Published 28 April 201622 May 2016 · Main Posts / The media / Higher education Specialisation is destroying my generation Joshua Krook Gertrude Stein originally called those who returned from World War I a ‘lost generation’, disoriented, wandering directionless through life, battered and broken by the war and unable to contribute to literary endeavours. Today’s youth face not a war of arms, but a war of credentials. Lost beneath a pile of requisite qualifications, the credentialism required of the young today doesn’t allow for young intellectuals to emerge into the public sphere, leaving much of the cultural thinking, writing and literature of our time to the boomer generation. The war of credentials forces a rigorous specialisation of the young, who are fast becoming the new lost generation as a result, setting aside artistic, philosophical and intellectual inquiry for the more mundane, specialised roles of the service economy. A cursory glance at history reveals why this trend is occurring. Ever since the 1990s there has been a steady increase in academic inflation; the number of degrees or certifications required to attain certain jobs and the devaluing of all degrees as a result of more and more people gaining said qualifications. Think supply and demand. Where a high school certificate was sufficient to get a job in journalism or business a few years ago, now these jobs demand a bachelors degree. Where a bachelors degree was sufficient to enter a job like research, now a masters degree is required. The number of masters degrees in particular has doubled from the early 1980s to the late 2000s. Millennials, as the primary victims of this form of academic inflation, are faced with a uniquely prolonged, expensive and inefficient entry into the job market, at a time when youth unemployment in Australia is at its highest level in twenty years. Prolonged tertiary education increases costs with no discernible greater outcome: young people are studying longer to get the exact same jobs, just as they are working four times harder to buy the exact same homes that their parents bought in the 1980s. The requirements of ‘expertise’ for public commentary has particularly inflated, with self-expression on topical issues like politics, society and government often requiring a PhD to gain access to a public media platform. Jessica Reid, features editor of The Guardian, mimics most editors by suggesting: ‘don’t pitch [an article]… without expertise.’ More often than not, the requisite for expertise is a PhD in the relevant field. The list of public intellectuals on television runs long with these certified PhD-wielding baby boomers: the likes of Richard Dawkins, the late Christopher Hitchens, Neil DeGrasse Tyson and so on. But the list of millennials runs thin. The time frame alone required to obtain a PhD locks millennials out of public policy discussions until their early thirties. At a time when information can be obtained exponentially faster than fifty years ago, there is a bottleneck on innovative thought and argument. Attached to this prolonged gaining of ‘expertise’ is the onset of specialisation caused by the attainment of all of these masters and PhD programs. Specialisation through a masters or PhD decreases the likelihood that the resultant thirty year old ‘expert’ will be able to contribute to a wide-ranging discussion on social and public issues outside of their ‘niche’ area of expertise. The problem is even now prevalent at the lower, undergraduate level, as Ivy League educator William Deresiewicz explains: When students get to college, they hear a couple of speeches telling them to ask the big questions, and when they graduate, they hear a couple more speeches telling them to ask the big questions. And in between, they spend four years taking courses that train them to ask the little questions – specialised courses, taught by specialised professors, aimed at specialised students. Never has the requirement of specialisation been more prevalent than in the current Australian media landscape. Even when a story is written specifically about millennials, the resultant article will likely be written by a fifty year old. Why? Because millennials lack the requisite qualifications to write about their own lives. When Annabel Crabb wrote, for example, that ‘the animal onesies fad is a primeval and collective animal howl of rage from a generation that cannot afford to move out of home’, she did not quote a single millennial on the issue. When young people do appear in the Australian media they appear as comedians, people who are literally there to not take themselves seriously. Any young comedian who begins to express an opinion on a public issue will face a backlash from baby boomers telling them to shut up and make us laugh, do some real work, or some other equivalent aphorism. Comedians are there to tell jokes not make social commentary. Leave the commentary to the fifty-year-old experts. An old catchcry from Socrates is the now-common phrase: ‘the unexamined life is not worth living’. Today’s equivalent is: ‘shut up and do your job, because your life is not worth examining’. Or more specifically, ‘shut up and do more examinations, until you’re an expert, then you may speak’. It is not surprising then, to see that the new great publishing houses require greater evidence of expertise at a level never before seen in history for nonfiction authors. At the same time, humanities departments around the world celebrate the ‘great books’ of Western civilisation, almost unanimously written by people without PhDs or masters degrees; Hobbes, Rousseau, Socrates, Aristotle and Shakespeare, as prime examples. Indeed, a resurrected Shakespeare would be turned away from Oxford’s graduate program of creative writing because he lacks the requisite undergraduate degree in an appropriate major: English, Writing or Literature. If the greatest minds of history cannot compete with today’s credentialism, then what hope do millennials have? The risks of sidelining the young until their early thirties should be obvious: we risk a lack of new inventions, technologies, creations, art, intellectual and literary achievement. We risk a new ‘lost generation’ of public intellectuals to the rabbit hole of specialisation. Instead of creating a class of specialised experts, we should be empowering the young to pursue a short and general style of education, which prepares them to take a role in the world as a whole, rather than in a single occupation. The production of new Shakespeares and Aristotles requires no less than a radical rethink about the so-called benefits of specialised education. – If you liked this article, please subscribe or donate. Joshua Krook Joshua Krook is a writer and law academic researching the future of legal education. He typically writes about technology, the future of work, and philosophy for his personal blog New Intrigue, and serves as Law Editor for the Oxford Political Review. More by Joshua Krook › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 8 November 20248 November 2024 · Poetry Announcing the final results of the 2024 Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers Editorial Team After careful consideration, judges Karen Wyld and Eugenia Flynn have selected first place and two runners-up to form the final results of this year’s Nakata Brophy Prize! 4 October 202418 October 2024 · Main Posts Announcing the Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers 2024 longlist Editorial Team Sponsored by Trinity College at the University of Melbourne and supporters, the Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers, established in 2014 and now in its ninth year, recognises the talent of young Indigenous writers across Australia.