释义 |
Definition of deskill in English: deskillverb diːˈskɪldiˈskɪl [with object]1Reduce the level of skill required to carry out (a job) 降低(对某一工作)的技能要求 advances in technology had deskilled numerous working-class jobs 技术进步已经降低了许多工人工作的技能要求。 Example sentencesExamples - Twentieth-century deskilling and the introduction of female labor, which destabilized such constructs for male manufacturing workers, were noticeably less evident as processes in building.
- Firms converted to large-scale assembly-line operations, ultimately speeding up and deskilling individual jobs.
- In some cases, service offers have been simplified, jobs have been deskilled, and personnel replaced with machines in order to reduce human variability.
- On the other hand for those who continue to be engaged in waged employment, the conditions of service will continue to deteriorate as the introduction of new technology serves to deskill, fragment and control the worker.
- Lobbying may have particular potency in this case because of the deskilling in cotton farming.
- For workers, the new technologies mean more flexible work arrangements (with reduced security and pay), job deskilling, and reduced union density.
- They analysed the implications of the proposals, explaining that it would be used to reduce teaching staff and deskill education.
- This era also coincided with the ascendency of the photography fine art market, and the deskilling of photographic apparatus to the point where amateurs became capable of producing commercial-quality images.
- This, in turn, however, led to fatigue, production speed-ups, repetitive motion injuries, and labor deskilling.
- Employers with a strong sense of social obligation to workers are less likely to engage in deskilling practices in the workplace.
- To be weighed against this are the implications of advocating ultrasound guidance for central venous cannulation, such as a potential for deskilling in the landmark method that may be required in some emergency situations.
- Industrial deskilling does not so much eliminate skill as it relocates it.
- Another author underscored the unpleasantness of the deskilled jobs.
- Certainly, there were deskilling and cost-cutting impulses present in virtually all industries engaged in flexible production.
- In response, the trade unions argued over issues of deskilling and reskilling and compensation; there were two industrial disputes in 1991 and 1992.
- Yet, what might be called deskilling in agriculture is in some ways different, more variable, and certainly less understood.
- 1.1 Make the skills of (a worker) obsolete.
使(工人)的技能过时 workers are being deskilled all the time Example sentencesExamples - Junior surgeons are becoming deskilled as result of the proposals.
- Consultants, faced with increasing demands to meet clinical targets, are progressively becoming deskilled in research.
- They have lost confidence and become deskilled and are put off by the thought of information technology and spreadsheets.
- It's all about deskilling, of course, so you can recruit people on low wages.
- Strikers feared the lack of the word ‘qualified’ would open the door to the deskilling the workforce.
- They resisted the automation that deskilled workers and increased the power of managers.
- When specialty medicine does cover 24 hours patients will expect specialists performing their particular skill, but further deskilling general medical trainees in the current climate may do more harm than good.
- People will become deskilled, grow disillusioned and move away.
- Not only has it contributed to the deskilling of the current generation of working age adults, it has also affected health.
- Such developments have made it possible to deskill larger and larger numbers of workers.
- It was also apparent that the Act had contributed to a lack of labour market strategy, a deskilling of the workforce and low productivity.
- The old story held that industry pulled recently dispossessed rural people to the city, where - along with deskilled artisans - they became part of a growing urban industrial proletariat.
- The current situation comes on the back of several years of deskilling of medical students due in part to the loss of students' integration into clinical firms.
- The medicalisation of modern society has already deskilled many other professions and led patients into an unhealthy dependence on medical care.
- Rapid access clinics, be they for chest pain, breast lumps, or rectal bleeding, deskill general practitioners in dealing with these symptoms because they give easy access to decisions taken with much more information.
- This deskilling of the workforce, pushing them onto individual contracts so they can be shed when the economy slows have all fuelled resistance to globalisation.
- Importantly, London's low paid migrant workers experience high levels of deskilling.
- However, the risk of distressing and deskilling the doctor must be minimised.
- Now the bosses have the audacity to try to deskill the workers at the Central, and to run down factories in the name of modernisation.
- There is speculation that the effects are not just on the child but also on the mother, who feels deskilled.
Definition of deskill in US English: deskillverbdēˈskildiˈskɪl [with object]1Reduce the level of skill required to carry out (a job) 降低(对某一工作)的技能要求 advances in technology had deskilled numerous working-class jobs 技术进步已经降低了许多工人工作的技能要求。 Example sentencesExamples - Employers with a strong sense of social obligation to workers are less likely to engage in deskilling practices in the workplace.
- For workers, the new technologies mean more flexible work arrangements (with reduced security and pay), job deskilling, and reduced union density.
- On the other hand for those who continue to be engaged in waged employment, the conditions of service will continue to deteriorate as the introduction of new technology serves to deskill, fragment and control the worker.
- Twentieth-century deskilling and the introduction of female labor, which destabilized such constructs for male manufacturing workers, were noticeably less evident as processes in building.
- Firms converted to large-scale assembly-line operations, ultimately speeding up and deskilling individual jobs.
- Industrial deskilling does not so much eliminate skill as it relocates it.
- Certainly, there were deskilling and cost-cutting impulses present in virtually all industries engaged in flexible production.
- They analysed the implications of the proposals, explaining that it would be used to reduce teaching staff and deskill education.
- To be weighed against this are the implications of advocating ultrasound guidance for central venous cannulation, such as a potential for deskilling in the landmark method that may be required in some emergency situations.
- In response, the trade unions argued over issues of deskilling and reskilling and compensation; there were two industrial disputes in 1991 and 1992.
- Lobbying may have particular potency in this case because of the deskilling in cotton farming.
- Another author underscored the unpleasantness of the deskilled jobs.
- This, in turn, however, led to fatigue, production speed-ups, repetitive motion injuries, and labor deskilling.
- This era also coincided with the ascendency of the photography fine art market, and the deskilling of photographic apparatus to the point where amateurs became capable of producing commercial-quality images.
- Yet, what might be called deskilling in agriculture is in some ways different, more variable, and certainly less understood.
- In some cases, service offers have been simplified, jobs have been deskilled, and personnel replaced with machines in order to reduce human variability.
- 1.1 Make the skills of (a worker) obsolete.
使(工人)的技能过时 Example sentencesExamples - Not only has it contributed to the deskilling of the current generation of working age adults, it has also affected health.
- The medicalisation of modern society has already deskilled many other professions and led patients into an unhealthy dependence on medical care.
- Rapid access clinics, be they for chest pain, breast lumps, or rectal bleeding, deskill general practitioners in dealing with these symptoms because they give easy access to decisions taken with much more information.
- They resisted the automation that deskilled workers and increased the power of managers.
- Junior surgeons are becoming deskilled as result of the proposals.
- When specialty medicine does cover 24 hours patients will expect specialists performing their particular skill, but further deskilling general medical trainees in the current climate may do more harm than good.
- Strikers feared the lack of the word ‘qualified’ would open the door to the deskilling the workforce.
- It was also apparent that the Act had contributed to a lack of labour market strategy, a deskilling of the workforce and low productivity.
- However, the risk of distressing and deskilling the doctor must be minimised.
- This deskilling of the workforce, pushing them onto individual contracts so they can be shed when the economy slows have all fuelled resistance to globalisation.
- People will become deskilled, grow disillusioned and move away.
- There is speculation that the effects are not just on the child but also on the mother, who feels deskilled.
- The current situation comes on the back of several years of deskilling of medical students due in part to the loss of students' integration into clinical firms.
- It's all about deskilling, of course, so you can recruit people on low wages.
- They have lost confidence and become deskilled and are put off by the thought of information technology and spreadsheets.
- Now the bosses have the audacity to try to deskill the workers at the Central, and to run down factories in the name of modernisation.
- Importantly, London's low paid migrant workers experience high levels of deskilling.
- The old story held that industry pulled recently dispossessed rural people to the city, where - along with deskilled artisans - they became part of a growing urban industrial proletariat.
- Consultants, faced with increasing demands to meet clinical targets, are progressively becoming deskilled in research.
- Such developments have made it possible to deskill larger and larger numbers of workers.
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