Thursday, 12 November 2015

Choosing a profession - Be Professional About It

Making a “Professional Choice” about Professions

In ancient India, we were born into professions. If you were born in a family of carpenters, you would also in all probability be trained to be one, same with professions like cobblers, farmers, priests, masons, state rulers / kings and many others. Is there value in this approach to getting into a profession? The flip side of this approach has been debated – the merits & demerits of inheriting a career both for the individual and the society. With mankind constantly organizing them differently – their needs, the sociological topography have become drivers for their profession.

On the ancient approach to professions, I think there is merit in that process – simply because it is driven by knowledge. The skills, richness of past experience being easily accessible to all in the family, the skills, output would flourish more. For example, a musician who’s house resonates with music each day is surely likely to influence the child / member of that family with the knowledge being more easily accessible and available, so also with a politician, administrator, army personnel. Factors on aptitude, capability, interest & past experiences in that profession have more recently played an important role in eventually crafting one’s career. However, on the point of knowledge acquisition, there is a starter’s advantage. The base of the profession is knowledge which is central to the family / community. The focus was on excellence – different trades / skills flourished, expertise further honed. Exclusivity of knowledge is what a lot of institutions have challenged when they standardize education and make it more accessible to a larger community.

India is poised to gain from both schools of thought – only if we do not reject the old while accepting the new.

To me the deeper question is what should be the focus while choosing how to spend time whilst on this planet – to most of us in urban centres it is about being gainfully employed.

To me this is as much a philosophical question as much as a live human resource question in organizations.

Let us continue our journey on choice of professions.

Later in the 1940’s till the 1960’s, with the growth of cities and industrial hubs, jobs were linked to education. Education level was an indication of intelligence. A Masters degree in literature was as valuable as a Masters in Mathematics. Degrees in both disciplines were perceived as equally intelligent acquisitions. Social sciences, physical sciences were taught, appreciated and present in equal measure. Our grandparents who had a B.A degree in Maths or Economics were well respected for their qualification. Besides the degree, it also showcased their ability to focus on a subject, work hard and clear those exams then. (without coaching classes or model papers....the sheer power of reading multiple textbooks and spending time in libraries made them strong and also achievers in their era). An under-graduate convocation ceremony B.A, B.Sc would be celebrated in their hearts (without ostentation) and welcomed at home and in the neighbourhood with warmth and good regard for the degree earned.

Then, came the 1980’s where an undergraduate degree was no embellishment on your visiting card. The number of graduates rose, the number of jobs probably did not keep pace. You had the media (especially films) on how young educated youth did not get employment and took to wrong ways. Debates on education system being irrelevant to the job market became louder and prominent.

However, that was another inflection point – a shift from education for education’s sake to education for job / industry’s sake However, each time the society re-aligned skills to the ‘job market”, it is important to note that it fooled itself when it blamed the knowledge it acquired. For example, a skill called “typing” in urban centres and in corporates made one more valuable. Supplementing a graduate degree with a typing skill or some similar skill made it easier to find the job. You find a starker reflection of this later in the 1990’s as well – the countless computer courses equipping oneself for a job. This is possibly one point of inflection where the knowledge acquired got re-aligned to the job market with an absolutely different tool – totally at a tangent with the core degree or knowledge acquired. Where my core degree could be in another field but one upskilled oneself to gain employment – Degree in Chemical engg but an IT professional. And mass tendency was to move towards “successful” industries.

Creating Skill gaps in the society: Mass inference

Later in the 1990’s – it was the IT revolution which took its toll on most other disciplines. A job in IT meant being not merely a graduate but an engineering graduate. IT also meant great working environment, opportunity to earn more, opportunity to live in places across the globe (which had then and still have much higher standards of living). Therefore, somewhere the mass inference was good intelligence = being an engineer = getting a job in IT = having arrived in life, therefore it is a good knowledge to acquire. We rationalize when we see success – I call it success rationalisation. In the process, some also found their true love in IT and some more out of societal compulsions / situations.

What it did to other disciplines in those two decades is something we will look at in another write up since the present focus is on how we choose our profession. Since, skills can be acquired, increasingly the trend is to make choices in higher education based on future outcomes it begets – more so in terms of extent and probability of monetary gains.

From family inheritance of an occupation, to skill based education and societal inheritance (peer pressure), the third variable in our career decision (and the first for many now) is the return on investment. When we see education for its return on investments – the learning / seeking knowledge goals is more likely than not to be diluted. The electives are chosen on what will appeal most in the job market (mind plays its tricks on you it justifies that you are gaining knowledge – but the purpose is to justify returns).

With the IT boom hijacking most engineering colleges, did anyone pause to think what happened to the other streams – civil, marine, instrumental. (This has wider implications, when the country needs these skills, a decade or two later).

I see this decade long boom period for specific skill sets as small disrupters for knowledge seekers, a degree / subject becomes a favourite because you see big-gains in the job market. There is no problem in being the country’s favourite discipline as long it does not become the only connotation of success in that decade.

In this phase, the majority start equating money with intelligence – which is the biggest misgiving a professional can ever have. Profession is about knowledge. Not all knowledge lends itself to high pay. Knowledge lends itself to being at the core of the subject, understanding its nuances and dancing with its applications /observations. Money is only an incidental outcome, a bi-product depending on level of industrial activity and in no way should it be allowed to assess the worth of any stream of work at its absolute core level.

Today, as I even write this, choice of education / profession is largely determined by seeing outcomes which others have had – for example, being an engineer still pays off, doing an MBA pays off even better. If the information of who, which field, which job / institute earned the most was not available to all of us, we would make more well informed decisions.

The MBA course always existed – today it is not just about knowledge, it reflects your education status, your visibility as a professional, probability of higher paying jobs, faster growth etc.

If for a moment, we could hide the career paths & the compensation earned by your Engineer / MBA cousins and neighbours, would you have still chosen the path simply looking at their jobs just as a child says he loves choclates or would like to be a teacher! It is only as interesting if not less interesting, than the curator’s job in the museum, the social worker’s job in an NGO, the teacher’s job in a school. When new age students say they are pursuing a professional course for passion – my only response to them is teaching needs a lot of passion too! Then why not become a teacher. All I seek is love for one’s subject – only then can we allow knowledge to flourish seamlessly.

Few courses and professions which do not have a stream of applicants are more likely to have the “passionate few” who do it for the love of the subject / work without allowing monetary considerations interfere with their career decisions. Journalism, politics, teaching, sports, music, counseling, geologists, marine divers, coast guards are some instances of unique professions which always have a call beyond one’s job brief!

The list of Padma awardees is one to reckon with – it was not derived from the most sought after course across nations by top percentile students….the list comprised of artistes, sportsmen, people who influenced society (no designation can describe such jobs) – most of them in pursuits which nobody would have been able to pursue with a calculation of ROI on education costs. They have their soul in congruence with their knowledge..hence they perform naturally.

As increasing number of people aspiring for higher education, we fool ourselves – we think we are getting knowledge but we meander into making ourselves employable in a rather unpredictable world. If we stick to gaining knowledge, chances of survival in an unpredictable world is even more.

We also fool ourselves by saying that today there is greater choice – are we not limiting ourselves to certain degrees? Have we changed the basis of our choice. The determinants of choice limit our choices. The ROI comes in the way of truly healthy choice. Healthy choice is a luxury for few with high risk appetite or passion.

Question for Reflection for young in India would be – if all your basic needs were provided for, which education / knowledge would you have really chosen?”

Find your knowledge and live for the love of Knowledge!

Author

Ms. Kanchana Manyam

No comments:

Post a Comment