Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Appreciating the importance of vocational education
Appreciating the importance of vocational education
Jan 25, 2026 4:20 AM

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
Charles Koch on Cronyism
You are unlikely to find a pair of siblings who are both as admired and reviled as the Koch brothers. Charles and David Koch are billionaire philanthropists, heads of the nation’s second largest pany, and activists who promote libertarian causes. To many on the right, the brothers are virtuous champions of liberty. To many on the left, the duo is the greatest threat to humanity since global warning (which some on the left would directly attribute to the Kochs). Both...
Is Being Bossy Bad?
The newest celeb campaign ing out against bullying, getting kids to eat their veggies and to go outside and play) is to stop women from being bossy. Actually, what they seem to want to do is ban the illusion of bossiness; that is, men are leaders and women are bossy. Well, that’s silly. And bossy. (yes, it’s a real website) says: When a little boy asserts himself, he’s called a “leader.” Yet when a little girl does the same, she...
‘Stop Being Poor’
Admittedly, “stop being poor” sounds a bit like “let them eat cake.” The remark was made by Todd Wilemon, a managing director at NYSE Euronext, when he was asked what people should do if they could not afford health insurance. “Stop being poor,” was his answer. Callous? Crude? Mean? Not really. Kevin D. Williamson explains how the ineptly-named Affordable Care Act isn’t providing insurance for all who can’t afford it. Appropriating a certain amount of money and labeling it “health...
Michael Miller: Pope Francis, Social Justice And Religion
Trending at today’s Aleteia, Michael Matheson Miller discusses Pope Francis and his call to social justice. Miller asks the question, “Do orthodoxy and social justice have to be mutually exclusive?” Miller says there is a “pervasive, false dichotomy between theological doctrine and social justice that has dominated much of Catholic thought and preaching since the 1960s.” Intrigued by the precedent that Pope Francis is setting in this area, Miller says, From his first moments as pope, Francis has urged Christians...
Our Sad Sex Economy
As much as progressives balk at the “imposition” of religious morality and the church in public and social spaces, secular humanism’s moral relativism is not working in America and continues to leave children vulnerable to profound evil. For example, the Urban Institute recently released a report on the economy of America’s sex industry — and the numbers are astounding. The Urban Institute’s study investigated the scale of the mercial sex economy (UCSE) in eight major US cities — Atlanta, Dallas,...
Jesus Christ, a Small Businessman at Work
Mark Tooley of IRD highlights a talk by Michael Novak, “Jesus Was a Small Businessman.” Speaking to students at the Catholic University of America, Novak observed: When he was the age of most of you in this room, then, Jesus was helping run a small business. There on a hillside in Nazareth, he found the freedom to be creative, to measure exactly, and to make beautiful wood-pieces. Here he was able to serve others, even to please them by the...
Scarlett Johansson, Oxfam, and ICCR Shareholders
Enough time has passed for this Denver Broncos fan to address a kerfuffle surrounding this year’s Super Bowl. I’m writing, of course, about Hollywood siren and liberal activist Scarlett Johansson, who appeared in a Super Bowl mercial to the chagrin of international charity Oxfam for which the otherworldly beauty served nine years as official spokesperson. Oxfam, listed in the Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility’s 2014 Proxy Resolutions and Voting Guide “Guide to Sponsors,” told Johansson she had to choose between...
The Hayekian Liberty of Ender’s Game
My conversion into a fan of science-fiction began with an unusual order from a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff: “Each Marine shall read a minimum of three books from the [Commandant’s Professional Reading List] each year.” Included on the list of books suitable for shaping the minds of young Lance Corporals like me were two sci-fi novels: Robert Heinlein’s Starship Troopers and Orson Scott Card’s Ender’s Game. I soon discovered what lay hidden in these literary gems. Along...
Diversity, Inclusion And Conversation: But Only If You’re Just Like Us
The definition of “diversity” is “the condition of having or posed of differing elements : variety; especially : the inclusion of different types of people (as people of different races or cultures) in a group or organization.” It appears, however, that diversity for some folks mean “only if you agree with or are just like us.” In Olympia, Wash., South Puget Sound Community College’s Diversity and Equity Center planned a “Happy Hour” for staff and employees in order to discuss...
Survey Results: What Do You Look for in a Pastor?
One month ago, I posted a link to a survey asking ten questions about what people look for in a pastor, promising to post the results one month later. The idea was to try to shed some light on the disconnect between supply and demand when es to ministers looking for a call and churches looking for a minister. The first thing that should be said is that, while I am grateful to all who participated, the sample size is...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved