The Independent on the apparent overproduction of graduates:
At no time during his four-year French degree or in the three subsequent years teaching English in Japan did Paul Escott, 26, see himself working as a full-time cashier in a bookies. Paul came back to the United Kingdom last August, with a view to getting his first UK graduate job - something to match his qualifications and experience. What he found, however, was not what he was expecting."I never thought I'd be taking 50p bets from stoned Jamaicans," he says with a smile. "In some ways I feel like a victim of my degree." Nowadays, he says, degrees are a dime a dozen.
Escott graduated in 2000 with a French degree from the University of East Anglia (UEA), where he spent his time "treating everything as a joke". He had a great time at UEA, and says that university life was the "mutt's nuts". He says he never gave a second thought to career development. "I did any old degree I knew I could pass, without any regard for where it would lead. If I ever made my mind up about anything at university, it was that I wouldn't make my mind up," he says.
Paul is one of an increasing number of graduates who are finding that their time in higher education was worth very little when it comes to getting a job. Although he says his priorities are not financial, and that he is reluctant to spend his life on the career ladder, Paul admits that he is not now where he wants to be.
In a book published last month, Anthony Hesketh of Lancaster University and Phil Brown of Cardiff University explain why cases like Paul's are increasingly common. Their study, The Mismanagement of Talent - Employability and Jobs in the Knowledge Economy, found that the number of graduates being turned out by universities is far greater than the number of graduate jobs available.
So forget about getting a degree then, even if you can?
The authors call into question the traditional notion of a degree being a key to guaranteed career success, saying that university credentials, "do no more than permit entry into the competition for tough-entry jobs rather than entry into the winner's enclosure."
So, you still need a degree to get a top job, even though it only gets you a chance of a top job?
The crucial question is not: Does a degree guarantee you a top job? It doesn't. Not now, probably not ever. The crucial question is: Are some people more likely to get top jobs if they skip degrees and start work at eighteen, or for that matter fifteen, or twelve, or eight? If a degree is insufficient, but still totally necessary for a top job, then it still makes sense for a would-be high fligher to get one. Even that bloke in the betting office may later find that his degree pushes him ahead in the queue.
It may well be that from the point of view of the economy as a whole, "Britain" cranks out too many graduates. But that doesn't mean that individual Britons who bust their guts and their banks accounts to get degrees are necessarily behaving irrationally.
In my opinion, the crucial question for a non-degree inclined eighteen-year-old to ask is: Where is the economy expanding fastest? You are much more likely to get a top job in an industry that is exploding with new opportunities, and is hence not organised and respectable and something that regular graduates yet want to get into.
Still study, in other words, but study different stuff.
One thing's for sure. Idling your way through university, getting a silly dime-a-dozen degree, and then expecting a great career, immediately, as of right, is no longer an option - if indeed it ever was. A top career means that sooner or later you have to start, you know, working. And sooner is better.
I don't think that those authors are right to regard the view that degrees guarantee you a great career as "traditional". I think that what they say, and what I've added, is much more traditional. Degrees get you in the door, but once in there, you have to work and to work intelligently, which is likely to mean that you have got into the habit of working, and of working intelligently, and that you can prove it. And I think most people know this.
Preparation for life after university, while still at university, is essential. I left university in 1991, the second worst year ever for graduate unemployment (1992 was even worse). Those of my year who gave the matter of work advance thought, who chose vacation work and volunteering with care, who attended what little milk round took place, were the ones who found themselves at or near where they wanted to be. Those who didn't - the majority - took years to catch up, and hardly any in their career of first choice. I am not surprised to find that the same applies today, now that there are as many graduates as there were A-level school leavers in 1991.
'A silly dime-a-dozen degree' - French? are you joking?
French? No, "dime-a-dozen" is American. I'm fascinated to see that The Independent expects their readership to recognize the phrase.
triticale
I think Tom means that a French degree is not a dime-a-dozen degree, not that the expression dime-a-dozen is itself French.
My guess is that almost any degree, if not accompanied by a bit of networking, a bit of thought about what you want to do next, and about who you want to pay you to do that, and about why they might want to pay you, can be dime-a-dozen.
My latest posting here ("Blooks"), as I now comment, is, I suspect, about a rather tragic person who did everything she was told to do, academically, but who didn't do anything else.

