Give examples of educated
unemployment
Answers
Answer:
Dr. Milind Sahasrabuddhe
Indrajit bairagya
Explanation:
Answer:
it is having an education and not being employed in your field or at all. You can have too much education for jobs that exist. I have the equivalent of a 2-year degree (AAS) in Electronics. This got me a dead end job for about 25 years. I went to college for a lot of this time, part-time. I have now have an AS Mathematics (1989), BLS (Bachelor of Liberal Studies) in Computer Information Science (Computer Science and General Business) (1996), and a MS in Computer Information Systems (2000). I got laid off and I cannot even get another Electronics Technician even though I do well on their entrance tests. So, I have educated myself right out of the workforce. I tried to get a job with a statewide grocery store chain three times and no job, even though I did work at a Target making $8/hour for about 6 months.
Of course I tried for 20 years to get a software job and no job. Part of this is age discrimination and part is the Catch-22 of needing 3–5 years of experience in order to get the job and needing the job in order to get the experience. I did have one recruiter actually say that I should be praised for sticking out so long to get college degrees but she still did not get me a job either.
I have 4 STEM degrees and apparently am unemployable (took early retirement from unemployment)!
I hope that this answers your question