Sure. A ton of time and energy is wasted for no productive end or real learning outcomes chasing college credentials.
The issue is presenting companies HR departments real alternatives to college credentials that perform comparably. Especially for people first entering a career. Colleges credentials allow employers to outsource the problem of hiring employees that meet a broad comprehensive standard.
Of course employers care about skills and not credentials. The issue is not that employers don't value skill. The issue is how do you infer skill? Current solutions are evidently not adequete to displace the college credential system.
The issue is presenting companies HR departments real alternatives to college credentials that perform comparably. Especially for people first entering a career. Colleges credentials allow employers to outsource the problem of hiring employees that meet a broad comprehensive standard.
Of course employers care about skills and not credentials. The issue is not that employers don't value skill. The issue is how do you infer skill? Current solutions are evidently not adequete to displace the college credential system.