Vocational Grad School

This was me:

With normal job obtaining methods such as, skill, connections, timing, luck, bachelor’s degree not producing the satisfying results of money, stability, growth potential, I decided to apply to graduate school.

When I was in full tilt application mode, I read a New York Times Magazine article, “What Is It About 20-Somethings” that was virtually written about me. Although incredibly reassured by the article on many levels, i.e. applying to grad school, suffering through unpaid internships, constant moving, unfettered relationships, I felt that it did not place enough emphasis on the economy and the fact that if I could find a job, I would not be dealing with the majority of these issues.

With the idea of grad school equaling job, equaling money, I found the Career Coach at The New York Times published, “A Recession May Be a Time to Go Back to School.” (Noted that it does not say “Good Time” or “Bad Time”.)

Getting really formulaic, Peterson’s – Your Comprehensive Guide to College Information lays out the 20 reasons that you should go to grad school and the 15 reasons that you should not. Among them: 1. Greater earning power, 2. Advance your career, 10. Graduating with large debt and 11. No guarantee of higher salary.

Feeling that journalism graduate school far increased my chances at option 1 and 2 over paying triple for a degree in media studies or art politics, I ultimately enrolled at CUNY Graduate School for Journalism. Seems that Peterson’s forgot a link to Daily Beast’s, 20 Most Useless Degrees, journalism being number 1 or US News, Grad Degree Jobs that pay more than 100K, dentist, doctor, lawyer, with journalist nowhere to be found. Need I even hyper-link that many believe that journalism is close to post mortem, except Jeff Jarvis and the CUNY J-School, of course.

If only I had gone to vocational school out of high school.

Original Caption: “Secretaries, housewives, waitresses, women from all over central Florida are getting into vocational schools to learn war work. Typical are these in the Daytona Beach branch of the Volusia county vocational school.”, 04/1942

(Image from: National Archives and Records Administration via Flickr Creative Commons)

 

Revised Headline:
Get a Job: Graduate School vs. Vocational School

 

Despite an unsteady economy, travelers are on the move.

Consumer confidence recently hit an all-time low in the United States, but travelers are still determined to get away.

The travel industry is not quite at its pre-9/11 vitality, but it is doing better than one might think.

ALTOUR, a travel agency ranked 14th on the 2010 Power List of best travel agencies in the United States, reported that though clients are nervously watching their investments, they are traveling.  And in many cases, they are going further and getting more adventurous than before.  Travel to the Euro zone has rebounded, making the continent ALTOUR’s #1 destination with 85% of clientele traveling there.  But a growing niche of travelers is increasingly turning to industry professionals in their quest for distant, more exotic locales.

South Korea's Gyeongsang Province: on the "exotic travel" radar? (April, 2010)

And they might as well venture far and wide.  Certain American cities, in an effort to relieve their own constrained budgets, are pinching visitor wallets hard with high taxes on travel services like hotels, airports, and dining out.

Despite these financial concerns, luxury travel is thriving.  Long-time backpacker destinations like Australia are making an effort to woo high-end customers with their quality food and wine, spas, and “uniquely Australian experiences”.

For a unique experience, a traveler would be hard pressed to venture farther afield than a luxury North Korean cruise.  The reclusive country launched its first cruise from the port city of Rajin earlier this month.  The ship, formerly used to transport cargo from North Korea to Japan, boasts karaoke and fresh coffee.  Unfortunately there are also reports of no running water in the lower-deck bathrooms.

Revised headline:  “Travel is Moving Despite Recession”

Second Avenue Businesses on Express Train to Unemployment

Since the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) commenced construction on Second Avenue for a new subway line in April 2007, local business owners struggle to stay onboard. The underground blasting, traffic rerouting and construction sites transformed uptown Second Avenue from a bustling, consumer-friendly neighborhood into a community eyesore.

Second Avenue Construction

Construction at 97th St. & 2nd Ave., courtesy of Mark Lyon. (March 2011)

Storeowners’ ability to survive may be further tested, as locals doubt the accuracy of the subway’s December 2016 completion date.  In a recent AM New York report, the Federal Transit Administration placed bets on a February 2018 finish.

Last July, the New York Times reported 29 closed businesses on Second Avenue between 63rd and 96th Streets. Since then, owners continue to close up shop, or at best, layoff employees.

Beach Café owner David Goodside told the Wall Street Journal earlier this week that business at his restaurant on 69th Street and Second Avenue is down 30% since opening in 2008. He laid off four employees this past spring. Ralph Schaller of East 86th Street’s Schaller & Weber Grocery told Crain’s he can relate.

“I guess business will improve when (the construction) is over,” Schaller, who recently fired an employee. “If we’re still around.”

While the MTA and the Manhattan Chamber of Commerce took joint initiative to encourage Second Avenue shopping with February’s “Shop 2nd Avenue, It’s Worth It!” campaign, business owners see no reprieve as jobs and local businesses continue to fade.

WSJ suggested that as a result, neighboring First Avenue is experiencing a revival. Wine bar Felice and the famed 2nd Avenue Deli are among upcoming openings on First Avenue this fall.

REVISED HEADLINE: 2nd Avenue Shops on Express Train to Unemployment

More Info re Curation Assignment

Hi, a student had a couple of questions about the curation assignment, and I thought I’d share my responses:

  1. Can I write in the first person (since it is a blog)? Yes, as long as you provide the curation part.
  2.  Can the post be longer than 250 words? Yes, but I wouldn’t go longer than about 50 words beyond that. Focus on the quality and amount of curation, rather than on writing something longer than most web curation “scanners” would read.