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The Truth About College
By Peter DeHaan
March, 2003
It amuses me to tell people that
I went to college for 26 years. Their
reactions vary from shock to admiration, from pity to surprise.
As a high school sophomore, I
learned that the local community college would admit select high school seniors.
Acting partly out of youthful arrogance and partly from moxie, I met with
an admissions counselor, hoping to be admitted the following year.
The advisor never asked my age or my grade as he mechanically pulled my
high school transcript. Apparently
mathematically challenged, he struggled to convert my quarterly grades into the
semester credits to which he was accustomed.
"Well," he eventually concluded, "it sure looks like you have
enough credits."
I completed my first college
class before I started my junior year in high school. I took at least one class a semester for the next two years.
College offered a challenge that high school lacked.
And though I earned high marks in high school, I excelled in my college
courses.
As my senior year in high school
wound down, classmates began announcing their college plans.
My best friend was headed to a private school to study a new field called
computer science. It seemed an interesting and promising choice and I decided
to follow her there. However,
despite my parents having sacrificed to make weekly deposits into my college
fund since the day I was born, the amount they had accumulated was woefully
inadequate. This reality, coupled
with the frequent media reports of college graduates being under-employed in
entry-level positions, led me to a more practical decision. I enrolled in an electronic technical school, where I could
quickly learn practical job skills and enter the work force, for a fraction of
the cost. Upon graduation, I
grabbed the first job that came along: repairing copy machines.
It quickly became apparent that
this was not the job for me. My
electronic school credential read, "electronic engineering technician," and
though I fancied myself an engineer, prospective employers more correctly viewed
me as a technician. To make the
career change I wanted, I needed more education. I reapplied to community college and earned a pre-engineering
degree.
I transferred to a local
university and enrolled in its electrical engineering program.
Well before graduation, a job change took me out of state.
I established residency there and resumed my education.
During this time, I responded to a help wanted ad.
The stated salary was three times what I was currently making.
I met every qualification and dashed off my resume, fully expecting to be
hired. But I was never even
interviewed. I later learned that
the company was deluged with applications and it summarily rejected every
applicant without a four-year college degree.
I resolved to never let that happen again.
Now, cynically convinced that a
college degree was little more than an attendance certificate, I sought the
shortest path to a four-year degree. I
found the perfect solution. It was
geared for full-time employees who had at least two years of college.
By attending evening classes, in an intense one-year program, I could
parlay my various college credits with documented experiential learning into a
bachelor's degree. I didn't care what the degree was in; I just wanted that
piece of paper. As the school year
wound down, however, I met with a surprise at work.
In my annual review, I was told that my management skills had greatly
improved and I was rewarded with a substantial raise. Although I had been striving for an arbitrary credential, I
inadvertently ended up improving my job skills. I shared this news with my professor, thanking him profusely.
In what I thought was unwarranted humility he dismissed my gratitude. "I don't deserve any credit," he said matter-of-factly.
"All we did was offer you an opportunity; it was up to you to make
something of it. It's what you
have inside that made the difference." It
was years before I would fully comprehend what he said.
Now seeing a direct connection
between education and earning power, I returned for a second major.
What I had previously learned were "soft" skills (interpersonal
communication, group dynamics, human nature, and so forth).
Now I needed to complement this with course work in accounting, business
law, and strategic planning. This
major, business administration, would enhance my job skills, making me a better
employee.
After a few years, missing the
elixir of education and feeling inadequate as a manager, I began considering a
master's degree. Again, I found a
program geared for the non-traditional student. Their offer was compelling, but even more intriguing was that
for an additional fee, in advance, I could enroll in a joint masters/doctorate
program. And I did.
I anticipated that the master's degree would make me complete as a
manager, but I viewed the doctorate more as a personal milestone.
My master's degree was completed as planned and I immediately began
working on the doctorate, which I had two years to complete.
Already worn down by the intensity of the master's, I soon regretted
committing to the doctoral program. But
stubbornness prevailed and I plodded on, meeting the requirements only a few
months before the deadline. I was
42; it was 26 years since I had gotten a jumpstart on college at age 16. There were some diversions along the way, job changes,
relocations and even a few breaks, but for the majority of that time, I was
attending classes – somewhere.
So for me, college has meant many
things: a challenge, a means to a job, help with a career change, an attendance
certificate, an avenue to a better salary, enhancer of job skills, and
management training. College can be
many things depending on what you need and what you want to accomplish, but it
is not a cure-all.
As a consultant, I do weeklong
call center audits. I begin the
week with an overview of the client's company and then drill down to uncover
weaknesses and opportunities. In
doing so, a distressing pattern has emerged.
On about the third day, I often find myself in a follow-up meeting with
the person who manages the call center. That
person's common concern is presented in different ways and with various levels
of emotion, but it always boils down to the same sentiment: "I feel inadequate
as a manager. I think I need a
college degree."
It breaks my heart when I hear
this. These are successful, dynamic
women, who have started at entry-level positions and through hard work,
dedication, and a talent for doing what's nearly impossible, have risen to
significant positions. These are
individuals who oversee the majority of their organization's work force,
control about half of the expenses (primarily labor costs), and maintain
virtually all of the incoming cash flow, yet they still feel inadequate. They believe that a degree will make everything right.
This always catches me by surprise because they conduct their work with
such great aplomb, confidence, and success.
I am never sure what to say, but next time I will be ready.
I will say, "Yes, college can
help you. If you have the
opportunity to go and are willing to make the sacrifices of time and money,
while putting much of your life on hold, then do it.
It will make you a better manager. But
it is not a panacea. There will
still be times when you will feel overwhelmed or inadequate or unprepared.
Most managers have these feelings. But
a formal education isn't everything.
While
my educational choices have, in part, enabled me to get to where I am today, I
know that had I gone down a different path, the result would be no less
meaningful, because as my college professor said, "It's what you have inside
that makes the difference."
What if you don't already have a career? These comments about college are strictly for those who have
an established career. For the
recent high school graduate and those just starting out or without a career
path, I always recommend college, provided they can handle the workload.
Being a traditional student and going to school full-time allows you to
get your degree in the shortest time, but it is not financially possible for
everyone. In this case, as for me,
you can intersperse education with vocation.
Although this approach takes longer, it enhances the experience as your
education is magnified by your work and your work is complemented by your
education.
What if you have no idea what to study? If this is the case, be sure and pursue marketable job skills
(don't focus on skills that will maximize earning potential, but rather on
what will maximize your enjoyment of life – which is not money.)
For those who are analytical thinkers, business and computers are good
pursuits; for creative minds, consider marketing or graphic arts.
And remember, many college graduates don't end up working in the field
they studied, but rather they use their education as an entry-point to the work
force. Once you have successfully proven yourself in full-time
employment, work history generally becomes more important than your degree –
as long as you have it.
So, go to college, study hard,
make the most of the opportunity that you are given, and remember, it's what's
inside that makes the difference.
To read other articles written by Peter DeHaan,
go to From
The Publisher or check out his blog at
http://blog.peterdehaan.com. In addition to publishing Connections Magazine
and AnswerStat magazine (for hospital and medical related call centers), Peter
also publishes several related websites, including
MyArticleArchive.com.
He may
be reached at 866-668-6695, dehaan@connectionsmagazine.com
or www.PeterDeHaan.com.
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