fmtjfw
Senior Member
- Location
- Fairmont, WV, USA
"If you have a certificate that you're an electrician, it doesn't matter if you do it in Hamburg or Berlin," Stellmaszek says. "Companies know what they get."
Europeans are often baffled when they try to hire U.S. workers, she says.
"You don't really know what you get," she says. "If someone tells you they're an electrician, they could have just exchanged light bulbs at an amusement park or they could have worked, maybe, at complex problems."
Stellmazek knows it's impossible to import such an elaborate program to the U.S. It's based on the guild system of the 1800s, and counts on reciprocity ? workers trained by a company must work their first three years for that company before they can leave. But the program is also the reason Germany isn't seeing a skills gap like the U.S.
The above is a quote from a representative of the German - American Chamber of Commerce in Atlanta, GA, USA (representing German firms with US plants). It is about the the problems they have hiring tradesmen/women above minimum skills and below college degrees.
What do you think?
It has been my experience that students from HS level trade schools vary from those who can install and program PLCs and complex motor starter systems, to those that use green wire as a hot conductor.
http://www.npr.org/2014/03/08/287549571/what-germans-know-could-help-bridge-u-s-workers-skill-gap