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Charles Wheelan, Ph.D. The Naked Economist

Charles Wheelan, Ph.D., The Naked Economist

A Well-Rounded Education Doesn't Have to Start with College

by Charles Wheelan, Ph.D.

Excellent (377 Ratings)
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Posted on Monday, August 25, 2008, 12:00AM

I'm going to step back from economics for a moment and write about teaching economics to both undergraduates and graduate students. Based on that experience, I have some advice for talented high school students: Don't go to college.

And advice for talented college graduates: Don't get a job.

A Complete Education

Of course there is a caveat. You should do both of them eventually, just not right away. Take a year off, either after high school or after college.

Use that year to do something interesting that you'll likely never be able to do again: write a book, hike the Appalachian Trail, live with your grandparents, trek in Katmandu, volunteer at a health clinic in India, or serve your country in the military.

Just do something that will make you a more complete person. I suspect that it'll also make you appreciate your education more (and, ironically, make you more attractive when you do apply for college or enter the job market).

Rules of Engagement

I have two rules. First, you have to support yourself. If you're writing that novel, then you need to be waiting tables when you're not at the keyboard. If you're traveling across India, then you've got to earn the money before you go. This isn't about Mom and Dad funding leisure travel. The time will only be meaningful if you have to work for it, literally.

And second, this experience can't be one of those uber-competitive kinds of programs that are designed as a means to get you somewhere else -- like NASA physics camp or 14 hours a day of intensive gymnastics.

The World a Classroom

Why should an 18- or 22-year-old head for Nepal instead of the University of Illinois or Wall Street?

For three reasons. First, because you can. Because the world is an interesting place, life is short, and there just aren't that many opportunities to take long stretches to do really cool things.

Second, and perhaps more practical, it'll make you appreciate your education more, whether you do it before or after college. I remember the first time I saw terraced rice paddies in Indonesia. I'd taken a course on monsoon Asia in college but the concepts seemed remote and academic. But when I was standing in Bali, staring up at the remarkable green fields carved into the mountainside, I finally understood all the facts that I'd memorized for the exams.

Book-Smart, Life-Ignorant

Last, it'll impart perspective and maturity. I've encountered a small but growing number of students -- amazingly smart and talented people -- who just seem intellectually immature and even emotionally unhealthy. They're obsessed with grades more than learning (because good grades are necessary to do the next hypercompetitive thing).

Despite enormous talent, I fear that these students aren't prepared for a world in which the best path isn't always the most competitive one; where failure is a precondition for success; where there are no letter grades to signpost success. They are smart but not wise -- and more life experience, both the waiting tables and the trekking in Nepal, would help that.

I imagine this kind of immaturity is an inevitable part of growing up, but it feels more common to me these days. Perhaps this is what comes of a generation characterized by parents who made extraordinary efforts to get them into the right preschool.

Hitting the Road

In any case, when it comes to taking a year off, I write from experience. When I was a senior in high school, I told my principal that I wanted to take a year off before going to college. He talked me out of the idea, but to his eternal credit he persuaded me to do it after college.

So I did. After graduation, I spent four months working at a law firm where I was paid a relatively large hourly sum to put 50,000 production documents in chronological order. I lived at home and caddied on the weekends. (In one of life's little ironies, the last guy I ever caddied for -- after a 13-year looping career -- was George W. Bush. Go figure.)

When I had enough for the trip, I left for Colorado, then California, then Tahiti, then Australia and New Zealand -- and so on, across Southeast Asia, China, India, Europe, and home. People often tell me how lucky I was, which is true in a broad sense, but not when it comes to having done this trip. The whole journey -- with a budget of $20 a day -- cost roughly as much as a Honda Civic at the time. Have you ever told a college graduate that he was lucky to be able to afford a Honda Civic?

Meeting Resistance

Curiously, most people -- including my college peers -- thought that taking a year off to travel was a terrible idea at the time. One relative told me that I would be "a year behind," a comment that only makes sense if you believe that life consists of checking off a series of boxes -- job, kids, house, vacation home -- and then ringing a bell.

There are two common arguments against taking time off to do something off the beaten track. The first is that "you can always do it later." I find that kind of sad; to quote Langston Hughes, a dream deferred is a dream denied. How many people do you know who have hiked the Appalachian Trail, volunteered at a clinic in India, written a novel, or done any of the things I mentioned above? These kinds of things don't get easier when you have kids and a mortgage.

The second is that this is some kind of elitist boondoggle. That's just nonsense. My wife (who as my girlfriend at the time) made the around-the-world trip with me. She graduated from an Ivy League school with a full load of student loans. She worked as a waitress on Nantucket (living in a bunkhouse behind the country club) until she'd earned enough to travel around the world for nine months and pre-pay her loans for a year. Then she came back, got a corporate job, and paid off the rest of the student loans. Not bad for someone with three siblings, all raised by a single parent who taught preschool for a living.

A Leg Up

The irony of taking a year out is that it's a pretty good career move, too. You get a unique life experience, and a year later, should you so choose, you can still apply to Harvard Law School.

Only in that pile of applications, you're the one who wrote a book or went around the world. That's who I want in my classes.

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164 Comments

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  • Tomy - Thursday, June 25, 2009, 2:11PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 4/5

    good article

  • Darnell - Thursday, April 23, 2009, 9:36AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    exactly 2 years ago i dropped out of high school. i then spent 2 years working for minimum wage, while lying about having a diploma due to job requirements. 2 weeks ago i passed by GED exam(with all B's and without studying 1 thing), and now i have been accepted in to college. Im more focused than ever. Great and Extremely True article.

  • ssk - Saturday, April 4, 2009, 3:11PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    After high school my daughter felt burnt out and not ready to hit the books in the Fall. She worked and took time to research career options and started College in the Spring semester refreshed and READY. I think the point is not to force a time frame. Each person is different. I'm sure she is getting more for the money spent because she was ready. She is enjoying school because she it was her choice. My son who is two years older has not enrolled in college yet. I'm glad because he has had a lot to sort out emotionally about taking charge of his life. I can see he is now getting closer to continuing his education. It will be in his time. I also trust he will benefit far more from it then if he had forced himself to just start.

  • Yahoo! Finance User - Sunday, March 15, 2009, 9:38PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Since when do we tell young adults to be flippant with their time and money and blow it on some fantasy vacation? Especially in times like we are having to endure now, we need to be encouraging the next genration to make the most of their money and invest it in things such as their education so they can get a "leg up" in the workforce. If they enjoy their career choice and succeed in it, then they take that fantasy vacation and maybe they'll be able to travel in more comfort than $20 a day. *Also, since when is living with your grandparents a self-sufficient task? (Just wondering...)*

  • Bri - Sunday, March 8, 2009, 7:25PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    I am a current undergrad and I completely agree, however I don't think you necessarily have to travel the world or anything extravagant to gain that experience. I went to a private university and worked part time as a waitress for 2 years and was ahead in credits so I decided to take a semester off and do an internship with Disney because I thought it would be fun and a really cool experience. Well that turned into a disaster, but I ended up staying away from home and now it's been a year and a half. I'm finishing up most of my school via night classes and working full time- that's real-world experience. I've noticed that when I go back to my old school and visit my friends they really are completely oblivious to what life is going to be like and they are going to be in for a suprise when Spring rolls around and they have to leave the comfort of school and get a real job and learn how to live, not to mention the massive student loans awaiting those who chose not to work. I have learned so much from the various jobs I've had to take to be able to survive on my own. I feel like I've explored a little more and realized alot of things I don't want to be when I grow up. I think when I go to grad school I'll take a break and try being just a student for once.

Showing comments 1-5 of 164Next >>
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