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IT careers aren’t cool enough for Canadian high school students

IT careers aren’t cool enough for Canadian high school students By:  Jennifer Kavur On: 16 Jun 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

High school students regard cool and fun factors more than salary and job security when considering their future careers, according to a study conducted by the Conference Board of Canada for the Canadian Coalition for Tomorrow’s ICT Skills and Bell Canada



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A new survey conducted by the Conference Board of Canada for the Canadian Coalition for Tomorrow’s ICT Skills (CCICT) and funded by Bell Canada Inc. suggests high school students aren’t pursuing careers in Information and Communications Technologies (ICT) because they don’t believe the work is fun or cool enough.

The report, Connecting Students to Tomorrow’s Jobs and Careers, is based on interviews with 1,034 Grade nine and Grade ten students from 21 schools in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Montreal and Halifax as well as feedback from 60 parents and 54 guidance/career counselors.

Nearly 77 per cent of students believe ICT jobs offer average or above average pay; 74 per cent believe ICT jobs offers average or above average job security; and 37 per cent believe ICT jobs are above-average in terms of creativity. However, 34 per cent believe ICT jobs are difficult and complex; 31 per cent believe ICT jobs are not fun; and 25 per cent believe ICT jobs are not cool.

“Whether students regard ICT-related careers as appealing or not appear to depend critically on whether they regard ICT jobs as interesting, fun and cool,” states the report.

The driving factor for kids is surprising, according to David Ticolli, executive director of CCICT. “They really are not concerned about whether the jobs are secure or available or whether they pay well, even though they believe that they do,” he said.

While 36 per cent of students reported interest in pursuing ICT careers, 19 per cent found ICT unappealing. Roughly one half are still undecided.

The survey results support a number of the initiatives that the coalition has engaged in for the past year, said Terry Power, president of Sapphire Technologies Canada, a division of Randstad Interim Inc. The Canadian IT staffing firm is a founding member of CCICT, where Power also serves as vice-president of the executive board.

But the main intention behind the survey was to understand the progressive decline in enrolment in computer science programs, Power pointed out.

“There are a lot of assumptions out there,” he said. “Some people thought parents were no longer recommending IT because they got burned in the dot com era, other people were hypothesizing that there was a fear at the high school counsel level that IT jobs are all going to get outshored therefore they weren’t recommending IT paths to kids.”

But the responses had nothing to do with the dot come bust or the fear of longevity, Power added. “They were all about this belief that IT isn’t cool, that the jobs are all heads-down, ‘I’m hanging out on my own in a cubicle and there’s no interaction,’” he said.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur is a senior writer for Computer World Canada.

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