
Z世代在美国梦的熏陶下长大,而这一梦想正逐渐消失。他们曾追随父母的脚步,相信只要学业优异、进入名牌大学,就能获得成功、房子和六位数的年薪——但总体而言,如今情况已大不相同。人们纷纷指责大学,要求其降低学费,并帮助学生掌握求职所需的实用技能。
皮尤研究中心的近期数据显示,70%的美国人认为美国高等教育体系正走向错误的方向,高于2020年的约56%。这表明人们对高昂的学费以及大学帮助学生谋得高薪职业的能力日益不满。
研究同时指出,特朗普政府正在加强对美国精英大学的管控。10月早些时候,包括布朗大学、达特茅斯学院、麻省理工学院、弗吉尼亚大学和范德堡大学在内的九所高校收到了一份名为《高等教育学术卓越协议》的文件,要求它们承诺拥护保守主义价值观与政策,否则可能失去联邦资金。这些政策要求高校在招生中禁止考虑性别或种族因素,为攻读“硬科学”的学生免除学费,保持两党中立,并将国际本科生比例上限设定为15%。
一些高校对此进行了抵制,哈佛大学甚至将此问题诉诸法庭。但其他学校未能幸免:弗吉尼亚大学校长在政治压力下辞职,而布朗大学和哥伦比亚大学等则选择与白宫达成协议。
尽管高校开始承认自身不足,但它们认为政府干预可能威胁美国的学术自由。然而事实表明,对美国高校现状的不满跨越了党派界限。约77%的共和党人和65%的民主党人认为美国高等教育正走向错误方向,分别高于2020年的66%和49%。美国教育问题的真正根源或许是学费飞涨和入门级机会匮乏——这正将新一代Z世代毕业生推向蓝领职业。
学费飞涨,入门级岗位正在消失
美国人对高校颇有微词,因为Z世代毕业生离开校园时背负着沉重的学生贷款,却面临寥寥无几的工作机会。
皮尤数据显示,约55%的美国人在“帮助学生为当前就业市场的高薪工作做准备”方面给高校打出差评。约52%的人认为高校在“为有需要的学生提供经济援助”方面表现不佳,49%的人表示高校未能充分培养学生的批判性思维和解决问题能力。这些问题正实时影响着Z世代的职业发展。
随着学费飙升,许多年轻人为了上学不得不自己或让父母背负债务。《新闻周刊》一项民调显示,Z世代人均个人负债超过9.4万美元,而千禧世代约为6万美元,X世代约为5.3万美元。10月早些时候有报道称,自2020年以来,Z世代是各年龄段中信用评分年降幅最大的群体。报告显示,他们的平均FICO信用评分下降3分至676分,比全国平均分715分低39分。
Z世代本可通过高薪工作偿还债务,但这类岗位供不应求。人工智能正逐渐自动化那些传统上由入门级员工或应届生担任的职位,使Z世代难以获得职业成功所需的垫脚石工作。截至7月,过去一年毕业的大学生中仍有58%在寻找稳定工作,而面临同样问题的千禧世代和X世代仅占25%。他们在最受欢迎雇主处的机会也在减少;SignalFire风投公司的数据显示,自2019年以来,15家最大科技公司的应届生招聘量下降了逾50%。
Z世代的蓝领浪潮
随着人工智能持续席卷企业职场,Z世代正在寻找职业避风港——许多人在蓝领工作中找到了归宿。
2024年哈里斯民意调查为Intuit Credit Karma开展的一项调查显示,约78%的美国人注意到年轻人对木工、电工等技工类工作的兴趣日益上升。许多此类岗位不仅收入可观,还能实现“自己当老板”的理想。这使Z世代工作者有机会不上大学也能赚取六位数年薪,且无需背负学生贷款。
去年,以职业教育为主的社区大学入学人数增长了16%,达到美国国家学生信息交换中心自2018年追踪该数据以来的最高水平。某些职业尤其吸引年轻工作者:2022年至2023年,学习建筑行业的Z世代人数激增23%,参加暖通空调和车辆维修课程的人数增长7%。未来还有更多机会:德勤和美国制造业协会的研究显示,到2033年,制造业预计将新增380万个岗位。
甚至连企业领袖也亲历了这一趋势。福特汽车公司首席执行官吉姆・法利透露,他的儿子未追随他走上高管之路,而是在今年夏季选择成为一名机械师。法利称,他的儿子质疑:既然能从事蓝领工作、成为“必要经济”的一部分,为何还要上大学?
“我们该讨论这个问题吗?”法利回忆起与妻子的对话,并补充说许多美国家庭都在进行类似讨论。“这确实值得一场辩论。”(财富中文网)
译者:朴成奎
Z世代在美国梦的熏陶下长大,而这一梦想正逐渐消失。他们曾追随父母的脚步,相信只要学业优异、进入名牌大学,就能获得成功、房子和六位数的年薪——但总体而言,如今情况已大不相同。人们纷纷指责大学,要求其降低学费,并帮助学生掌握求职所需的实用技能。
皮尤研究中心的近期数据显示,70%的美国人认为美国高等教育体系正走向错误的方向,高于2020年的约56%。这表明人们对高昂的学费以及大学帮助学生谋得高薪职业的能力日益不满。
研究同时指出,特朗普政府正在加强对美国精英大学的管控。10月早些时候,包括布朗大学、达特茅斯学院、麻省理工学院、弗吉尼亚大学和范德堡大学在内的九所高校收到了一份名为《高等教育学术卓越协议》的文件,要求它们承诺拥护保守主义价值观与政策,否则可能失去联邦资金。这些政策要求高校在招生中禁止考虑性别或种族因素,为攻读“硬科学”的学生免除学费,保持两党中立,并将国际本科生比例上限设定为15%。
一些高校对此进行了抵制,哈佛大学甚至将此问题诉诸法庭。但其他学校未能幸免:弗吉尼亚大学校长在政治压力下辞职,而布朗大学和哥伦比亚大学等则选择与白宫达成协议。
尽管高校开始承认自身不足,但它们认为政府干预可能威胁美国的学术自由。然而事实表明,对美国高校现状的不满跨越了党派界限。约77%的共和党人和65%的民主党人认为美国高等教育正走向错误方向,分别高于2020年的66%和49%。美国教育问题的真正根源或许是学费飞涨和入门级机会匮乏——这正将新一代Z世代毕业生推向蓝领职业。
学费飞涨,入门级岗位正在消失
美国人对高校颇有微词,因为Z世代毕业生离开校园时背负着沉重的学生贷款,却面临寥寥无几的工作机会。
皮尤数据显示,约55%的美国人在“帮助学生为当前就业市场的高薪工作做准备”方面给高校打出差评。约52%的人认为高校在“为有需要的学生提供经济援助”方面表现不佳,49%的人表示高校未能充分培养学生的批判性思维和解决问题能力。这些问题正实时影响着Z世代的职业发展。
随着学费飙升,许多年轻人为了上学不得不自己或让父母背负债务。《新闻周刊》一项民调显示,Z世代人均个人负债超过9.4万美元,而千禧世代约为6万美元,X世代约为5.3万美元。10月早些时候有报道称,自2020年以来,Z世代是各年龄段中信用评分年降幅最大的群体。报告显示,他们的平均FICO信用评分下降3分至676分,比全国平均分715分低39分。
Z世代本可通过高薪工作偿还债务,但这类岗位供不应求。人工智能正逐渐自动化那些传统上由入门级员工或应届生担任的职位,使Z世代难以获得职业成功所需的垫脚石工作。截至7月,过去一年毕业的大学生中仍有58%在寻找稳定工作,而面临同样问题的千禧世代和X世代仅占25%。他们在最受欢迎雇主处的机会也在减少;SignalFire风投公司的数据显示,自2019年以来,15家最大科技公司的应届生招聘量下降了逾50%。
Z世代的蓝领浪潮
随着人工智能持续席卷企业职场,Z世代正在寻找职业避风港——许多人在蓝领工作中找到了归宿。
2024年哈里斯民意调查为Intuit Credit Karma开展的一项调查显示,约78%的美国人注意到年轻人对木工、电工等技工类工作的兴趣日益上升。许多此类岗位不仅收入可观,还能实现“自己当老板”的理想。这使Z世代工作者有机会不上大学也能赚取六位数年薪,且无需背负学生贷款。
去年,以职业教育为主的社区大学入学人数增长了16%,达到美国国家学生信息交换中心自2018年追踪该数据以来的最高水平。某些职业尤其吸引年轻工作者:2022年至2023年,学习建筑行业的Z世代人数激增23%,参加暖通空调和车辆维修课程的人数增长7%。未来还有更多机会:德勤和美国制造业协会的研究显示,到2033年,制造业预计将新增380万个岗位。
甚至连企业领袖也亲历了这一趋势。福特汽车公司首席执行官吉姆・法利透露,他的儿子未追随他走上高管之路,而是在今年夏季选择成为一名机械师。法利称,他的儿子质疑:既然能从事蓝领工作、成为“必要经济”的一部分,为何还要上大学?
“我们该讨论这个问题吗?”法利回忆起与妻子的对话,并补充说许多美国家庭都在进行类似讨论。“这确实值得一场辩论。”(财富中文网)
译者:朴成奎
Gen Zers were raised on an American Dream that's slowly disappearing from view. They followed in the footsteps of their parents, who were once told that excelling in school and landing a spot at a top college would lead to success, a house, and a six-figure career—but broadly speaking, that's no longer the case. People are pointing fingers at universities, demanding that they ease costs and provide students with the skills they need to find jobs.
Seven in 10 Americans say the U.S. higher education system is heading in the wrong direction, according to recent data from the Pew Research Center. It's up from only about 56% of Americans who said the same in 2020, signaling growing discontent over tuition costs and the ability of colleges to set pupils up for gainful employment.
Simultaneously, the study notes, the Trump administration is cracking down on elite U.S. universities. Earlier this month, nine schools—including Brown, Dartmouth, MIT, University of Virginia, and Vanderbilt—were sent a document titled "Compact for Academic Excellence in Higher Education." It asked schools to pledge allegiance to conservative values and policies, or risk losing their federal funding. The policies instruct colleges to prohibit factors such as gender or race from being considered in admissions decisions; give free tuition to students pursuing "hard sciences"; maintain bipartisan neutrality; and cap international undergraduate enrollment at 15%.
Colleges have since pushed back, with Harvard even taking the issue to court. But others didn't come out unscathed; a University of Virginia president resigned under political pressure, while schools such as Brown and Columbia chose to strike deals with the White House.
While universities are starting to fess up to their shortcomings, they argue the government's interference could threaten America's academic freedom. But as it turns out, disappointment over the state of American colleges transcends party lines. About 77% of Republicans and 65% of Democrats say U.S. higher education is heading in the wrong direction, up from 66% and 49% in 2020, respectively. The real culprits of America's education problem may be skyrocketing tuition and lack of entry-level opportunities—pushing new Gen Z graduates into blue-collar careers.
Tuition costs are soaring, and entry-level jobs are disappearing
Americans have a bone to pick with colleges, as Gen Z graduates are leaving school with crushing student loans and a lack of job opportunities.
Around 55% of Americans gave colleges and universities poor ratings when it comes to prepping students for well-paying jobs in the current labor market, according to the Pew data. About 52% also rate the schools poorly in giving financial assistance to students who need it, and 49% say colleges aren't adequately developing pupils' critical thinking and problem-solving skills. This is having a real-time impact on Gen Z's careers.
With tuition costs soaring, many young people are forced to take on debt—or ask their parents to do the same—in order to attend school. The average Gen Zer carries more than $94,000 in personal debt, according to a Newsweek poll, compared with millennials owing roughly $60,000, and Gen Xers $53,000. Earlier this month it was reported that Gen Z saw the steepest annual credit score drop of any age group since 2020. Their average FICO credit score slipped three points to 676, according to the report—39 points lower than the national average of 715.
Gen Zers could pay off their dues by landing high-paying jobs, but those are in short supply. AI is increasingly automating roles traditionally reserved for entry-level workers, or those fresh out of college, locking Gen Z out of stepping-stone jobs essential for career success. As of July, 58% of students who graduated from college in the past year were still trying to find stable work, compared with 25% of millennials and Gen Xers who faced the same issue. And they're losing prospects at some of the most sought-after employers; hiring for new graduates among the 15 largest tech companies fell by over 50% since 2019, according to VC firm SignalFire.
The Gen Z Blue-Collar Wave
Gen Z is searching for professional refuge as AI continues to sweep corporate workplaces—and many have found shelter in blue-collar work.
About 78% of Americans have noticed a rising interest in trade jobs among young adults, according to a 2024 Harris Poll survey for Intuit Credit Karma (Intuit Credit Karma). Many of these roles, from carpenters to electricians, offer the ideal of being your own boss while making good pay. It gives Gen Z workers a chance to skip college and still make six-figures without being burdened by student loans.
Enrollment in vocational-focused community colleges also jumped 16% last year, reaching the highest level since the National Student Clearinghousebegan tracking the data in 2018. And certain professions were catching young workers' eye; there was a 23% surge in Gen Z studying construction trades from 2022 to 2023, and a 7% hike of participation in HVAC and vehicle-repair programs. Even more opportunities are on the horizon, as 3.8 million new manufacturing jobs are expected to open up by 2033, according to research from Deloitte and the Manufacturing Institute.
Even major business leaders are witnessing the trend firsthand. Ford CEO Jim Farley revealed his son didn't follow in his C-suite footsteps, opting to instead work as a mechanic this past summer. He said his kid questioned why he even needs to go to college when he could take up a blue-collar job and be part of an "essential economy," according to Farley.
"Should we be debating this?" Farley recalled discussing with his wife, adding that it's a conversation stirring in many American households. "It should be a debate."