Organization:Praxis

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Short description: US for-profit apprenticeship program
Praxis
File:Praxis, break the mold logo, vertical.jpg
Type of site
Education
Available inEnglish
OwnerIsaac Morehouse
Key people2013
Websitewww.discoverpraxis.com
CommercialYes
Current statusActive

Praxis is a for-profit apprenticeship program in the USA. It places young people at paid positions with startup companies.[1] Participants in the program are not required to have a college degree.[2][3][4] Praxis was founded by Isaac Morehouse in 2013.[5][6]

Background

After interacting with businesspeople and students while working for an libertarian nonprofit, Praxis founder Isaac Morehouse noticed a skills gap between recently graduated college students and employers.[7] Having been homeschooled himself and then exposed to a university-education, Morehouse noticed the disparity in skills taught and skills demanded by the professional world, as well as the frustration faced by students who expected a job upon graduation.[7] This led Morehouse to believe that most of the perceived value of a college degree comes from its value as a signaling mechanism, showing employers that a candidate is superior to those without the signal. Employers told Morehouse that a lack of work experience was the primary reason they did not hire candidates with college degrees.[5] Morehouse founded Praxis in 2013 as an alternative signal for employers and students, combining traditional educational components with work experience.[7]

Description

Praxis places participants with business partners to work 30 hours per week as an employee (as opposed to a traditional intern).[8] Participants then complete 10 hours per week's worth of coursework designed by professors contracted with Praxis. The academic and non-academic subjects in the curriculum is designed to instill a level of entrepreneurial thinking in the participants, and to challenge them to think broadly about complex questions.[9] The combination of hands-on work experience, technical education in the curriculum, and a liberal arts education is designed to train participants to work practically and to be analytic thinkers.[10]

Praxis also features resume and writing workshops, public speaking seminars, professional networking opportunities and a variety of professional development projects, both within the business partner context and within the broader scope of the program. Motivated by the belief that college costs are disproportionately high relative to the payoff of a degree, Morehouse designed the program to give participants "the best of a college education and real-world work experience."[11]

The program is additionally structured as to provide low-cost, high-quality labor to small businesses and startups.[12]

Curriculum

The Praxis curriculum covers economics, history, entrepreneurship, and technology.[citation needed]

The curriculum includes an additional portfolio project and hard skills module, which includes resume writing skills, writing development, interview skills, and public speaking skills.

Each subject in the Praxis curriculum is designed to prepare participants to be entrepreneurs. A notable feature of the Praxis curriculum is that participants are encouraged to engage directly with the material, and to challenge material they find superfluous, and replace it with similar material deemed more useful by participants.

See also

  • Academically Adrift
  • In the Basement of the Ivory Tower
  • Real Education: Four Simple Truths for Bringing America's Schools Back to Reality
  • UnCollege
  • Thiel Fellowship

References

  1. Magill, Derek (October 22, 2015). "The UM Dropout Whose Startup Wants to Get You Your Dream Job Without a College Degree". The Michigan Review. http://www.michiganreview.com/derek-magill-praxis/. Retrieved 26 August 2016. 
  2. The Freeman "Is There a Viable Alternative to College?" by Jeffrey Tucker, July 13, 2013
  3. Capitol Confidential As Higher Education Bubble Accelerates, Alternative Emerge By Jarrett Skorup, July 17, 2013
  4. John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy "Boot Camp for Professional Careers" By Anders Edwardsson and Jay Schalin, September 27, 2013
  5. 5.0 5.1 Real Clear Radio Hour Breaking the Mold-A Practical Alternative to College
  6. Boucher, Stephen (December 2, 2015). ""Companies don't care about degrees": As credentials lose their value, state subsidized university makes no sense". The Rebel. http://www.therebel.media/_companies_don_t_care_about_degrees. Retrieved 26 August 2016. 
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 Conversations with FiFi and T.K. Don't Go To College
  8. Alister & Paine Seven Questions with the Guy Who's Disrupting Education
  9. Praxis Blog Is A Liberal Arts Education Valuable? By Isaac Morehouse, November 7, 2013
  10. Praxis Blog Is Praxis Only For Entrepreneurs?
  11. YouTube Praxis: A Real World Education
  12. Praxis Praxis for Business

External links