- The study cited is of job listing data by Indeed/HiringLab: https://www.hiringlab.org/2024/02/27/educational-requirement...
See halfway down the graph 'Educational requirements in job postings, by sector'. It varies hugely by sector.
- It seems a lot of people end up in college and really don’t study hard, and for those people, if it replaces their jobs, that is life. For the people that take meaningful disciplines and study hard, AI can be a tool to help them. But they need the base intelligence to correct and navigate the output.
- NY Post is not a journalistic outfit and doesn't belong on this site
- In general yes, but in this particular case the NYPost is citing a real study on job listing data by Indeed/HiringLab:
https://www.hiringlab.org/2024/02/27/educational-requirement...
Read that actual study directly, rather than the NY Post.
- The sensational "...as AI infiltrates the workplace" isn't supported by the study, which separately assesses the growth of skills-based hiring and GenAI replacing certain jobs.
The study says:
> It’s unclear at the moment whether comparatively high or low potential exposure to GenAI technologies is positive or negative for knowledge workers, and what impact it will have on educational requirements going forward.
The headline makes it seem like college degrees are being obviated by AI, and that isn't the case yet for anything except (maybe) graphic design.
- Right, and in fact the HiringLab article undermines the sensational claims by NY Post that things aren't proven to be doing anything other than returning to pre-pandemic:
> But while the long-term downward trend is clear, the uptick in bachelor’s and graduate degree requirements observed between summer 2020 and early 2022 — when the US labor market was tightening, with demand for workers exceeding worker supply — is interesting. One possible explanation is that the increase coincides with a rise in quits and a spike in pandemic-driven early retirements. A sudden exodus of experienced and educated workers may have prompted a flood of backfill postings from employers seeking a close match to those workers who had recently departed.
or succinctly "some employers will tend to specify the highest level of educational requirement they think the current job market will offer".
Of course if Indeed had broken things out by specific employers or categories, it would be way more useful than just one stupid average.