Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Appreciating the importance of vocational education
Appreciating the importance of vocational education
Jan 2, 2026 8:40 PM

If there is one thing young people believe in collectively, it is their individuality. “No two people are alike,” the refrain goes. But in the age of Common Core, educational systems too often treat all students alike, glossing over their unique skills and abilities. A top-down, cookie-cutter curriculum and the decline of vocational education have left too many children, on both sides of the Atlantic, without an ability to exercise their gifts.

Erik Lidström, who has written extensively on educational policies in Europe, charts the processin a new essay on theReligion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite. In “The sad death of vocational education,” he looks at how new educational policies effectively locked talented young people out of the workforce. In a sweeping historical narrative he notes that – in his native Sweden, as in the United States – literacy antedated the federal government’s intervention in curricula:

Sweden began implementing government schools for the general population from 1842 onwards. Children started school at age seven, and schooling pulsory for six years. The schools employed traditional teaching methods, and by the time students were 12 or 13 years old, they knew more, in total than those who today finish high school (albeit in different subjects).On average they knew how to read and write, in addition to algebra, history, and civics – all arguably better than their modern, 19-year-old counterparts.

In the 1950s, though, “experts” began de-emphasizing vocational education, adding years of “abstract and theoretical” education. The changes caused those students who are more interested in technical fields to tune out – and to disrupt the studies of their college-bound classmates. Everyone suffered,Lidström wrote:

In contrast [to the pre-Fifties era], lecturers at Uppsala Universitywrotethat, in 2013, “Among the students e to us right from high school, a majority has problems with the language.” Elsewhere, half of those who begin high schooldo not masterthe mathematics they were supposed to learn between the ages of 10 and 12.

Under the new experts, technical jobs were presented as less prestigious, valuable, and fulfilling than “intellectual” jobs in “the professions.” Readers will see the same phenomenon at work in the United States.Mike Rowe once said such jobs are practically considered“vocational consolation prizes.”

“Because of the destructive policies of “experts” and politicians, it has e exceedingly difficult to e a good tradesman,”Lidström writes.

Yet those professions have lifted generations out of poverty – and that is itself sometimes the genesis of the opposition. In 1831, when Reverend Simeon S. Jocelyn tried to open a vocational college for blacks in New Haven, Connecticut – town residents, including Yale University, shut him down. The infamous post-Reconstruction Black Codes existed in no small part to petition from black laborers – in the process raising white wages (and consumers’ costs).

Modern antipathy to technical work was not shared by Martin Luther King Jr., who said, “All labor that uplifts humanity has dignity and importance.” Lidström agrees, writing:

There are no “higher” and “lower” vocations in life. The academic may enjoy a higher social status in some circles. But that person has not achieved a more praiseworthy function than the plumber or the carpenter. In any modern economy, there aretens of thousands of different jobsto be done. All are necessary, and if done right, all praiseworthy. …

Finding our niche in life, our vocation, is never easy, and some achieve this more perfectly than others. But our work creates mutually beneficial relationships with others. We continuously adjust to their desires, they to ours, and gradually we all more-or-less find our ways.

The new transatlantic emphasis on apprenticeshipsmay begin to correct course and and help more young people find out how to serve others in their own unique, individual way.

Read his full article here.

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
As Venezuela Crumbles, Will America’s New ‘Socialists’ Pay Attention?
The Venezuelan economy is buckling under the weight of its severe socialist policies, and even as its president admits to a nationwide economic emergency, the government continues to affirm the drivers behind the collapse,blaminglow oil prices and global capitalism instead. This was supposed to be the dawn of “21st-century socialism,” as the late President Hugo Chavez proclaimed over 10 years plete with the right tweaks and upgrades to its materialistic, mechanistic approach to the human person. “We have assumed mitment...
Explainer: Obama’s New Overtime Rule
What just happened? On May 18, the Obama administration announced the publication of a new Department of Labor rule updating and expanding overtime regulations. Why did the overtime rule change? Since the 1930s some white collar jobs (i.e., those performed in an administrative setting) have been exempt from the overtime requirement. The white collar exemption salary level was adjusted in 2004 to $455 per week or $23,660a year. The new rule will entitle most salaried white collar workers earning less...
Sanders’ Policies Won’t Get Us Scandinavian ‘Socialism’
Today at The Stream, I examine the dissonance between the goals of Vermont senator Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign and his mended means: [W]hile Sanders’ goals may parable to Scandinavia, there’s little Nordic about his means. It all reminds me of a quip from the Russian Orthodox philosopher S. L. Frank, a refugee from the brutality of actual, Soviet socialism. “The leaders of the French Revolution desired to attain liberty, equality, fraternity, and the kingdom of truth and reason, but they...
Why Christians Care About Economics
“Economic activity is one of the mon and basic forms of human interaction and the Bible has much to say about it,” says Dale Arand. “However, it takes time to understand plexities of our modern economy so that we can better apply God’s principles to our everyday activity.” Arand offer five reasons it’s worthwhile to understand economics, including: 3) We want our government to restrain evil, not enable it. We know stealing and lying are wrong, but in our economy...
Video: Rev. Sirico on Private Property as the Solid Ground for Religious Liberty
The spring session of the 2016 Acton Lecture Series closed on May 17th with an address by Acton Institute President Rev. Robert A. Sirico entitled “Freedom Indivisible: Private Property as the Solid Ground for Religious Liberty,” which examinedhow private property provides an essential foundation forreligious liberty in a free and virtuous society. We’re pleased to share the lecture with you via the video player below. ...
The ‘Good Food Now!’ Olive Garden Crusade
Your writer lives beyond the outskirts of Midland, Michigan, a small Midwestern town that is buoyed fortuitously by a Fortune pany. It’s a nifty place: Population around 50,000, a plethora of parks and bike trails, three rivers converging west of town, relatively low crime rate, and plenty of establishments of both the local and national variety in which to dine out. One of these eateries is the Darden Restaurants, Inc. chain Olive Garden. Can’t say I’ve ever dined there, but...
David Bentley Hart and the ‘Pelagian Criticism of Wealth’
Following up on yesterday’s post “Samuel Gregg on David Bentley Hart and Murderous Markets,” Rev. Gregory Jensen, author of the Acton book The Cure for Consumerism, observes that “Hart’s assertion that ‘the New Testament treats such wealth not merely as a spiritual danger, and not merely as a blessing that should not be misused, but as an intrinsic evil’ is simply wrong.” Writing at his Palamas Institute site, Jensen, an Orthodox Christian priest, added that “it is a gross overstatement...
5 Ways Obama’s New Overtime Rule Will Harm Workers
In announcing the Obama administration’s new overtime rule (for more on this news, see this explainer), Vice President Joe Biden panies will “face a choice” to either pay their workers for the overtime that they work, or cap the hours that their salaried workers making below $47,500 at 40 hours each work week. “Either way, the worker wins,” Biden said. Biden has held political office for more than four decades, and yet he has still not learned one of the...
French Catholic Bishop Dominique Rey: ‘Thinking Outside the Box’
Bishop Dominique Rey speaking at Acton’s April 20 conference in Rome. Yesterday in the French section of the Vatican’s newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, an exclusive interview finally appeared with the outspoken Bishop Dominique Rey of Toulon-Fréjus. Bishop Rey provided the interview when in Rome last month to speak about the current challenges to religious and economic freedom in Europe at the Acton Institute’s conference “Freedom with Justice: Rerum Novarum and the New Things of Our Time“. The May 19 headline “Sortir...
Explainer: What is Going on in Venezuela?
What’s going on in Venezuela? Because of high inflation and unemployment, Venezuela has the most miserable economy in the world. The country currently has an inflation rate of 180 percent, but that’s expected to increase 1,642 percent by next year. The current unemployment rate is 17 percent, and the IMF projects it will reach nearly 21 percent next year. The country is also crippled by shortages of goods and services. A few weeks ago Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro instituted a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved