Abstract
There are two paradox in Indonesian education recently,
firstly is the paradox of job offer and vacancy. Thousands of high
school/diploma 3 and university graduates struggle to seek for jobs during
market job fair, on the other hands, Saturday’s papers keep on advertising a
lot of job vacancies from many companies. There are many educated young people
who find difficulty in finding jobs; on the contrary there are many companies
which find difficulty in finding qualified employees.
The second paradox is the fact that many successful
people in their career turn out not to be the students who always got high grades
at their former education. And there are many people who had high scores at
their former education are not the successful people in the career later. It
seems there is no significant relation between what they learn at schools and
their success in their careers.
Series of observations and interviews found out that to
be successful, someone should have hard skills, like being intelligent and
creative, and mastering his/her field. Also soft skills, like being hard worker,
information seeker, risk taker, problem solver, always learning new things, having
lots of friends and partners in collaboration, and having a concern for others.
The above paradox may illustrate that Indonesian
education so far is not comprehensive as it emphasizes on hard skills and neglects
the soft skills. It is high time to rethink the Indonesian education.
Keywords: education, paradox, hard skills, soft skills.
Introduction
When there was a job fair in
Surabaya, thousands of job seekers come hoping to get a job there (www.jppn.com. Accessed 14 August 2013). Similar
situation happened every time there was a job fair in other big cities in
Indonesia. This is an indicator that many Indonesian youth are looking for work
in Indonesia. This is also supported by the results of tracer studies conducted
by several universities (Samani, 2011). Inequality number of job seekers
compared with job vacancies offered at job fairs showed how difficult young
people get a job.
Interviews with job seekers illustrated
how difficult it was to find a job, even though they were graduates of leading
colleges (Samani, 2012). The data also showed that those who found difficulty
to find jobs were not only college graduates, but also vocational graduates,
although the school is designed to make the graduates ready to enter the work
(Saifuddin, 2014). Tracers study on vocational schools showed a mismatch
between the work and the majors’ background (Samani, 2011). It showed the difficulty of vocational
graduates to get jobs.
With the large numbers of
applicants, does it mean industries would be very easy to get employees in
accordance with the standards? Are not there so many applicants, so they just
choose the best among them? Apparently this is not the case. Every Saturday, Indonesian
newspapers contain lots of advertisements from companies seeking new employees.
The number of these ads shows that it is not easy for the industries to look
for employees who have the desired qualifications. PT PAMA’s (a leading company
in Indonesia) experience showed, if there were 100 applicants, those who passed
the psychology selection were a maximum of only 25 people, and then those who
passed in interview test were only a maximum of 5 people. The figures were the most
optimistic at the level of mechanical and operators. The higher the job level
the more difficult it gets (Subekti, 2014).
Competence Discrepancy between the Schools of the World
of Work
Why does it happen?
Apparently there is a discrepancy competencies learned in school and university
with the world of work desired competencies. Need assessment done with the
industries found that the desired world of work competencies are: (1) master his/her
expertise, (2) capable of reasoning well, (3) has a good working attitude,
among other things: honest, disciplined, hard working and responsible, (4)
problem solver, (5) able to communicate well, (6) and able to collaborate with
others (Samani, 2010).
Mastering his/her expertise
and ability to reason properly referred to as the hard skills, while others
called soft skills. Industries consider soft skills are very important. Vocational
skills can be quickly trained, but forming a working attitude is difficult
(Kamilan, 2014). This phenomenon is in line with the reports of Chapman &
Hammond (2013) that the industries require employees who have good soft skills;
so that they are immediately ready to work. That is why most of the ads look
for employees who have work experience. Those who already have work experience
are expected to have sufficient soft skills, so industries do not need to train
them more (Samani, 2012).
Are only employees who
require soft skills? It is apparently not so. A series of depth interviews with
school principals, teachers, graduate students, corporate managers, was
conducted to collect information about: (1) whether their friends while
studying at the previous school/college who always got high marks and was
praised by the teacher/lecturer, are now the most successful compared to other
friends, (2) their friends who are now (as an adult and work) the most
successful in the work: how their scores when they were at school/college and
what kind of activities they had at school and outside school/college. (3) That they are successful
now, what seems to be the key to their success.
It turns out that those who
always got top marks when they were at school/college are not always the most
successful people when they are adults and work. Those who are now the most
successful in work and society, most of them got ordinary marks when they were
at schools/college, but they were active in social activities both within the
school/college and in the community.Even many of them worked while they were
students of the school/college (Samani, 2012).
Why they are very successful
in their career and daily life? It is
found that the key to their success is much more influenced by the provision of
soft skills, such as hard
worker, problem solver, creative, resilient, capable to communicate and
collaborate well, and risk taker (Samani, 2012). These factors were also confirmed by FGD
results carried out by PhD students at State University of Surabaya.
The importance of soft skills appears to increase in the 21st
century. Dalin and Rust (1996), Rich
(2001), Wagner (2008), Trilling and Fadel (2009) are some of the expert, with
different terms, who remind the importance of soft skills for the 21st
century. Even Wagner (2008) questions
"why even our best schools do not teach the new survival skills our
children need ". Handy (1997) criticizes “I believe we need a totally new
kind of schooling which not about learning knowledge and fact, but to help the
student to know what to do with all this knowledge and how to do it”. In the
era of technology, work method changes very quickly. What workers need is capability and curiosity
to learn new technology related to his/her jobs. High order thinking is needed to response new
work method with advance technology. Problem solving is everyday task faced by
most workers now. Most of task in
industries are carried out in the form of collaboration, so capability in
communication and collaboration are very important.
What we need to handle that kind of work situation? Dallin and Rust
offer what they call life skills, Wagner offer what he call the survival
skills, Trilling and Fadel offer what they call 21st century skills
and Rich offer what she call mega skills.
The skills offered by those expert are very similar and most of them can
be categorized as soft skills. They show a huge evidence and arguments why the
skills offered are very important in the era of technology.
We get two paradox, here. First,
between the difficulty of job seekers to find job and the difficulty of
industries to find good new employees.
Second, the people who got good mark in school/college but do not
success in their career, while the successful people got ordinary marks during
in schools/college. It seems that from
their school/college, the graduates do not get the key competencies needed to
get a good job and to be successful.
Where those successful people managed to develop the soft skills? Depth
interviews with some successful people concluded that they acquired the soft
skills from their experience in the organization's activities and from working
while going to school/college. The obligation to manage their time made them
develop self-management and always looked for opportunities. Interaction with
colleagues with different backgrounds made them developed the ability to
communicate and cooperate. Their enjoyment to handle task in his/her organization
and the requirement to do school/college task, made them get used to working
hard and never giving up. Participation in the organization was also an
excellent vehicle to build networks and take risks (Samani, 2014).
Formal education praxis in Indonesia has not put soft skills as an
important part of education. Theoretically soft skills has been known long
before. One of the fathers of Indonesian Education, Ki HajarDewantara (2004)
has already mentioned the importance of the character or budi pekerti in education. Law on National Educational System also states
clearly that the purpose of education is to develop students to become
religious, healthy, scientific, creative, and independent human being, having
good character and becoming good citizen. Curriculum in Indonesia also mentions the
importance of three domains of education, namely cognitive, affective and psychomotor.
Unfortunately the character and the affective domain as the basic of
soft skills are only relied on a nurturant effect and not a deliberate
educational purpose. Therefore there is no part on the lesson plan how to
achieve it. Also there is no specific
measurement tools how to check the achievement either. It makes character and
affective domain are neglected during teaching and learning process. So it can be understood that successful
people acquire soft skills not from schools/lectures, but from work and
participation in community organizations.
Indonesian government and educators have to consider the education praxis
in schools and colleges. The phenomena
described above shows that the education praxis in schools teaches the mismatch
competencies from the real world needs.
They focused only on hard skills and neglected soft skills needed by
world of work. It makes the graduates
get difficulty to get job and makes them to learn soft skills from another
activities.
From industries’ point of view, this means high cost. Industries need a big budget to give a long job
training or even retraining for the new employees. That is why industries
prefer to get new employees who have work experience, so they don’t need such
training. It also cuts down time needed
in managing the new employees. From graduates’
point of view, they are at loss because most competencies they acquired at
school are not those needed by world of work. From government’ point of view that is money
wasting, because it funds a mismatch education.
We have to rethink our education and soft skills should have greater
attention.
I don’t say that we do not need hard skills to be successful, we do need
it. People will get difficulty to get
job when he/she does not have any hard skills.
People will not get success when he/she does not have higher thinking
skills. But we need soft skills as well. People will not success when he/she does not
have good capability to communicate and collaborate with other people. He/she needs to work hard, to work creatively
and to responsible to his/her task.
Recommendation
Education has to pay attention to both skills and put them into teaching
learning objectives. Teacher has to
elaborate the two sides of teaching learning objectives in his/her lesson plan
and measure them in his/her students achievements. School principal has to develop school
culture that boost students’ soft skill development. Student achievement report
must contain soft skills as well as hard skills, so that the teacher pay an
equal attention to both aspects.
Do we need new subjects for soft skills domain? I don’t think so. Soft skills competencies should be
deliberately developed and measured the results in the process of education.
But it is not necessarily in the form of soft skills subjects. Soft skills and
hard skills are both necessary and should be united as life skills developed
and integrated in the learning process (Samani, 2010). Hard skills can be
learned as the content and soft skills are developed within the content.
As an example, in history
class, students can learn how to work hard, collaborate with their friends and solving
problems through learning history. The
history teacher should insert the spirit of work hard and collaboration in his
lesson plan, develop and practice them in the history class. Both the history
and these skills are integrated and measured. Another example is during an
extracurricular activities, soft skills might be developed, but it should be
planned and measured well
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