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Do you think the PAP stands for compassion?

VIBGYOR

Alfrescian
Loyal
May 4, 2009
MY THOUGHTS

For fresh grads, a Catch-22 situation


By Tan Ying Ding


IT HAS been nine months and 10 days since I graduated - for me, a transitional period that I call bittersweet.

Now, with a recent letter from the Central Provident Fund Board requesting I repay in cash the amount withdrawn for my university education, I'm reminded that I am among the statistics of fresh graduates struggling to land a job in the current global economic downturn.

Since I graduated in July, I have sent a total of 32 resumes to statutory boards, government ministries, private financial institutions, etc.

Six companies replied - five to offer me an interview, one to reject me.

Though my peers might have sent out more cover letters and resumes, I believe there is a growing sentiment of depression felt equally by us all - we might have consigned ourselves to the waiting room of Limbo, considering the need to seek a psychiatrist.

More companies have frozen their headcounts, others have retracted job offers - as has happened with a few of my friends. Still others are cutting back on hiring fresh graduates with little or no working experience.

Indeed, after seven months of trying, I even allowed myself to be coaxed by a licensed representative of a leading life insurance company in Singapore into taking the Capital Markets & Financial Advisory Services Module 5 examination (requisite for all representatives of licensed and exempted financial advisers).

This, even though the social stigma currently attached to the job of a financial adviser clashes with my introverted personality.

In the meantime, it seems I'm caught in a perennial waiting game.

I send resumes and cover letters, then wait to hear from the human resource personnel. I take screening and personality tests, then wait for the actual job interview, where I wait again for the inevitable but dreaded question: 'What is the reason for your unemployment gap?'

Call it a Catch-22 for fresh graduates: we don't have the experience needed for the job, but how can we prove ourselves if we cannot get anyone to hire us in the first place?

The market, having shifted from a seller's market to a buyer's market in the months before I graduated, does not look set to improve - quite the contrary, in fact.

Come this July, the graduating class of undergraduates from the three local universities will be unleashed into the job market, and competition might well intensify.

This influx is one more concern, especially for those like me.

I read sociology, considered a general degree, which I had thought would offer me considerable options in the working world.

After all, my peers who opted out of the honours track and hence graduated a year earlier than I did are all working in very different professions: sales, teaching, banking, communications and even airspace management, to name but a few.

But it seems my repeated tries are telling me otherwise.

While I do not disparage the discipline for which I have much respect, I do in hindsight wonder if it was prudent for me to have chosen my major out of interest rather than practical reasons.

Now, I am dejected, and at times worried that the woes of my unemployed status will spill over into other areas of my life.

Wallowing in self-misery, however, is not a solution.

In the meantime, I have chosen to give tuition, which has been a really rewarding experience.

As my students grow and improve, I find myself with more assignments coming my way. Even more, I am determined to keep my chin up, though I still long for the day when I can be truly proud of that graduation portrait of mine silently residing in the living room.


The writer, 25, graduated from NUS last year with a degree in sociology. He is currently giving tuition while applying feverishly for a job.
 

ScarFace

Alfrescian
Loyal
1. Piss All Peasants
2. Please Ask Politely
3. Peasants Are Poor
4. Poke Arse Purveyors
5. Pride And Prejudice
6. Principality And Peasants
7. Piss And Poop
8.
 

yellow_people

Alfrescian
Loyal
I don't see what PAP's compassion has to do with this 25 year old fresh grad's issue. His education has given him the means to earn a living in these difficult times through tuition. Afterall no govt owes its citizens a living. Mr. Tan ought to be grateful that he has the privilige to be born and raised in Singapore. It could have been a whole lot worse.

Yet in the 10 months since he graduated he has sent out "32 resumes to statutory boards, government ministries, private financial institutions".. sounds like a picky individual who's life goes to pieces when it does not turn up the way it is supposed to. It never ever does in reality. You adapt to your environment. That's what an education is supposted to equip you with. Is this the reason why, employers are increasingly favoring the hiring of FTs?

Most of our grads like Mr. Tan may have excellent academic qualifications.. but they have alot to learn about life. Perhaps that is where I believe the FTs have a distinct and clear edge over the local pedigrees.
 

Vendetta

Alfrescian
Loyal
This kuku can always go apply to be a teacher instead of whining about not being able to find a job!?!

:biggrin:
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
When he applies for job, he should look at the area of regional rather than the pathetic 640 sq km of land.

If he does that, he will have oversea working experience and even get himself an unsinkified foreign gf.

Isn't it a win - win situation?

Oh i forgot, sinkie education doesn't equip him with such high level of creativity and independence. oops.. My bad..
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
I don't see what PAP's compassion has to do with this 25 year old fresh grad's issue. His education has given him the means to earn a living in these difficult times through tuition. Afterall no govt owes its citizens a living. Mr. Tan ought to be grateful that he has the privilige to be born and raised in Singapore. It could have been a whole lot worse.

Yet in the 10 months since he graduated he has sent out "32 resumes to statutory boards, government ministries, private financial institutions".. sounds like a picky individual who's life goes to pieces when it does not turn up the way it is supposed to. It never ever does in reality. You adapt to your environment. That's what an education is supposted to equip you with. Is this the reason why, employers are increasingly favoring the hiring of FTs?

Most of our grads like Mr. Tan may have excellent academic qualifications.. but they have alot to learn about life. Perhaps that is where I believe the FTs have a distinct and clear edge over the local pedigrees.

He seems to stick to follow the rules of life like a formula. There is right formula for being successful,

Only the formula for behavior such as compassion, righteous and proper. All of these are labelled as Unsinkified Character.
 

SIFU

Alfrescian
Loyal
CB KIa tonychat,

your own thread no one post huh :biggrin:

fucking pathetic.. now got to spam other threads with your nonsense again :oIo::oIo::oIo:
 
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