A La Carte Education
Published Monday, November 20, 2006 by Blogger at CUC | E-mail this post
During a recent conversation, a friend of mine divulged her secret for maximizing her learning experience at CUC. Instead of exclusively following stringent guidelines about the specific classes she needed to fulfill her major, she chose to select classes based upon her perceived level of interest in the topic regardless of its pertinence to her prescribed course of studies. It was a system I personally christened 'A La Carte Education'. It went something like this - 'Introduction to Geometric Shapes sounds interesting. Ancient Hieroglyphics 365, could be fun. Scuba Diving 101, hmmm... might as well since I already own a wetsuit and snorkel...'
By her own calculations, my friend was about a semester behind where she probably should have been. Still, I couldn’t help but envy her decision to boldly seize control of what she learned while in college. I personally believe that at times, students become too focused on fulfilling the minimum obligations for their majors, and in the process fail to explore the possibilities that await them in other courses.
And isn’t exploration what college is really all about? How else can a person say for certain that the major they have chosen to spend tens of thousands of dollars to pursue is indeed the right career path for her or him? Obviously I am not advocating that students waste their time or money by frivolously taking an abundance of excess classes, but I believe that there is merit in 'A Late Carte Education'. It could direct students to more fulfilling career paths, or at the very least make them that much more knowledgeable. If being behind a semester is what it takes to solidify one’s commitment to a particular career path, then so be it. It is certainly better than the alternative of spending the next 40 years of one’s life in mathematics when one’s true desire is studying world philosophies, or vice versa.
--- Daniel Alexander Granderson
Labels: Daniel Granderson
You're so right. Love the first entry.