October 29th, 2009Learning – The Real Cost
Recently published long term studies have indicated that on average, it costs a total of 193,000 pounds to bring up a child in the UK – equating to approximately 26-28 pounds each day. This news was received with a swathe of cynical reactions from long suffering parents, few of whom were totally shocked.
Many pundits are now evaluating the current recession and its effect on traditional education systems with consistent reference to the strategies to survive adopted by parents, educators and students alike in the recession of the 1990’s.
Analysis suggests that on average up to 40 percent of the entire household disposable income is spent on education and schooling overall. With the hardening attitude towards bank lending and mortgage allocation this figure could rise as our young people stay with their parents for longer before leaving the nest and lengthen their education programs – almost as a by product of something to do whilst we wait for things to get better.
With an ever increasing family focus on the cost of living, alongside many companies cutting back on training and development programs – it is pointless spending money on training when you do not know for certain that the person will not be made redundant – it is small wonder that many people are now reviewing their method of personal development and the subject matter that they study in.
Banking, public services and the like have historically been considered long term stable employers and attracted people in accordance with that. Over the last ten or so years this has been largely superseded by the perception of positions on offer within the IT industry.
Unlike training in engineering or the motor industry (where key skills have mostly to be gained in a practical environment), IT training can predominantly be home based. Whilst it’s difficult to transport a complete car production line into a home, computer based training is a different matter. Progress in the intellectual property field such as IT have grown exponentially because of this and the continued developments in the way the skills are taught and learned.
New training methodology utilising 24/7 remote access to highly skilled lecturers adds weight to the strategy and the final result is certification in a field that is widely sought after throughout the world. Along with easily quantified salary and career structures it is little wonder that IT training is so attractive.
With many people unsure of their future, whether early on in their career or mid way through life, home based training in subjects such as IT can often be seen as a superb, low cost, easy paced development program; gaining skills that are easily accepted anywhere in the world and highly resilient in a changeable economic environment.
(C) 2009. Browse LearningLolly.com for superb information on Publisher 2007 and Publisher 2007 Training.