I think an apprenticeship kind of thing could work out well. Have the kids work part-time learning job skills, then part-time general education?
I.... I want to say that's reasonable. My reservation is that I was labeled the stupid kid in grade, and middle school, and they really tried to funnel me into a program like that. A letter was sent home to my mother saying they were afraid I was retarded (that was really in the letter). I was also told I would never get past algebra I. An advanced economics degree and a law degree later.... I was just shy, scared, bullied, and had a speech impediment (a lisp actually, which I no longer do). I just refused to do a single thing they told me about going into a program like that; I was going to college no matter what they said....
If you could somehow make it so it didn't detract from their general education and future prospects that would help reassure me ... for whatever that may be worth.
I think if a KID wants to work then something is wrong, more likely then not the system has failed.
Older teenagers (16+ or so) wanting to work would be okay I would think.
I think an apprenticeship kind of thing could work out well. Have the kids work part-time learning job skills, then part-time general education?
Also known a college?
Well. Some colleges.
I've never seen a college or law school really prepare someone for work. YMMV.
The answer is that there could be a valuable institution providing cheap labor and education to youths on practical skills needed in the workforce.
This all depends on parents, businesses and the government not all screwing it up. Or even not having one screw up.
Bluh, it would probably get horribly abused.
Yeah, it's the horrible abuse I'm worried about.... Foresight is only as far as you can peer into the past. The view isn't good from where I'm looking.
Allowing unrestricted child labor is probably the only way large businesses are going to focus on job creation in America.
O there are jobs.... Pay on the other hand....
That's the thing... they want it as cheap as possible... you don't get any cheaper than offshore child labor... that's what the American labor force is directly competing with.
I talked to one guy at Occupy Indy who claims to have worked as a personal assistant to a corporate executive on Wall Street, and quit when they started asking him to organize retrofitting a personal yacht into a floating child labor camp.
Wouldn't doubt it. Businesses are insanely short sighted and contradictory.
They all want "customers." They love that and the
more money from them, the better.
They all want "employees." They love that and the
less money to them the better.
Employees... are... customers.... If not your own employees, then someone else's.... How are customers supposed to pay lots of money while being paid the absolute minimum?