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Blog

Honoring All Jobs

June 26, 2014 by Jim Peacock 7 Comments

Far too often, the message delivered to young people is that “everyone needs to go to college” to be successful. Evidence of this assumption surfaces everywhere. High schools put up signs with seniors who have been accepted into colleges. NPR publishes articles that say the only downside to getting a college degree is not finishing the degree, picking the wrong college, or choosing the wrong major. As a career practitioner this strikes me as odd. Not only is this detrimental to our economy, but it is disrespectful to all those people whose skills and gifts lead them toward trades / crafts occupations. We need all jobs to be honored in this country. It is clear this is not often the case.

trades

There are 10’s of 1000’s of jobs that do not require a college degree that are wonderful choices for people, and YES, make very good money.  I know many people who have great jobs with no bachelors degree, from a great career in the radio business, to auto mechanics, HVAC, and many others. Businesses in the trades / crafts areas are desperate for bright people who can problem solve and produce quality work.  Why do we shuffle EVERY student who is bright in math / science to college?  If they want to work with their hands and produce goods, why wouldn’t we make it OK for them to choose a trade?  I think of the German model of education that provides two different tracks in high school allowing bright young men and women who want to work in a craft or trades area to get the training they need… and it is OK to do this, not second class like it is here.

If you have not read Shop Class As Soul Craft by Matthew Crawford, you should.  He has a PhD in Philosophy and was working for a professional journal writing abstracts, but was always drawn back to his work on motorcycles and the problem solving skills it took to do that job. Matthew is one of many people who probably was given one choice in high school. “You are bright, you are going to college.”  Matthew argues that our country has failed an entire population of people by continuing to cut shop classes and offering high school technical education for those people that can’t go to college.  (noticed I said “can’t go to college” which is loaded with all kinds of implications.  Because they do not LOOK like they are college material?  They don’t learn best by reading? Because they are poor?… this list goes on and on.)

[Read more…] about Honoring All Jobs

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: college career advice, crafts people, craftsmen, honor all jobs, Life Coaching, trades people

Engaged vs Being a Member

May 29, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

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As I prepare for my round table presentation at the National Career Development Association conference in Long Beach in a couple of weeks on “How to create a more vibrant State Career Development Association”, I find myself contemplating on the importance of professional development. Regardless of where I have worked, I have been professionally involved with associations.

I was active in the Association of College Unions-International (ACU-I) while in graduate school and into my career as a Director of Student Activities. I presented at regional conferences and even wrote an article published in ACU-I comparing student governments in New Zealand & Australia to the American model. (This was a great way to rationalize a gap year after grad school backpacking / hitchhiking around New Zealand and Australia).

In my short stint in the Office of Tourism for the State of Maine, I presented to a number of groups in the tourism industry. As a high school guidance counselor, I was involved with the Maine Vocational Association (MVA), Maine Counseling Association (MeCA), and Maine School Counselor Association (MESCA), at Board levels and even as president of MESCA. Now I am a two-time past president of Maine Career Development Association (MCDA). I have learned so much from all of these.

But this is not simply about “being involved” for my own extraverted self. Here is why you might want to consider being more involved with your professional association(s).

[Read more…] about Engaged vs Being a Member

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: continuing education, mentor, mentoring, professional development

Shop Class As SoulCraft. By Matthew Crawford

April 30, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

Shop Class As SoulCraft.  By Matthew Crawford

What an interesting book from a PhD’s point of view on how our society has lost its touch with the trades / crafts people.

soulcraft-book

It’s a bit like Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance partly because the author holds PhD in Philosophy I’m sure.

This has always been one of my soapbox speeches anyway, so I did enjoy this book.  The message in our society is “go to college” and it is told in many ways throughout our lives, in schools, on T.V., in magazines, and on that thing called the Internet.  We are loosing some very talented crafts people who will go on to unhappy lives working at a desk when they would have LOVED working with their hands and figuring out complex problems using machinery.  Some of the brightest young men I ever met were at a high school vocational technical center after I left Colby College a private liberal arts college. One young man in particular was so gifted in the machine tool program that even his instructor who had been a machinist for years was blown away.

[Read more…] about Shop Class As SoulCraft. By Matthew Crawford

Filed Under: Book Reviews

My favorite career bloggers

April 29, 2014 by Jim Peacock 2 Comments

LinkedIn, Twitter, Google +, Facebook, conferences, journals, and more continue to come across our desks as ways to do professional development.  (See previous blog on this topic).

So how do we manage all this information?  I found that there are key people out there writing about topics meaningful to me and that if I follow these key people, they will either sift through the volumes of topics and synthesize for me or they write topics I am interested in.   

DSCN1938 - Version 2

I also use feedly.com to organize various blogs & news I want to follow.  This is an aggregator application which compiles news feeds from a variety of online sources. I have three categories, CAREER, NEWS, and SOCIAL MEDIA. I can then add people / organizations that I want to follow under each category.  Currently I follow two news feeds, one social media marketing feed, and six career feeds.  This does NOT have to be overwhelming.  Keep it simple.  Less is best.  Based upon the input I received in a different LinkedIn groups, I’ve actually added a couple to my feed.

By using Feedly I can log into one place and get a quick snapshot of current blogs, articles, and news.  I
can skim the list and if there is something that looks interesting, I read it.  If I like it, I share it on LinkedIn or PeakCareers Facebook, or Twitter.  This allows me to manage my time and if I had all of these coming into my email I would be overwhelmed.  If I had to actually go out to each person/organizations site, I would never go.  

Here is my list of bloggers I follow.

[Read more…] about My favorite career bloggers

Filed Under: Career Tagged With: bloggers, blogs, career advising, career coaching, college career advice

Graduate to a Great Job. Make your College Degree Pay Off in TODAY’s Market. By David DeLong

April 15, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

graduate-to-a-great-job

Graduate to a Great Job. Make your College Degree Pay Off in TODAY’s Market. By David DeLong

One of my jobs is working part time at Colby College in the Career Center and the Director loaned me this book because David is a Colby alumni and she had recently met him.  Curious, I began reading it when I was covering “drop-in” hours and was hooked immediately.  I finished it over the weekend, great stuff!

This is a book written to college students and their parents and is filled with practical advice on a range of job seeking topics from networking (which is obviously the key piece), the importance of internships, tips on writing a strong resume, interviewing, attitude, and the parents role (one chapter devoted to what parents should and should not do). He also recommends getting into the College Career Center and getting as much as you can out of it while the student is there.

[Read more…] about Graduate to a Great Job. Make your College Degree Pay Off in TODAY’s Market. By David DeLong

Filed Under: Book Reviews Tagged With: academic advising, career advising, career coaching, college career advice, college student advice, David DeLong, Life Coaching

Flat Kate visits Maine

April 13, 2014 by Jim Peacock Leave a Comment

My niece’s daughter, Kate, who lives in Minnesota had a class project after reading Flat Stanley to draw herself on a piece of paper and mail herself to Maine.  My job was to introduce her to the great state of Maine taking pictures, purchasing artifacts / memorabilia and generally showing her around.

Well….. I got into it. Taking her to my Career Development Facilitator (CDF) class one day for presentations, showing her the State Capital, letting her ride some lobsters, and stopping by the President of Colby Colleges’ office for pictures.  I documented some of the places we visited (including the oldest blockhouse from a fort on the Kennebec & Sebasticook River from the 1700’s) and sent her a few items to remember her trip by.

If you are interested in Flat Kate’s travels, check it out here.  https://peak-careers.com/blog/flat-kate/

Don’t forget to listen to a real Maine accent at the end 🙂

Filed Under: Personal

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