No matter what you major in at university, there will always be lessons that can only be learned in the School of Life.
In an increasingly competitive job market, companies are looking for graduates who have learned not only from their textbooks, but from the world around them. Here’s what you need to know – and how to teach yourself.
For more: How to kick your career goals (while working, raising a family and generally being awesome).
1) How To Network With Purpose
Networking can get a bad rap: the idea of connecting with others for the express purpose of using them in the future is, admittedly, a bleak way of seeing your friendships. It’s also the wrong way to see networking! Building a network doesn’t just mean forming relationships that will serve you professionally. Networking is about finding your tribe — people who inspire and challenge you — and forming mutually-beneficial relationships with others.
Teach yourself: Try one-on-one networking with others in your field. Don’t be afraid to reach out with an unsolicited email; remember, they were once in your position. And remember that serving as a connector — being able to link two friends together — is just as important as forging connections for yourself.
2) How To Manage Your Bank Account
In 2015, could there be a more crucial skill than knowing how to manage your money? Surprisingly, schools have done little to prepare students for their financial futures. By failing to require personal finance classes for students, many universities send their graduates out into the world ill-prepared for the realities of adult life.
Top Comments
I'd have to disagree with this article. I went to a conservative private school and they still taught me a lot of this stuff (including cooking basic meals in home economics and basic home repair skills in the woodwork classes) and I'd argue that i should have (and did) learn all of these things and more from my parents and family.
Sorry, I'm a high school math teacher and we most certainly DO teach finance, we look at budgets, credit, interest, savings, loans - I have had people I taught say #4 and I have been able to show them the textbook chapters and assignments on those exact topics and amazingly they reply "Well I don't remember doing that" - and that is not my problem, plenty of the kids I taught do remember it fine.
Teachers also often give advice on study, pacing yourself, and avoiding burnout - again, if you didn't realise it was important, despite us telling you so,not our fault.
And teaching failing well? Give me a break, teachers are constantly trying to explain to kids brought up by parents who never let them experience failure, and who lobby schools to have certificates for everyone, just for participating, that sometimes they aren't going to do as well as they think, and they aren't going to be rewarded for everything.
The other things mentioned are life skills that are supposed to be part of a child being brought up by their own family, it's not a school's responsibility to teach a child how to be an adult. You had the child, the vast majority of the responsibility begins and ends with you, schools are a small part of your child's upbringing, designed to cover the basic educational needs parents are not skilled in providing. Make sure your kids know that what they do in school is important, if they spend 13 years mucking about, putting in little effort and having a negative attitude toward school don't expect them to suddenly have picked up much. If you want them to know things you think they'll need, then encourage & teach them from birth and for the entire time you are in their life, not wait until they get to school and expect someone else will do it all for you!
Amen!