I'm potentially going to offend at least someone on here but I feel I need to say this.
I've found over the years that the best people in most work places are the ones with a limited academic background.
I was in the police for fifteen years of my life and towards the end of my time I saw graduates coming into the job at Inspector rank. These people had various qualifications for this and that, but they were completely useless and no one had any respect for them. One young lady who had been a data analysis came in straight as Inspector and never spoke to any of her staff - she used to sit in her office all day and just send e-mails to every one when she could have done it face to face.
My own sergeant had been in the service for over twenty five years and was one of the best supervisors I ever had. He had joined the service at 18 and left school with no qualifications! He was desperate to get promoted to Inspector but failed his interview board twice. However, people with appalling management skills were getting promoted into the higher ranks and this was down to a combination of things like degrees and business qualifications and sometimes a bit of favouritism.
Again on another note, my friends son is now 22. He left school with top GCSE results and then went on to do A levels. The lad is a complete bum though - you cannot have a proper conversation with him and he's got a similar personality to Harry Enfields Kevin & Perry characters. My friend is pulling is hair out because his son has no people skills and he thinks the world owes him a living. My friend has been trying to get him to apply for an apprenticeship but this lad is turning his nose up at anything that pays less than 40k a year. His attitude stinks!
I'm one these people who struggle with exams and interviews but can put my mind to any job and be great at what I do. There are other people out there who seem to waltz through exams and higher education courses like a breeze but cannot actually put their knowledge into practice.
Don't be put off by the whole qualification thing as you have probably got more life skills than a lot of other applicants.
Don’t really agree with this.
Where I am there’s people with what might be described as having a “limited educational background” and they’re absolutely useless - the approach to getting a defective train going is to punch every button, jab every switch, curse, and then hope that by luck the train moves, which quite often it doesn’t. Likewise it’s not much cop having people who can’t write a coherent report or entry on a trouble card.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the spectrum there’s people of “limited educational background” who are wonderful - can get any train going no matter what, or can put a disrupted service back together in a seemingly effortless fashion.
Attitude and personality is a far better indicator of a good railwayman; someone who resents someone else’s education is as bad as the stereotypical graduate who has trouble relating to non-graduates. Both are just as bad in their own ways. I’d suggest the examples given are of people with bad attitude / bad personality rather than because of their educational background.
If there’s four quadrants made up of graduate/excellent, graduate/useless, 40 years experience/excellent, 40 years experience/useless then I’d say all four boxes are populated fairly evenly. Just from my local area I can quite happily fill all four. Neither should length of service ever be equated with competence in my experience.