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I truly do not know anybody who thinks they are owed a job after graduation. They work hard, get internships, and still can't get jobs because people just don't wanna hire or they want X amount of experience which is bs. You're saying they don't wanna work and bust their ass to get a foot in somewhere, companies aren't letting people even put a toe in
I agree. I think there are a lot of annoying things about millennials (I'm sort of halfway between gen X and a millennial) but I do think that they catch too much flack for not working hard. A lot of them definitely know what hard work is about, but it's like you're saying, companies aren't letting people even get halfway in the door. I got very very lucky. I got a pretty much useless degree in philosophy. Now, I found out a cool way to spin it for job interviews, but I lucked out and wasn't been asked about my education.
I took a few years off school to work in the music business, then I went back and finished. I got lucky as fukk and got a job in web design/marketing within 2 weeks after I graduated college. I found recently from my boss that the ONLY reason i got hired was because my references said I worked hard.
They didn't care about what I knew in this field, nor my education. Now that I have a "career" type of job, the fact that I have a philosophy degree hopefully won't cripple me like I thought it would, because I can move this job experience into a lot of areas.
But I got very lucky, and my decision to take time off school actually helped. Most people I know that went straight from high school and blew through college in 4 years are serving or living at home with their parents. It's tough out there. they say there are more jobs, but they're all low paying jobs.