Educational Choices Are Actually Yours
Amy Barr, The Lukeion Project
The start of a new academic year has arrived. Some hate getting back to academic work as they are forced to abandon the relative freedom of summer activities. Others are keen to get back into the swing of things as they look forward to new challenges. Most see their yearly academic schedule as inevitable, something that must be done, boxes that must be checked, and time that must pass one way or another. Which kind of student are you?I have found through over 30 years as educator that students who have some educational autonomy will have a better attitude towards each new academic year. Conversely, students who feel they are locked into a parade or generic classes and subjects tend to have less enthusiasm about the work at hand.
A person who works a factory job completing a repetitive chore may accomplish much in a single day but seldom looks forward to his task. Even if he manufactures something he loves, his enthusiasm for it will not last long. Humans quickly get bored with repetition and with a lack of personal challenge. Most humans avoid undertakings that offer no room for improvement, no challenges, no changes.
When I was in high school, I worked for a nice pizza restaurant. I picked that job because I loved the pizza there and thought it might be fun. Wishing to earn enough money for college, I spent most of my evenings for a full year making or selling that pizza. I saved carefully and did indeed pay for my own education with that money. I am glad I had that job, but I went from being a pizza-loving teen to somebody that still dislikes pizza many decades later. You can have too much of a good thing.
Most of us gravitate towards projects that allow us to improve and eventually excel if we choose to put in the work. Good health (both mental and physical) depends on the ebb and flow of seasons, changes, and challenges. If everyone gets the same grade no matter how hard they work or if every day looks the same no matter what you do, boredom will lead to apathy. Apathy will lead to resignation. Looking back at my high school pizza job, I know that my boredom was not just eating too much pizza but the constant sameness.
As you start a new academic year or semester, you might feel you have been given few choices about your classes because certain topics must be covered in the short span of a few years. That transcript is not going to finish itself! You may begin to see what is in store and learn to view it through the lens of sameness and respond with a bored yawn.
You may also see what is ahead and realize that your education is a blank page that you get to illustrate and fill out how you like. Yes, you need an English credit each year of high school. NO, that English credit does not need to be the same one that everyone else completes. Foreign language? Math? History? Science? Writing? Yes! Everyone needs those. Learn to tick those boxes and finish those requirements in ways that challenge you.
Your academic plan is all your own. Prepare yourself for a
future that interests and engages you. Even if you do not feel you have a ton
of choices over the types of things you are expected to study this year, retain
control on how you prepare, the amount of effort you expend, and the level of
mastery you achieve. You have more control over your current circumstances and
your future than you might imagine. Even small investments towards excellence now
will fill out the blank page of your education in ways that only you can
control. Everyone has the autonomy necessary to become truly excellent at many
things. Start today.Your education is not something done to you or for you but by you.
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