Description
Professor is VERY VERY strict about grammar and punctuation so please keep that in mind.
This is a Human resources class, so it's better if you kinda have an idea about that.
Read the chapter from the textbook provided, carefully.
Many social critics, such as Jane Jacobs in her last book (she died a number of years ago), Dark Age Ahead, have suggested that American society has become overcredentialed. In the early 20th century most stock-and-bond traders did not have high school diplomas. Today, you need to get an MBA to get a job on Wall Street. In past generations you did not need a high school diploma to run a store. When I was in high school, store managers usually had high school diplomas. Today, store managers have master's degrees.
Based on the Textbook answer:
Are degree requirements based on objective job analysis? Is American society obsessed with credentials at the expense of practical know-how?