College is a great place to learn. So what?

What if we decided to take learning into our own hands? What would we be missing? Can we do better for our own learning and personal development in small, homegrown communities without the assistance of a school or university?

1.Schools give us permission to learn. Formal institutions of education justify expenditures of time and money for the pursuit of one’s own interests. When we tell our spouses or coworkers that we need to spend Saturday in the library because we’re taking a class for our degree, we may earn their support and respect. Tell the same people you are working on a draft of a novel, and you may be asked to do something else. Family functions, chores, commitments to work and friends all seem to take priority over our own learning and personal growth. When we go to school, we allow ourselves to commit to learning tasks with diligence, guilt-free passion, and with few interruptions.

But wait a minute . . . what happens if we go to school, but then don’t finish the degree? Are all our time and energy wasted? And what happens when we do finish the degree? Is all our learning, and the permission to devote our lives to learning, over?

2. In school we honor commitments so we can get things done. We sign up for classes with deadlines and grades that provide feedback for doing what we said we were going to do. A promise made to ourselves for personal self growth never seems to hold the weight that an obligation to an instructor or advisor at an institution holds. Debt, transcripts, and the “permanent record” bear witness to how we hold up to our promises.

 

On the other hand . . . how often do we fulfill commitments to school that have nothing to do with learning? How much of our degree programs reflect our own lifelong goals?

3. The institution is held accountable to your success. Instructors, advisors, and administrators succeed only when we, the learners, achieve. The interdependence guarantees a community of support.

 

 

On the contrary . . . how often to students, as individuals, feel that faculty is accountable to them personally? Do contracts hold instructors to their word toward individual students?

4. We develop relationships with teachers, advisors, and others who know more, and who are better connected than we are. Experts, some of whom would otherwise have nothing to do with us, are willing to teach, advise, mentor, and publish with us in formal academic settings.

 

Is it possible that we could network with experts and practitioners in authentic settings other than school? Unless my goal is to establish a career as a lifelong academic, wouldn’t I be more fully engaged, raising deeper questions, building more authentic relationships with a broader network by learning outside of school? Is it possible that these experts would take me more seriously if I approach them directly as in individual interested in learning rather than hire them indirectly through an institution like school?

5. We have much to do and little time. In life, learning is messy, hit-and-miss, and unpredictable. In school, learning is condensed, streamlined, and efficient. Much of the work of education, i.e. figuring out who we are, what to learn, how to learn, and what to do, is already done for us. Preprocessed curricula await our speedy consumption. No need to ask distracting questions, reflect on process, or risk self-doubt. We just have to gobble it up, swallow it down, and make sure somebody pays the bill.

But what if what we have to learn takes time? What if what we don’t mind getting messy? What if we’re naturally slow and don’t mind savoring challenges or taking risks?

6. Achievement is measurable. Well-defined timelines and sequences mark progress. As learners, we know we’re getting somewhere when we earn credits and reach other indicators of our success. We can measure and compare our rates of success on bar graphs easily communicated in bulleted formats such as resumes and Powerpoint presentations.

What if what you want to learn is not measurable? And so what if what you want to learn is measurable? What happens when you reach your goals? Do you then stop learning?

7. People smarter than you will read and critique your work. Teachers and others will read your work, offer feedback, and even help proofread your drafts. Reading work in process is their job. Besides, more than likely, your teachers aren’t your friends. You can pretty much trust that their feedback is honest and relatively unbiased.

 

 

So, why not contact smart people directly? Why not contact the leaders in your field of study and offer to pay them their going rate as a consultant?

8.Schools offer identity and social credibility. “He’s a student.” “She’s a grad assistant.” “I’m a Harvard PhD.” Our academic titles let others know that we’ve had to suffer for what we know. Even as children, schools defend us when we’re asked how we’ve been spending our time.

 

 

So why not just tell people you’ve suffered for your learning. For example, how does this sound “My name is Patricia Kambitsch, and I may not have my MFA but I’ve suffered even more than if I had one.”

9. Schools offer access to information. Knowledgeable people tell you their stories in classrooms. Research groups rework old information and uncover new knowledge.

 

Hold on. . . Thanks to technology, libraries, and open source courses and syllabi, information is plentiful and cheap. No longer can we use information as an excuse to go to school.

10. As students in school, we not only have a place to go, but a place to stay. Most campuses encourage loitering by design, Libraries furnished with carrels for the serious, include couches for the sleepy. Landscaped courtyards and quadrangles shade benches and maintain Wifi hotspots. Student unions and cafeterias don’t mind if you pack a lunch or bring your own tea bags. You’re allowed to be there.

 

And . . . most of us can get by with loitering in such places even without a valid college ID.