By clicking “Accept All”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyse site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts
These cookies enable our website and App to remember things such as your region or country, language, accessibility options and your preferences and settings.
Analytic cookies help website owners to understand how visitors interact with websites by collecting and reporting information anonymously.
Marketing cookies are used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.
I understand why you feel like giving education a miss but there are many life experiences to learn from further education. You may be a lot smarter and wiser than I was at the age of 18 but looking back I was clueless. The cost of further education has risen to sickening amounts but you need to think of what you could gain from further study. Work for someone else for a while to gain some experience.
He/She had an apprentership with the BBC (do you know how many people would bite their arm off for that), its hardly formal education, and he gave that up to become a milkman. Plus he thinks buying an Iphone will help him in business. Plus he cannot even answer the questions he's been asked so people can offer advice, DWP springs to mind. (although i do agree with you post)I'm going to buck the trend here - and say that education is utterly useless if it's not inspiring the person to use it. It sounds very much like being in formal education is switching Chrissy off from any sort of learning. Which is a shame, because once I realised that some education was actually useful in the real world, you couldn't stop me! But so many of our teachers and the system itself is built around non-jobs and non-practical applications. i.e. getting qualifications for the sake of them.
Chrissy - what would you need in order to run your business? Could you structure your learning around starting up, rather than stopping altogether? So for example, if you want to learn about iphone apps, could you volunteer for work experience somewhere where they specialise in this type of business?
I'm generally of the opinion that it's better for someone else to pay for you to learn, rather than paying it yourself - and a lot cheaper!
Caroline I'm shocked!
"I'm generally of the opinion that it's better for someone else to pay for you to learn, rather than paying it yourself - and a lot cheaper!"
So the employer teaches you your trade, PAYS for your further education, and you then walk away leaving them with nothing but the bill?
That's why employers have contracts that state you must work for them for X number of years after the course finishes or pay them back, too many people taking 'free' education through employers for granted!
Even more of a reason to go work for someone else - anyone with such a short attention span won't make it through the tough times!TotallySport said:He/She had an apprenticeship with the BBC (do you know how many people would bite their arm off for that), its hardly formal education, and he gave that up to become a milkman. Plus he thinks buying an Iphone will help him in business. Plus he cannot even answer the questions he's been asked so people can offer advice, DWP springs to mind. (although i do agree with you post)
i was london at the junior apprentice for bbc, for very far in the stages aswell. So many good benefits working to yourself.
...
With unemployment high and the state of the economy, it's best to get good qualifications now, and hope that in 4/5 years time when you come out, the economy will be in a better state and you will have a greater chance of being employed.
...