Why
formal education does not always guarantee success
Have you ever wondered why there is a great deal of
successful people who performed very poorly in their formal education? Why are
there so many graduates who are failures in life? Why is it that you one has to
meet graduates who are struggling to survive and living even below one dollar a
day? Does it mean enrolling for formal education can be a waste of time and
finances? Well, it does not mean that
education is not essential in success but it does not guarantee success.
1.
Life skills are more important
Success in life depends on the skills that one possesses
in a particular field. Skills that are usually applied in various fields are
not entirely acquired through formal education. For instance, focusing on a
graduate with very pleasing academic papers in a Management course, for the
graduate to be able to fit well in managerial positions, he/she must possess
some skills. When that graduate does not
even know how to work as a team, usually gets angry at every small fault and a
poor conflict handler, do you think that the papers can help the graduate
succeed in managerial positions. Therefore, despite the papers being good,
skills must accompany the papers.
2.
Hard work can take you far.
We have all in one time or another been told that “hard
work pays”. For hard work to pay one’s efforts, education is not a determinant.
Hard work is innate such that a person feels being compelled to work and work
even harder from within. For instance, one might have a calling to
entrepreneurship. The entrepreneur might be less educated and only conversant
with the basic reading and writing. The entrepreneur becomes dedicated to
his/her work to an extent that he employs the said well-educated graduates to
work for him/her. This is evidence that the less educated entrepreneur is more
successful that the well-educated graduate.
3.
Passion is key
There is that
feeling that always intrigues someone and is responsible for motivating one
towards working on it. This is usually the passion. It does not require formal
education to realize one’s passion. Rather, it is the passion that one has that
helps one in choosing the career path to follow in formal education. Realizing
one’s passion, it just requires one to revisit what he/she loved to do when
young. It may be thinks like sport or music that you find that they really
don’t require formal education to succeed in such fields. Also, career paths
taken through formal education, they should be guided by one’s passion. Such
that, if one want’s to pursue teaching, teaching aspect should be coming from
within the person and not just from acquired education. It is possible for a
passionate teacher to succeed in teaching profession more than a teacher who is
in the profession just because of the education.
5. Talent
leads to success
Talent
is different from passion. Passion is an intriguing feeling towards doing
something while talent is an ability that is naturally found in an individual.
The natural ability enables someone to do something very well without being
taught. These abilities can be realized as they show themselves very early as a
child is growing. A child who is talented in athletics or in drawing, it is
very possible to tell right from the child’s young age. These talents found in children needs to be
nurtured as the child develops so that they can succeed in them. Therefore, a
talented person does not need formal education to succeed in his/her talent.
For instance, a talented runner does not need formal education to excel in athletics
but formal education would only be an advantage to the runner’s intellectual
growth.
Simply stating, as everybody is trying to climb up the
education ladder, should be aware that education just complements success but
does not guarantee success by itself. There are other things that can guarantee
success and one can be successful without being well educated. So, if you are
there crying that you are a failure just because you never acquired good
education, wake up and look for your path to success.
Article By:
Joyce Mwai