When I was a kid, they drilled into me that being academically successful will get you into the top schools, and get you the best jobs.
Cut to me now in my 30s, been job hunting for the past year after being laid off from my previous job for not meeting their standards three months after one of my parents died, and having the gall to try to set boundaries against doing installs back to back.
Grades don’t mean shit if you don’t have the following:
Interview skills (aka the ability to BS your way through an interview),
Experience (sad that those who start working in high school are ahead of the game, when really kids shouldn’t have to be put in situations to start work that early),
Connections (it’s not what you know, it’s who you know)
Barely had any of these when I graduated from college and spent close to 6 months trying to find a job from there.
Yeah as a former straight A student, entering the workforce was a rough transition. Suddenly smarts and hard work are nearly irrelevant and it’s all your ability to sell yourself, appease your bosses, etc. Turns out no one taught me these skills and in many cases taught me the opposite.
We are born anarchists taught the virtues of communism without naming it, and then have it all brutally stripped of all those ideals by adulthood under bourgeois “education” systems.
Anyway, Pedagogy of the Oppressed is a great read.
it’s always “fun” to ask people what they think of socialist/communist/anarchist policies, have them say “oh yeah that sounds amazing”, then you tell them where it’s from and you can see in their eyes how they go into mental lockdown to prevent Bad Thoughts.
When I was a kid, they drilled into me that I had to be nice and share. Entering adulthood was whiplash.
When I was a kid, they drilled into me that being academically successful will get you into the top schools, and get you the best jobs.
Cut to me now in my 30s, been job hunting for the past year after being laid off from my previous job for not meeting their standards three months after one of my parents died, and having the gall to try to set boundaries against doing installs back to back.
Grades don’t mean shit if you don’t have the following:
Interview skills (aka the ability to BS your way through an interview), Experience (sad that those who start working in high school are ahead of the game, when really kids shouldn’t have to be put in situations to start work that early), Connections (it’s not what you know, it’s who you know)
Barely had any of these when I graduated from college and spent close to 6 months trying to find a job from there.
Yeah as a former straight A student, entering the workforce was a rough transition. Suddenly smarts and hard work are nearly irrelevant and it’s all your ability to sell yourself, appease your bosses, etc. Turns out no one taught me these skills and in many cases taught me the opposite.
We are born anarchists taught the virtues of communism without naming it, and then have it all brutally stripped of all those ideals by adulthood under bourgeois “education” systems.
Anyway, Pedagogy of the Oppressed is a great read.
it’s always “fun” to ask people what they think of socialist/communist/anarchist policies, have them say “oh yeah that sounds amazing”, then you tell them where it’s from and you can see in their eyes how they go into mental lockdown to prevent Bad Thoughts.