Cool feeder.
I've often wondered how many professions have a built-in forced period of unemployment right after graduation like we do?
I see it as weak professional associations. There have to be ways of protecting the public (licensure) versus not bankrupting new graduates.
Several years ago many schools were allowed to have students sit for the licensing exam during their final semester in order to close the gap. I think it might have been CACREP schools only (I saw it as part of campaign to delegitimize non-CACREP schools).
Lawyers have this issue -- but they can get well paid paralegal jobs while they study for the Bar.
Sounds like they have changed the process since I last looked. We had to wait until we graduated to take the NCE -- that was the delay. Not sure what CCE is -- I see cce-global.org administering all the NBCC exams.
It does seem to be a general rule of graduate-level education that no "real world" lessons and expectations are set. The other place I see this is in the "find your own internship site" attitude of lots of schools -- or at best they assign it to a junior faculty member who already has full-time duties elsewhere.
Same. I guess they see it as a rite of passage or proof of worthiness or something.