I found this book at Chapters and it (of course) piqued my curiosity, given the title and content. Frankly, this was another book that made me reconsider my own quest in writing a book for high school grads, as this one covers a lot of good material. Chapters discuss the importance of good choices, knowing yourself, different types of colleges and technical institutes, volunteering, travel, and other options and considerations for high school grads.
There are different editions of the book published for different markets. Canadian and American editions exist (and potentially other regions as well) and there are also College and University editions. I bought an American College edition in Canada (go figure). It was almost 270 pages.
While the authors covered a lot of good content, I think I would have found the book a bit of a hard slog to finish if I was 18 years old. Parts of it weren't as engaging as I would have expected, given the target audience. If you're a more cerebral high school grad, and your trying to figure out what to do, this might be the book for you. As the authors aptly point out in the book: 'College is an expensive place to get your head together.'
Anecdotes, stories, resources, and information to help young adults decide and plan on a direction for their lives
Saturday, January 30, 2016
Tuesday, January 12, 2016
Musing on Careers - New and Old
I did an informational interview with a student from one of my SAIT classes earlier this week, and one of his questions got me thinking. He asked me what it was like starting a career in Information Technology before Google went public - as he put it, 'when IT was a cool and cutting edge industry with browsers and technology changing and evolving all the time.'
I answered him as best I could. I felt I started my IT career at the tail end of that whole 'gold rush' as it were. In many ways it felt like a bit of a lottery - if you chose the right company to work for, you could get rather rich; if you chose the right technology or language to become an expert in, you could also get rich. But if you missed out on either of those choices, well, it might not be the fairy-tale experience we hear in so many stories. I fortunately chose a good language to focus on (java) at that time, and that helped establish my career.
I was reflecting on that conversation this evening, and I realized that while I had managed to get into IT reasonable close to when new media started going main stream, I have also had the distinction of having a career in an 'industry in decline' - print media. Specifically newsprint. That was a different feeling. It was not well paying. There was shift work. Certainly more dangerous. In fact, I just realized tonight that when we did maintenance on the press, we never 'locked it out' - a standard safety practice in many industries I had learned over a decade earlier in the saw mill. The support for education (getting a journeyman's ticket) in the industry was poor. In fact, it was a bit of joke. We ran huge presses that would hardly fit in a gym, and the journeyman course was on a press that would fit in a closet.
What is the lesson here? .... I can hear you thinking.
I got into printing because an organization had a need and I was asked to fill it. I was tired of formal education and learning theory without practical, hands on experience. I wanted to feel productive. Printing really scratched that itch for me. I didn't care how much I was making. The product of my labour was tangible - I could see it and I knew I was learning good things and getting experience, and that felt good.
There's a time though, when you need to examine where you are and what your doing with your life. Ask yourself if you can continue doing this for another 10 or 20 years. Does it make practical sense for you to do it for that much longer? Will it affect your health and your quality of life down the line, etc. That's what my wife and I did. And as a result, we sold our house, moved, and I went back to school.
I answered him as best I could. I felt I started my IT career at the tail end of that whole 'gold rush' as it were. In many ways it felt like a bit of a lottery - if you chose the right company to work for, you could get rather rich; if you chose the right technology or language to become an expert in, you could also get rich. But if you missed out on either of those choices, well, it might not be the fairy-tale experience we hear in so many stories. I fortunately chose a good language to focus on (java) at that time, and that helped establish my career.
I was reflecting on that conversation this evening, and I realized that while I had managed to get into IT reasonable close to when new media started going main stream, I have also had the distinction of having a career in an 'industry in decline' - print media. Specifically newsprint. That was a different feeling. It was not well paying. There was shift work. Certainly more dangerous. In fact, I just realized tonight that when we did maintenance on the press, we never 'locked it out' - a standard safety practice in many industries I had learned over a decade earlier in the saw mill. The support for education (getting a journeyman's ticket) in the industry was poor. In fact, it was a bit of joke. We ran huge presses that would hardly fit in a gym, and the journeyman course was on a press that would fit in a closet.
What is the lesson here? .... I can hear you thinking.
I got into printing because an organization had a need and I was asked to fill it. I was tired of formal education and learning theory without practical, hands on experience. I wanted to feel productive. Printing really scratched that itch for me. I didn't care how much I was making. The product of my labour was tangible - I could see it and I knew I was learning good things and getting experience, and that felt good.
There's a time though, when you need to examine where you are and what your doing with your life. Ask yourself if you can continue doing this for another 10 or 20 years. Does it make practical sense for you to do it for that much longer? Will it affect your health and your quality of life down the line, etc. That's what my wife and I did. And as a result, we sold our house, moved, and I went back to school.
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