Advice to Students: Avoid Unemployable Courses
May 26, 2009
For this reason, even the huge number of opportunities available overseas still cannot solve the unemployment problem of the
It is also the reason why some group does not really view the recent news of 200,000 jobs for skilled and professional Filipino workers in the Middle East and
Lito Soriano, the executive director of the Federation of Manpower Exporters (FAME) and president of LBS E-Recruitment Solutions Corp. said, “In choosing a career path, do not go for popular but for employable courses.”
According to Soriano, employment opportunities really abound in the Middle East – specifically in
“They were at the jobsite, so it must be true. It’s a welcome development to the workers, industry, and the economy. [However], the situation is still the same. We don’t have enough qualified Filipino workers to fill the job openings," he said.
To solve this problem, educational institutions and the students should set their eyes on the really “employable" courses.
Soriano said, “It goes back to what I have been repeatedly saying, the education sector and new graduates should review their options."
He further explained that majority of the applicants who got hired are those with previous work experience. Fresh graduates are left out because they do not have the right qualifications.
Some of the popular courses for incoming college freshmen that Soriano claims have become unemployable are hotel and restaurant management (HRM), nursing and information and communication technology (ICT). Students take these courses in college with the notion that they are in-demand and that many attractive opportunities are waiting for them upon graduation.
“In truth, there are so many graduates of these courses who are either unemployed or were forced to get a job that is totally not related like those in call centers,” Soriano explained.
The recruitment consultant said that the said courses have also become popular abroad so many countries need not hire foreign workers for their manpower demand.
The recruitment consultant recommends the following courses to students: engineering, physical and occupational therapy, laboratory technician and other vocational courses.
Soriano also reminds the Philippine government to give more information about the legitimate job openings as the news of job opportunities abroad can be used by illegal recruiters to victimize hopeful applicants.