deskill

verb

Etymology

From de- + skill.

  1. derived from *(s)kelH-
  2. inherited from *skilōną
  3. derived from skilja
  4. inherited from scilian
  5. inherited from skilen
  6. formed as deskill — “de- + skill

Definitions

  1. To redesign (a job) so that less skill is required to carry it out, for example through…

    To redesign (a job) so that less skill is required to carry it out, for example through the introduction of new technology.

    • The impact on workers is fairly obvious but I believe that managerial jobs have also been deskilled by the adoption of controlling systems and procedures.
  2. To change the role of (workers) so that they are no longer required or able to use the…

    To change the role of (workers) so that they are no longer required or able to use the skills that they have acquired.

    • Tragic, too, is the gradual deskilling of teachers, loss of excitement about the profession, and loss of gifted teachers to other pursuits.
    • In this transition from an economy built on energy-guzzling heavy industry toward a 21st century society of energy-sipping high technology, millions of Americans and Europeans are being “deskilled.”

The neighborhood

Derived

deskiller

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for deskill. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA