a vocational tutor to do in one year, what a school teacher couldn’t do in 11 years.
I’m seeing too many young chefs cancelling shifts at work because they have to stay behind at college and do extra lessons in maths and English.
Surely the idea of college is to prepare students for the professional workplace. So encouraging them to cancel a shift in order to fulfil a disillusioned assessment board, seems to go against the grain. That’s a little “ranty” I know. Sorry! But like I mentioned earlier, having been an instructor at a college and now an employer. I can see several industries losing potentially solid employees at the first hurdle.
Like I’ve mentioned. This is just my personal view which I felt like sharing. Some people may agree, some will disagree. I find the whole subject area very interesting and education and preparing children for the future is something I am very interested in for obvious reasons.
I have spoken with fellow chefs, caterers and other people who work in various types of professional environments. Most will agree that to find a young person to start employment with the right work ethic is rare. They are usually unprepared for a professional working environment.
Why? Realistically, I don’t know the answer. As a father of three children, one of whom is at college himself. I can honestly say I m a little shocked that his college course is only 18 hours long per week. Fortunately, he works a few days a week at a bar, doing long shifts. Where I feel he may be better prepared than most when eventually going in to full time employment.
A recent work experience student was scheduled in for a full 12-hour day. Well, I planned to have him shadow me from 10:30am until close. By 4pm It was clear that he was flagging. This made me think about this whole issue. These students are going through college after leaving school and are not used to working or focussing on a job/task for more than a few hours. They have been raised on a diet of 100 minute lessons and breaks every few hours. This does not happen in catering.
I don’t have the solution. I can’t even guess where to start to be able to rectify the situation. All I can do is offer work experience to young people and hope that they “get it!”. The road to success is not always about academic achievements. It can come in many forms and also be measured in many ways.
Knife of Brian is Head chef at the Greyhound Ipswich and Knife of Brian Cookery & Catering. He supports CALM (campaign against living miserably ) male suicide charity and has just finished his first pop up event at the Suffolk Show and would be a gigolo if he wasn't a chef.
For more blogs like this from Knife of Brian visit his website www.knifeofbrian.co.uk