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Mike Coslo wrote:
.. . . . So what makes a youngster decide to become a Ham? We can try using the input of those who became Hams at a young age. Most of what I have heard is that the person was very interested in the technical aspects involved with getting on the air. Making antennas, building rigs, and getting them on the air was a big part of the attraction. I was one of those back in the "Golden Era" of ham radio. There were two basic types of kids who got into ham radio. Those who had a strong interest in electronics and enjoyed building their rigs and such many of whom went on to become EEs and EE techs. The other category consisted of kids whose interests were in using ham radio to *communicate*. I was one of those. I was a certified geek from a tender age but I didn't have much interest in electronics as such because I was far more interested in things mechanical which eventually led me into a career in mechanical enginering with DXing and contesting strictly on a hobby basis. Others in this group had no particular interests in technical matters at all. When I look back at all the kid hams I knew and what they've done since then on the job and in the hobby it's about a 30/70 split. 30% are into electronics, 70% are not and never were. One of my young ham acquaintances from back then became a priest for instance. As often as not having to study electronics and do soldering iron pushups were friggin' obstacles to getting on the air. In the end, I believe that it is young people that have a technical interest that will likely become Hams. And that, I believe, is the crux of the issue. Sort of. Bottom line here though is that ham radio has historically attracted a much broader group of kids than just those with an interest in electronics. America is not a place that encourages those who might be thinking of a technical career. We have a tendency to encourage a more "pop culture" outlook, which as often as not discounts actual learning for "street cred", There's another factor here. I raised three kids and they're raising a total of five kids under Pop-pop's "close supervision". The problem I'm seeing at least within today's version of the Yuppy class is overprogrammed kids and sports. Their lives are consumed by carefully planned "events" mom & dad have arranged for them. Football practice here then more football practice, soccer practice, two swim meets this week and oops let's not forget Corryne's dance class and there goes mom "Crap, I gotta be in three places at the same time again!" There aren't any open slots in the kids' schedules for some quiet soldering iron time on their own. It's obsessive, massive and insane. and actually turns the smart person into an object of ridicule. I'm not laying any claims to being particulary smart and I took a lot of cheap shots about being a geek up thru my junior high school years. I wasn't alone with this problem either, all us young hams had to deal with it to one extent or another. I was lucky because I've never been bothered by "peer pressure", fuggem, "meet me out by the swings after school . . ". The wilting lilly type geeks had it much tougher but I don't remember any who pulled out of ham radio because of the crap they took from other kids. The big drivers kids have is their parents, if the parents support their interests the geeks will be OK. If the parents don't support or think much of their interests the geek kids have a real problem. My parents were very supportive of my interest in ham radio (except when I blotted out the TV while Dad while watching the Friday nite Gillete fights. "Radios off NOW". Click). I don't see where life has changed very much in this respect. There are levels, and there are levels. If a person is intelligent, and wants a good livelihood, you will find careers that are acceptable. You can be a movie star, or perhaps a lawyer. A whole spectrum follows, but engineering and the technical fields are not very high on that list. How often is the Techie portrayed as a sort of Bill Nye, the science guy type (at best). How about the smart woman who takes off her glasses and suddenly becomes the hot babe? Professor Frink on "The Simpsons"? Pop culture is not kind to the technical types. My experiences with programs like "bring your sons and daughters to work day" shows that almost none of the kids is even thinking of a technical field. A lot want to be lawyers. Kids ain't stupid, they follow the money. Problem there is that one of these days the lawyer biz is gonna tank because of overpopulation. Once in the past, we were scared into thinking that maybe science and technology was maybe not such a bad thing. That happened when the commies launched Sputnik. Suddenly it seemed important that at least some of our kids decided to work in the sciences. Hopefully we will decide that again without having to be shocked into it. Don't even get me started on that debacle. I was one of the first to find Sputnik 1 on 15M which I did with the ham club's old Hammarlund rcvr. Long story but I'll spare ya that one. Kids flocked to engineering schools in battalions then they dumped into the Apollo program. When that bubble broke months after the Apollo program ended several years later something like 200,000 graduate engineers found themselves out on the bricks looking for jobs. I met a guy in that timeframe who was one of those. You won't believe this one but it's true: This guy had spent his entire professional career "engineering" NASA control and annunciator panel PILOT LAMPS for God's sake! He finally found a job as a real estate agent and barely beat the sheriff to the title for his abode. Thousands of others weren't so lucky. These guys (and a few gals, very few) have raised their kids and are becoming grandparents today. They have clout, they been there in volume. I wouldn't expect them to encourage acquiring technical educations, at least not in engineering, I would expect a lot of lingering bitterness about engineering careers on their parts. As much as I've enjoyed my 40+ year engineering career even I'd hesitate about encouraging a kid to get into the biz. Like everything else the engineering of the products we use is being shipped offshore. I dunno, don't look good to me . . I am pretty firmly convinced that until we stop catering to the least common denominator, until we stop marginalizing the technically and scientifically inclined, we will not find many youngsters who want to come into our hobby. I agree with that 100% but it would take years to have any noticeable effect. Taking the topic out a bit further so what if ham radio shrinks, even if it shrinks a bunch? What would be the real-world implications? A bit less clout at the FCC? The League might have to lay off a few bodies? After that what?? We have a helluva lot more hams today per capita today than we had back in the "Golden Era". If we lost half of us we'd still be ahead. We've been sitting ducks for years with respect to losing some of our spectrum space above 30Mhz. and it has nothing do with the number of valid ham tickets. The huge change from the "Golden Era" involves the HF spectrum. HF radio has become almost passe as far as it's commercial value is concerned. Hell, the FCC is dumping BPL all over it, sez it all. So I don't see where even a precipitous drop the number of ham tickets will have any effect on our HF privs. So what's left to get excited about?? With or without kids citizens of all ages will continue to come into the hobby which will continue to evolve just like it has for the past century. I dunno what ham radio will be like 25-50 out but my hunch is that it'll be smaller, maybe much smaller but still very much alive and well. The future is much bigger than any of us or the even the ARRL (gasp!), there's absolutely nothing we can do about any of it. Rants and hand-wringing in this NG notwithstanding. Let it roll and enjoy the trip people. - Mike KB3EIA - w3rv |
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