Back-to-school shopping this year might entail a tool belt and goggles instead of textbooks and binders.
Enrollment at US community colleges focused on vocational skills rose 16% in 2023 to its highest level since 2018, according to National Student Clearinghouse data. The number of students enrolled in four-year colleges rose just 0.8%.
Gen Z is driving that trend as a generation faced with unique challenges, per The Wall Street Journal.
These factors have enticed young people to explore options outside of traditional schooling. In a Jobber survey of 1k Americans ages 18-20, 75% said they would be interested in paid training at a vocational school.
Adding to the temptation, 2023 was the fourth consecutive year that the median pay for new construction workers was higher than that of new hires in professional services or information industries.
The median annual pay for new construction workers rose 5.1% to ~$48k in 2023, compared to new professional hires whose pay was ~$39.5k.
The new trend means that more workers are entering skilled trade occupations, and they’re younger.
More young people in the trades means skilled professions are getting a rebrand. And technology is helping: Some vocational programs are replacing outdated tools with high-tech solutions like robots.
Speaking of tech, one last reason some are turning to skilled trades: AI.
Jobber’s survey found that 34% of respondents felt trade careers could offer more job security than desk jobs as generative AI takes off.