English disscoution 150 word answerr

Getting a 

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college degree still helps your chances

 of getting a job, but not necessarily a good one.

Some Americans are becoming overeducated for the jobs that are available to them, as data shows more college educated workers are taking low-skill jobs that are clearly below their qualifications.

Take taxi drivers for example. About 15%, or more than than 1 in 7, had at least a bachelor’s degree in 2010, according to 

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Bureau of Labor Statistics data

.

Compare that to 1970 when less than 1% of taxi drivers had college degrees. And the job description hasn’t changed much, if at all, since then.

“A lot of people, particularly people with bachelor’s degrees, are getting jobs, but not good jobs,” said Richard Vedder, an economist at Ohio University.

In a

 study released Monday

, Vedder shows that about 37% of employed U.S. college graduates are working in jobs that require no more than a high school diploma. Those include jobs like taxi drivers, sales clerks, firefighters and telemarketers. He calls this phenomenon “credential inflation,” as the supply of college grads is growing faster than the jobs requiring that level of education.

Vedder argues that an underemployment problem is likely to persist even after the U.S. economy recovers fully from the jobs crisis. He predicts that the number of college grads will grow by 19 million between 2010 and 2020, while the number of jobs requiring that education is expected to grow by less than 7 million.

  

http://economy.money.cnn.com/2013/01/28/overeducated-and-underemployed/?iid=SF_BN_River

   

Discussion Points:

1. Do you know someone struggling to find a job worthy of their college credentials? 

2. Does knowledge of this economic issue shape your perspective and/or motivation while you work towards a degree? 

3. Have you ever worked a job that you feel overqualified for? If not, would you consider working a job that doesn’t require a degree even though you (hypothetically) had one?

4. Does applying for a job you are overqualified for affect your interview strategy? (for instance I tend to leave things off my resume that would make me seem too overqualified. i have found that a lot of restaurant managers look for employees they feel will stick around the longest: people without degrees or more advanced work experience.)

5. Tell me some ways you think this problem can be remedied. (e.g. increased wages making market more competitive, and so on)

 

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