News
headlines on the day after the matric results were publicised, bemoan the fact
that only a small percentage of matriculants looking for jobs will be employed.
Much ado is made of the “lack of jobs and opportunities” for matrics, yet no
mention is ever made of entrepreneurship or the possibility of school leavers starting
their own business.
Another
bold headline, focussed on terrifying every young person entering the “big wide
world” is the supposed “tragedy” that such a small percentage of people that have applied for studies at a
tertiary institution, and especially for graduate courses, can be accommodated.
Let us say, for argument sake, that the percentages on their report cards are high
and they get accepted into a tertiary institution - how many of this number
will actually qualify with a degree?
The
commercial world is hungry for managers, but the majority of green graduates
apply for jobs with technical skills instead of management skills on their CV. wtf….
My point is that schools are focusing on technical skills to the exclusion of
much needed and vital management skills. The problem is that the disillusioned student
will only find this out after the fact.
Not being
accepted into a university and, by implication, not being able to obtain a
degree, may seem like the end of the world to many disappointed, disillusioned
and “rejected” young people, but it could in fact be the best thing that ever
happened to you. It could create the single biggest impetus that propels you
into a future filled with hope, where your biggest dreams and ambitions can be superseded
by far…. A future where you become an entrepreneur and owner of your own
business – being financially independent and, at the same time, helping to grow
the national economy and creating jobs for future school leavers.
The
education department needs to establish a sense of urgency regarding the
incorporation of vital entrepreneurial skills and information into the national
syllabus for secondary schools. In doing so, future matriculants will be
empowered to believe that they hold the keys to their own future success (no longer feeling like they are at the mercy
of tertiary education systems or being
held ransom by the limited employment opportunities available in the current
market) while at the same time ensuring economic growth and sustainable
creation of employment.
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