Viewing 38 posts - 1 through 38 (of 38 total)
  • cycling officers, why do you need a degree.
  • oldgit
    Free Member

    ?
    Why for example do my experiences count for nothing.
    Almost half a century of knowledge and passion for everything cycling.
    Thirty years of working in the private sector working on building contracts for the public sector.
    Bugger all knowledge of transport systems 😐 but what’s to know. They’re all just big hard things that cars go up and down, what else is there.
    I know that painting a few yards of kerbside green doesn’t make for a cycling town.
    And winning over the won over 🙄 won’t change a thing.

    duntstick
    Free Member

    Come to France and try to start a MTB business……………….

    grumm
    Free Member

    Cos everyone who’s not properly thick has a degree these days. 😛

    geoffj
    Full Member

    It’s an easy, if lazy, way of restricting the applicants for a job.
    Any decent employer would say, formal qualification and/or relevant experience.
    And tbf riding a bike a lot, does not necessarily qualify you to be a cycling officer.

    andy7t2
    Free Member

    I’d imagine that if you are designing traffic systems some kind of qualification would be required

    duntstick
    Free Member

    It’s the way of the world, experience counts for bugger all, box ticking qualis are where it’s at! 😯

    crikey
    Free Member

    Imagine Sean Kelly trying to do the job; it’s about more than riding a bike….

    project
    Free Member

    You dont need a degree to design roads or traffic light controled junctions,just a sheet of paper, the ability to never have to drive or ride on what you design,the ability to draw lots of lines, be colour blind, so you paint random green, or red bits, or in london town blue bits,

    Then you know when youve done a good job,when all the papers slag your work off, and people avoid your junction, thus ensuring less cars use it,thus making it look like youve improved it.

    Award yourself another coloured pen or a pay rise.

    MrSynthpop
    Free Member

    If its a public sector job i’m surprised they can eliminate experience in favour of degree – may be worth querying as it effectively discriminates against anyone who went to work before the explosion in degree courses.

    Drac
    Full Member

    Other way around asking for experience can be classed as discrimination, asking for a set qualification isn’t.

    Stoatsbrother
    Free Member

    Because nearly 50% of kids go to university these days – yet only about 51% of kids get passes in 5 GCSEs including English & Maths. So having a degree has become an entry level qualification.

    oldgit
    Free Member

    Hmm pretty sure that all the traffic systems in these parts were designed by monkeys orbiting the earth in a space station.

    Elfinsafety
    Free Member

    [video]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kPANKRHL9HU[/video]

    oldgit
    Free Member

    That’s Hemel Hempstead 😀

    Brilliant system if you know about it. One out of town driver who doesn’t and it’s chaos.

    Elfinsafety
    Free Member

    That’s Hemel Hempstead

    See that’s why you don’t deserve the job.

    oldgit
    Free Member

    Anyroadup who’s gonna stop me buying my own green paint?

    Elfinsafety
    Free Member

    You’ll get sectioned you know, if you carry on like that. You can’t just go out and paint bits of road green.

    oldgit
    Free Member

    Okay then Blue.

    Elfinsafety
    Free Member

    😆

    I love you… 😳

    BigJohn
    Full Member

    If they ask for a degree…give them a degree. A 2:1 from Bradford in Textile Technology if they want specifics.

    CaptJon
    Free Member

    Bugger all knowledge of transport systems but what’s to know. They’re all just big hard things that cars go up and down, what else is there.

    Please tell me that was your answer to one of the question on the application form.

    will1
    Free Member

    If it’s for the local authority then the job description is usually changed to suit someone who already works for them. Outsiders often get interviews but the job is already earmarked for someone internally but they have to go through the motions – wrong but it definitely goes on.

    allthepies
    Free Member

    Weed out the riff-raff ?

    hels
    Free Member

    Grum – I think you will find that a lot of people who are proper thick have degrees these days.

    anokdale
    Free Member

    Got to agree with will1 one there, the job has been created for someone i reckon, point is you cannot beat experience oldgit 😉

    tron
    Free Member

    Good education challenges you and changes the way you think. It’s about more than just the knowledge you pick up on the course.

    It also provides a handy way of proving that someone can deal with large amounts of complex information in a short period of time, which is handy when you’re wading through rules and regs.

    ampthill
    Full Member

    Who says you need a degree, I thought I new one without a degree…

    MSP
    Full Member

    tron – Member

    Good education challenges you and changes the way you think. It’s about more than just the knowledge you pick up on the course.

    It also provides a handy way of proving that someone can deal with large amounts of complex information in a short period of time, which is handy when you’re wading through rules and regs.

    I found working life much more complicated than my degree course. While I do believe in the need for some higher education, I think the current expansion of further education has been about moving the burden of training from companies to the tax payer and massaging unemployment figures.
    My degree in computer science provided me with little useful knowledge, and now 20 years later anything I did learn has been obsolete for over half my working life. I just wish that there were decent education options that allowed me to add to my skills as an adult.
    Try finding a local college that runs a project management course of any description, then see how all of them run courses in flower arranging and hair dressing.

    uluru
    Free Member

    I think in these economic times it’s far more likely that the post is advertised because it can’t be filled internally. All our jobs are advertised as internal only in the first instance, they’re only advertised externally if they can’t be filled.

    clubber
    Free Member

    tron – Member

    Good education challenges you and changes the way you think. It’s about more than just the knowledge you pick up on the course.

    It also provides a handy way of proving that someone can deal with large amounts of complex information in a short period of time, which is handy when you’re wading through rules and regs.

    LOL – not necessarily…

    Funnily enough though this is a debate I’ve had a couple of times when hiring people for my department. I (Masters Degree) always say that a degree is desirable but not essential while the other guys in my dept (no degrees) say that a degree is essential…

    My degree has next to no relevance to my job. All it shows was that I did it. Frankly, anyone of reasonable intelligence can get a half decent degree with a moderate amount of work. It proves next to nothing when considering how good someone will be at a real world job. In fact, I often think that if I’d not gone to uni, while I’d have missed out on some brilliant times, I’d have done at least as well, if not better career-wise.

    tron
    Free Member

    Note that I said “good education”. 😀

    pjt201
    Free Member

    Which council is hiring a cycle officer? All the ones I deal with have just been given the axe! Councils see cycling as an easy budget cut I think.

    mogrim
    Full Member

    Which council is hiring a cycle officer? All the ones I deal with have just been given the axe! Councils see cycling as an easy budget cut I think.

    Devil’s advocate: Why does a council need a cycling officer?

    molgrips
    Free Member

    t what’s to know. They’re all just big hard things that cars go up and down

    Serious? 😯

    clubber
    Free Member

    tron – Member
    Note that I said “good education”.

    That’s the thing though – if you saw my cv, that’s exactly what you’d say…

    leggyblonde
    Free Member

    I blame president blairs

    thomthumb
    Free Member

    apply anyway; explain in your covering letter about lack of degree

    Bugger all knowledge of transport systems but what’s to know. They’re all just big hard things that cars go up and down, what else is there.

    I strongly recommend rewording this!! 😆

    orena45
    Full Member

    Experience will count for a lot, possibly more than a degree. Saying a degree is desirable/required is so that you get a reasonably educated person who can carry out tasks like writing reports, work to deadlines etc applying.

    I used to be an LA (local authority, not Los Angeles…that would’ve been awesome) Cycling Officer and really enjoyed it, wish I was still doing it rather than ‘general’ highways design I do now.

    If you want the job, don’t be a pessimist and apply for it and see what happens, you’ll almost definately get an interview at the very least IMHO. 🙂

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