Jim Rohn has a quote that says, “If you don’t design your life plan, chances are you’ll fall into someone else’s plan. And guess what they have planned for you? Not much.” What does designing your life plan look like? Is a college education needed to succeed? If not, what does it look like to be a life-long learner?
Today, we’re going to answer a question asked by Jan from Wisconsin. She asks, “What is your view on formal college education today?”
I think it’s valuable for us to talk about what the relationship education plays in our lives. I have really seen over the years a progression or evolution that is happening in the area of education. It’s my belief that our current educational system is very much behind the time. Our education system was originally designed for an industrial age, made to produce factory workers. However, we don’t produce quite as many factory workers anymore. We are in an information and technology age...and I don’t think our education system has caught up to that.
An example of this is how business gets accomplished in the information age, smart business happens through collaboration. I have so many business relationships that are valuable to me and I collaborate with on a regular basis. The crazy thing is, if I were to have collaborated when I was in school, it would have been seen as cheating. Yet today, it’s how business gets done.
Robert Kiyosaki wrote a very interesting book a number of years ago called, “Why ‘A’ Students Work for ‘C’ Students and ‘B’ Students Work for the Government.” It’s a very interesting book that I would recommend. The whole idea is that if you’re an “A” student, you’re too intent on passing tests and focused on the academic side of things. In addition, “A” students don’t like to make mistakes, and that’s a problem with “A” students, they think making mistakes is a bad thing.
Whereas “C” students make all kinds of mistakes — I was a “C” student myself! Sometimes, I even struggled to pull in “C’s” in school. I didn’t go very well and I didn’t enjoy school because I was more interested in the practical, hands-on side of things. I wanted to understand how I was going to be able to practically use what I was learning. I was more interested in becoming “street smart” as opposed to “book smart.” Now don’t get me wrong, I read books. I love reading! I discipline myself to read because some of the smartest “street smart” people are avid readers, so I value books. But more than valuing books themselves, I value the application that they can have in the relationships and real-life experiences out in the marketplace and Mainstreet.
I think that formal college education is important in some fields. I don’t have a college education and I believe that I’ve been reasonably successful in life. When I was young, I used to think less of myself because I didn’t have a college education, I had a little bit of an inferiority complex. Today, I almost hold that as a merit badge, I’m proof that you don’t have to obtain a college education to be successful. However, there are fields where it is an entry point to get in the door of certain careers. For instance, doctors, lawyers, teachers, accountants, and others need to have a formal college education. But I think it’s field-specific. What I am saddened, even disgusted by, is when someone goes to college and they don’t know what they’re going to do.
I’m big on intentionality. I think that being intentional is a key thing in life. At the end of the day, be intentional about what you do, whether it’s with your faith, family, fitness or in any of the four areas of freedom — time, money, relationships and purpose. All those things come back to intentionality. As it relates to college education, why spend thousands and thousands of dollars on an education if you’re just going to end up getting a job that pays barely more than you would receive if you never went to college in the first place? Being intentional about your education is so important because it plays such a key role in so many aspects of your life.
I’ll leave you to think about this quote from Jim Rohn; he said, “If you don’t design your own life plan, chances are you’ll fall into someone else’s plan. And guess what they have planned for you? Not much.”
WEBSITE DESIGNED & BUILT BY