Dont Graduate - What Students Should Know About College, But No One Ever Tells Them


For all the students even dreaming about going to college, I have one piece of advice: don't graduate. Yes. You heard me. Don't graduate. I'm sure dozens of intelligent people have told you that you need to go to college and get good grades so you can get a good job that will provide good benefits. Well, the bad news about all of this good news is that it is cruel propaganda.

Let me explain why. Year after year, I watch you work hard and earn good grades (some of you, at least). You receive honors and awards for your achievements. You eventually graduate and your family comes to your graduation--with gifts and balloons. Once graduation is over, reality drops. There are few good jobs for you. You move back home to live with your parents (assuming that you left in the first place). Initially, you have to work jobs that seldom pay well or have anything to do with your major. Those darn student loan people start calling to remind you about your huge debt and all the special programs you qualify for if you are "experiencing problems meeting your debt obligations." You discover that you still have some choices. You can settle for a decent job that pays the bills. You can marry, have children, and spend the rest of your life suspended between debt and death. Or, you can go back to college to graduate all over again.

I'm here to say-don't do it. Don't graduate twice. In fact, don't even graduate once. Instead, I strongly urge you to do something even better and that is "get educated." If you are confused, then this is a sign that you have probably graduated without being educated. Let me make my point more concrete.

Do you remember hearing stories about athletes who somehow made it through high school without ever learning how to read or write? Of course, you do. I bet you were just as shocked as everybody else. How in the world could this happen? Didn't somebody know? Of course, somebody knew. Somebody always knows. But knowing did little to stop those athletes from parading across the stage at graduation-with a diploma.

They graduated, but they weren't educated.

So, here's the kicker (and you are not going to like it).

For one moment, I want you to imagine that you are an athlete who graduated uneducated or undereducated. Guess what? This isn't make-believe. You are that athlete and the athlete is you! Sure, you probably have an A average. You can read poems in Latin while doing hat tricks, and you are probably on your way to a prestigious university. The fact of the matter is that none of your magnificent attributes really matter. You and the athlete are in the same boat. He is situated at one end and you at another. However, it is the same boat. You both graduated and you both have the diploma to prove it. In spite of your differences, both of you have been reduced to the same level. How does this happen? When you figure out the answer, you will be on the road toward educating yourself and maybe a few others as well.

For now, I just hope that you can see the gap between graduating and being educated. No longer do you have to wait and hope someone will explain this complicated reality to you. If you decide you absolutely have to go college, then you must graduate with an education. If not, you will spend the rest of your life in that boat and it's harder to get out than you think.

J.K. Dennis is the author of "9 Lessons for a Meaningful Life." To learn more about the book, visit http://www.atlasbooks.com/3hp/index.html#titles. Questions and comments can be sent to 9lessons@3hp.us.


MORE RESOURCES:
Northern Marianas College president Sharon Y. Hart led yesterday the official launch of several non-credit online courses at the institution.

GRAND FORKS (WDAZ-TV) - The University of North Dakota online education has skyrocketed. Now more than 25 percent of UND students are enrolled in online courses.  Talk about this topic

Traffic safety weighed against cost concerns Driver education has come a long way since Uncle Billy taught Don Gorman of Deerfield to drive. Gorman, who testified this week in favor of a bill to allow New Hampshire teens to take driver education classes online, said he learned all he needed to know before taking his road test from Uncle Billy, and besides a smack on the head when he hit the ...

An emerging group of entrepreneurs with influential backing is seeking to lower the cost of higher education from as much as tens of thousands of dollars a year to nearly nothing. These new arrivals are harnessing the Internet to offer online courses, which isn’t new. But their classes are free, or almost free. Most traditional universities have refused to award academic credit for such online ...

Free online courses are instructing non-techies in JavaScript and other coding and design of Web apps

U.S. News and World Report, in its first-ever Top Online Education Program rankings, gave CMU high marks in a variety of areas including student engagement and assessment, student services and technology.

PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 24, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Infinite Solar Inc., the leading provider of renewable energy training, is launching Infinite Solar Online, Internet-based solar training programs that expand ...

Online higher education got a big boost this week when Sebastian Thrun, a professor of computer science at Stanford,...

KANSAS CITY — The University of Missouri System will soon unveil a new e-learning portal, a one-stop shop where potential students can browse online courses and enrolled students can better manage their schedules.

Free online courses from leading IT educators promise to teach students how to build a search engine or program a robotic car within a matter of weeks.

home | site map FAQ | Contact
© 2011 Correspondence courses