I blame p**s poor parenting, social media amd smartphones.....
Our worlds gone mad, I blame the celebrities, the influencers, the YouTubers.
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Many years ago, my wife and I were in London for a long weekend vacation. One evening we were in a crowded pub and shared a table with two young men. During our conversation with them, we learned they had recently graduated from University with degrees in Sound Engineering.Do you think over education has had an impact too?
Education needs to be aimed at the right individual, we are all different and intelligence should not be measured on just an academic scale where everyone goes to get a degree in something or anything. Some people are academic and university will bring the best out in them but for others it is the actual doing that gives them a buzz, ie trades like motor technicians & sparkies. What seems to be lacking today is that desire for knowledge, being curious about the world around you which is what got many people motivated once upon a time to pursue a certain direction but spending the majority of your early years staring at that phone screen is just brain numbing and creating a generation of nothing.Do you think over education has had an impact too?
That's what we thought as well, but didn't understand why any university would offer a roadie degree.PS Mike - that 4 year degree has qualified them to become what we used to call "roadies" by the sound of it.![]()
It gets fees in. Never mind if the degree is pointless.That's what we thought as well, but didn't understand why any university would offer a roadie degree.
I have a friend who studied sound engineering at Southampton.[Caution: TLDR alert!]
There are two people on this thread who directly know he quality of sound engineer training the BBC used to offer.
When I started in sound in 1978, there was one whole course* outside the BBC, the Tonmeister postgraduate course at Surrey. A classical music degree was a prerequisite (so that was beyond me). They graduated less than two dozen people per year, who were expected to carve out careers in the music industry.
The BBC induction course was rigorous: half electrical/electronic and acoustic theory, and half practical, followed up with more in-depth courses six months to a year later (after getting practical experience on station). They told us their basic course was intended to cover the 1st-year electronics university undergraduate syllabus, but in 12 weeks (well, six really, as the other six were mostly practical). "So, you're struggling with complex numbers. Well, here's the textbook, go back and re-read it carefully..."
There was a test every Friday morning, pass mark 90% (50 or so questions, requiring understanding and fast mental arithmetic). You could fail once, 89% a second time meant termination of your contract. We had two people, both degree-qualified, leave our course because of the pressure.
I've since got a pretty good degree, but I've never worked so hard academically. And it didn't qualify me to be a 'proper' engineer, either: that would've meant two more courses, of similar length and intensity to the first one.
Nowadays the media degrees that proliferate don't (can't?) even explain basic operating principles. They just train in processes ("in that situation, do this..."). They don't educate, nor train students to think.
It starts in school. For example, every child is supposedly taught basic science, yet we still have even politicians responsible for national strategy confused about energy versus power (hint: they are NOT synonyms), and wholly unaware of dust-to-dust cost issues. Decisions costing billions are made whimsically, as they lack the analysis skills.
Regarding trade skills, apprenticeships, etc. I wholly agree, but it's culture: you can't just throw money at it, when craft skills and quality of workmanship are not valued. Anyone else want to live in Japan?
Sorry, Way too much information.
E.
*The ITA (became the IBA, responsible for ITV stations) did have a technical training centre at Crawley Court, but their courses were postgraduate and aimed at transmission engineering mostly -- not my field. They also trained very low numbers of people.
That's acoustics. I'm sure it's a great course, and it overlaps with sound engineering, but it's only a part of it. The Tonmeister course (Surrey based theirs on the german model) is/was about recording and a bit of broadcast engineering.I have a friend who studied sound engineering at Southampton.
Then went on to work at Arups for 20 years doing opera houses, theatres, arenas etc.
His was definitely a top class sound degree!
My personal experience of apprentice carpenters isn't quite that, however, they do seem to resent the low wages they receive, whilst often also thinking that achieving a Level 2 NVQ makes them fully qualified and worth the same as a fully trained and experienced man is. They are also, for the most part, far too fascinated with what is going on on social media, to the point where many cannot go more than 10 minutes without the need to look at their phone and join in to conversations. It is difficult to wean them off their phones and the inattention to the job this causes results in more than a few dismissals (i've had several put with me as a last chance only for them to be fired because they cannot mend their ways)... and people seem allergic to real hard work these days...
See my comments above re-NVQs (to me NVQ means Not Very Qualified whilst taking the same amount of time as a C&G).My wife and I were surprised a UK university offered a four-year college degree for what we would consider to be a technician.
The issue we have in the trades is that these days the sort of apprentices we would once have had, often late bloomers or lads who were not academically gifted, get shunted through a system where despite having a shorter school day and doing next to to homework often seems to turn them into A or B stream. So they go to university rather than into the trades. And so often we are left with the dross who at one time would have been site labourers and little more. This has been a progresdive decline that we have seen since the turn of the century - and this isn't just my opinion, but is the opinion of many more senior guys I've worked with across the tradesEducation needs to be aimed at the right individual, we are all different and intelligence should not be measured on just an academic scale where everyone goes to get a degree in something or anything. Some people are academic and university will bring the best out in them but for others it is the actual doing that gives them a buzz, ie trades like motor technicians & sparkies. What seems to be lacking today is that desire for knowledge...
.......They told us their basic course was intended to cover the 1st-year electronics university undergraduate syllabus, .....
That is very true, I did 6 months on the road with a band when I was in my early 20s. I was taken on as a set joiner but the nature was you worked with sound and light guys too. I had a blast touring Germany and the other roadies were a great bunch of guys (albeit they drunk or stoned most of the time). Not one had spent 4 years at Uni for a degreePS Mike - that 4 year degree has qualified them to become what we used to call "roadies" by the sound of it.![]()
As you likely know, Germany has a wonderful state and employer sponsored program called "Ausbildung". The Ausbildung program is open to anyone interested an apprenticeship in over 300 job categories. The program starts around the end of the tenth year of school and successful applicants are sponsored by a company for two to four years of classroom and hands-on training. Some of the programs provide a stipend for the student as well as all required tools and equipment. At the end of the program, most applicants are offered positions within the company that sponsored them; otherwise, they are on their own to find employment.It's actually a total shame that we don't properly support as a nation, apprenticeship schemes any more. It is one of the things that has damaged our economic substance.
I don't know which 'older' joiners you are referring to, but pretty much all of the guys I've worked with in recent years who were late 50s and older were products of an apprentice system which up until the 1980s produced "carpenters and joiners", i.e. your qualification required both site and bench skills (and quite a few medium to large firms also required you to do a wood machining qualification as well). Saying that, we always had a few jobber joiners and site fixers (site carpenters), but I wouldn't be in such a rush to knock their skills either, as it takes a certain skill set to be able to buttress a collapsing building or set multiple lintels, etc quickly and accurately. Older generally means a lot more and wider experience. But as to 'older' joiners doing price work on newbuild housing you just won't see many of them - boring, repetitive and kills your body. Go on site and you'll find it's a young man's game.I think to add to the conversation, I know a lot of 'older' joiners who are still on the tools mainly working on housebuilding sites or trying to get back to the house builders as they don’t want to work on general jobbing, workshops (most don't know one end of a bench from another and have no interest in learning) or general carpentry/joinery.
How much would a set of tools cost for site work. Thinking cordless kit and mitre saw? £1-2k?I think to add to the conversation, I know a lot of 'older' joiners who are still on the tools mainly working on housebuilding sites or trying to get back to the house builders as they don’t want to work on general jobbing, workshops (most don't know one end of a bench from another and have no interest in learning) or general carpentry/joinery. Apparently big sites are still easier money, the work is repetitive, and you don't need to think much. They are also saying that none are interested in apprentices as they cost too much, moan about the cost of tools and don't pull their weight. A lot of joiners also hold the view that to earn a decent living they have to invest heavily on tools, vans, insurances, etc and youngsters coming into the trade are put of by the cost of tooling, no longer is a bag with a hammer, axe, two Yankee screwdrivers, a chisel roll with a selection of chisels (1/4" - 11/8") a brace and roll of bits enough to get started with even basic tools running to high hundreds or over a thousand pounds.
When my son was around 14 I was going to ask around for some work experience on the tools as he had shown some interest but he didn't want to go into the building trade as it was too physically demanding, and was set to go to uni for law or accountancy. He decided that was too boring. He is now a serving Royal Marine Commando (not physically demanding at all).
At a guess, 5,000-10,000, depending on specialities. It's shocking how quickly it all adds up.How much would a set of tools cost for site work. Thinking cordless kit and mitre saw? £1-2k?