuition or a community college transfer is looked upon more favorably now. Frankly, a lot of the elite schools are bullshit and the general public is waking up to that now. The work a student is willing to put into learning is much more important than if the school has a high rank.

      • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        I have definitely heard parents encouraging kids to go into the trades. Could be a regional thing. Anecdotal either way.

        I agree elite schools are bullshit for the vast majority. There are some PhD and medical programs that aren’t. But that’s a tiny percentage of students who would benefit.

        • Subtracty@lemmy.world
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          20 hours ago

          Yeah, it is definitely dependent on region and lots of other factors. Plus, I fully admit it is a small sample size. But I just wanted to say my part because suggesting the trades certainly isn’t as universal as advising kids to go to college was a generation ago.

          Also, I agree with the elite schools for grad programs. But so few kids get to that point and would have to get through undergrad (and likely crippling students loans) to even apply to for the good grad schools.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      If Trump gets elected, and he mass deports millions of people, there will be a surge in construction demand.

        • Mac@mander.xyz
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          18 hours ago

          We could literally shut down the economy in defiance if we all got together and did something about it.
          Pipe dream, though, tbh.

          • pdxfed@lemmy.world
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            17 hours ago

            Trump may beat everyone to it. Bash on immigrants as he loves to since it brings out poor white folks, many of his financial backers are industries like service (hotels, restaurants, Ag) who are already understaffed because they’ve made the jobs so awful only truly desperate or illegal workers will stand them. He will seriously trigger “a day without immigrants” meanwhile upending prices through tariffs that will screw most Americans who are already living in debt and skipping basics. Unfortunately for America, there will not be another election if he wins this week.

    • pbbananaman@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      I’m dreaming of an oversupply of trade workers. It’s too expensive right now to get any work done. Lots of scammers too.

    • FoxyFerengi@lemm.ee
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      18 hours ago

      John Deere and a few others recently paid like 20m to build a diesel tech training center for my university that includes several large vehicle bays and a fuel development lab, with the expectation the students would work for their companies after graduation. It’s starting to look like these kids will be opening their own businesses and ending the cycle of ripping off farmers in the community.

      As a former mechanic with lots of lovely health issues before even hitting 40, I really hope they do work for themselves so they can get out of the grunt work when they are my age and still earn from their experience

    • otp@sh.itjust.works
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      22 hours ago

      It’s the new thing that parents want their kids to do. I feel like it’s going to backfire, lol

      • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        Agree. We need trades people but we also need jobs, re-shoring, affordable housing, affordable health care, affordable education, etc. to go along with. It could become another bubble like pharmacists and knowledge workers.

        The longer I’m in the workforce the more I think David Graeber was right.

    • doggle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      21 hours ago

      I’ve heard there’s an enormous demand for experienced tradespeople, but apprenticeships are pretty much full up…

      Kind of a nobody-wins situation. Money to be made, just not by anyone on the ground floor.

    • Asafum@feddit.nl
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      21 hours ago

      The downside to that is it is much harder to continue working as you age depending on the trade. Usually the “best” route there is to start early, learn what you can, and go independent eventually hiring other people to do the hard stuff you no longer can do.

      Also need to be careful specializing… I went super specific and well… Yeah… Ice cream refrigeration machines aren’t exactly ubiquitous. I should have stuck with residential HVAC but I hated crawling under houses and being on call all night :/

      I currently work in a factory (yeah I’m just chock full of bad decisions) and I can say from what I’ve gathered from my coworkers being a “machinist” isn’t so much of a viable trade anymore. Everyone pays like shit now.

      • BlitzoTheOisSilent@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        Only thing I’ll disagree with you here is the machinist comment. My dad’s been a machinist for like 45 years now, same industry, same building.

        He is constantly complaining to me that they can’t find machinists, or even people who are willing to learn. I have zero machining experience, and he was trying to get me hired at one point, that’s how desperate they were getting.

        And it’s not a bad company, to be clear, they’re a government contractor, have very good benefits, competitive pay (he’s even complained they’ve given guys with a year’s experience multi-dollar raises to keep them), etc.

        According to him, if you have mechanical aptitude and are willing to learn all of the intricacies of machining, you can and will make a decent salary for the rest of your life so long as you’re willing to work.

      • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        Glad you mentioned that. It can be very hard on the body, and for older people they will likely want to transition into ownership, or a supervisory or admin role…and those slots are limited.

        We need to think about using technology to help people work less. Not just fatten profits.

        • Asafum@feddit.nl
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          21 hours ago

          We need to think about using technology to help people work less. Not just fatten profits.

          It’s such a hard topic to deal with because you have to tackle the concept of ownership.

          As it currently stands in capitalist economies the owner, as the title implies, owns the means to increase productivity that would enable people to work less, but since they are the owners they see it is morally repugnant to have other people who did “nothing extra” get “more” money as the math is essentially: less work, same pay = greater value, except you didn’t provide any greater value to them, the machine/technology that they own did.

          It’s a shitty situation for sure :(

          • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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            20 hours ago

            Yup, this is all true. Worker cooperatives, unions, and expiring patents faster are all things that can help. None are a magic wand. But they make a difference.

      • Vanth@reddthat.com
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        18 hours ago

        from what I’ve gathered from my coworkers being a “machinist” isn’t so much of a viable trade anymore. Everyone pays like shit now.

        Yes, agreed at least for my industry. My company hires “machinists” with no experience or education, gives them minimal training on how to push a button and not stick their hand in running machinery, and expects at least half to leave for a job that offers ten cents an hour more as soon as they can. They killed the pension for new employees and wonder why no new employees have any “loyalty” to the company.

        I’ve always had massive respect for welders. That shit is an art. Not so with the folks we are hiring these days. Fast food fry cook wages don’t get you artisan welders.

      • Elaine@lemm.ee
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        8 hours ago

        Excellent point right here. I spent nearly twenty years in a trade till arthritis began to develop. I spent the last three years of that job using the education benefits to get a degree and a new tech skill that has morphed into my current career. (I looked into running my own crew but that particular trade was and is in a downturn.)

  • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 hours ago

    I think there are a lot of fields people are being encouraged to ignore because “it’s totally going to be made obsolete by AI any day now”. I’m sure some of them ultimately will be, but we still have people doing financial services despite so much of the calculations being handled entirely by software under the hood.

    The people pushing this AI revolution concept are those who stand to make money off it, and those who can use it as an excuse for layoffs to save money in the short term before they jump to another company and avoid the consequences.

    • ericbomb@lemmy.worldOP
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      16 hours ago

      I remember 14 years ago in high school I was kicking around the idea of becoming a court reporter (type out everything said in court) , but was told “nooo look at Siri, that’ll totally replace all that soon!”

      No, no it’s not. We don’t want things like that making choices like that.

      Also was told “C and C++ is too old, learn something newer”

      People get too excited about new tech, not thinking about why the old tech stands the test of time.

    • Nollij@sopuli.xyz
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      17 hours ago

      I’m in IT. It’s the advice I wish I’d followed from the beginning.

      Once you get comfortable in your job and it becomes routine, you need to find a new one. Keep growing your skill set, and probably take a hefty raise each time.

      Don’t worry about being a job hopper - it resolves itself easily enough when you don’t find the next position for a while.

      • mugthol@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        16 hours ago

        That sounds super stressful to me and you need to have a lot of energy left after your workday to look for a new job. I’m so glad I don’t have to do that

        • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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          11 hours ago

          Try doing a bachelor next to you job. Dear God, do I long for some rest. I’ve been slacking on my studies lately, but I only have 50 EC left to do. Anyways, I’ve got no choice but to change jobs after I get my bachelor. Employers don’t give proper raises, they only give unfair wage gaps to new employees. That s how you get the “I’ve worked here 30 years and the new college kid gets twice my salary” rethoric. That’s sadly how it works. So eventhough I’ll have my degree next year, I know I won’t get paid for it unless I leave. I’ll try, because I like my job, but I know they won’t accept my offer.

      • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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        6 hours ago

        Also in IT, I’m not as frequent a job hopper as some but it’s how I climbed the ladder to where I am today. Ultimately companies don’t give a fuck about you and just care about their profits so they will pay you as little as they can. Your only time to get more $ is when they’re vulnerable and hiring cause they need you.

      • WanderingVentra@lemm.ee
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        6 hours ago

        I so need to do this. Been at the same job for almost 10 years and it feels like everyone else I started with has surpassed me for this reason in terms of salary and position. But i hate applying for jobs in tech so much, having to do the leetcode study bullshit as if I’m still in school and all that. It’s so exhausting and annoying. Maybe it’s the ADHD, but it’s hard to bring myself to sit down and do it.

        But also, I could really use more money, it’s been impossible to save for a house where I live, and I’d love to be able to have one someday. I know it’s not too late, I still have so many years before I retire, but I’m still jealous of you guys that could sit down and more easily do the interview dance every 2-3 years.

    • Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works
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      17 hours ago

      Just be careful when you do, because there’s a risk of screwing up your retirement savings. Losing employer contributions that could have kicked in if you held out another 6 months or whatever. (I’m not an expert on this subject by the way, and ymmv)

  • That_Devil_Girl@lemmy.ml
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    19 hours ago

    If you want a good job, become a social media influencer. It pays more than most other jobs, and you can be the worst type of person and still make it big.

  • Call me Lenny/Leni@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    As someone without friends, I hear a lot of “if you want friends, get a job.”

    Plot twist: I actually do have a job, many of them don’t.

    • ericbomb@lemmy.worldOP
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      16 hours ago

      Ahh man all I got was a disabled mom and prison dad.

      Think I can trade him for a rich dad to a rich person who wants to claim they had a rough child hood?

  • CameronDev@programming.dev
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    21 hours ago

    No one seriously thinks OF is a viable career path do they? Sex work has never been a career thing, at best you get a couple years of good earning and then you get forgotten. At worst, you get a pittance and mental health issues.

    Tech has worked out for lots of people, just because some are laid off every so often, doesn’t mean the rest aren’t doing really well.

    • bizarroland@fedia.io
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      21 hours ago

      OF is a lottery for pretty girls or for people in very niche communities.

      Like if your thing is wearing girly socks and mushing Jello between your toes, you could probably make some money on onlyfans but just being a generic 6.5 out of 10 or better looking? No chance in hell.

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    9 hours ago

    I think we’re about to circle back to circa 1000s yurop: “Now, my child, you behave while I try to sell you as a slave FREE ENTREPRENEURIAL COLLABORATOR to mr. Rich Douchebag, as that is the only way to go up the social and financial ladder.”