No B.S Friday: The school system is designed to get you used to losing.
Coming into the tail end of 2021, I wondered if it was time to update my bio. I found myself pausing at the line, “Jon is a self-made millionaire, even though he failed high-school…. twice.”
It’s a standard line for me, but then I thought about it and rewrote it as, “Jon is a self-made millionaire BECAUSE he dropped out of high school twice.”
“Dropped out” is actually a nice way of putting it. Makes it sound like it was a choice. It was more like I was ejected… like the way a fighter pilot is ejected from a burning air-craft.
School and I didn’t get along. And you could point to the spit-balls, the fighting, the arson allegations but really, these were all symptoms. I just didn’t know how to exist within the system.
And this is what saved me.
Of course I didn’t understand at the time. I was 17. I didn’t even know what ‘system’ meant. I couldn’t understand it. All I knew was that school made me feel like sh!t.
Fast-forward a few decades, and now I think I’ve started to figure it out. The reason I was ejected from the wreckage of my burning school is that my principal was a dickhead, my teachers were angry lesbians, AND the schooling system is designed to acclimatise you to losing.
I’ll say that last bit again. The school system is designed to acclimatise you to losing. To being a loser. To giving up on your dreams, and accepting your fate as a quiet and pliable potato.
Think about the grading system.
The grading system is the feedback loop between the school and the student. It lets the student know how they’re going, and how they’re performing in the eyes of the school, and by implication, the eyes of the world.
But the system is rigged.
Imagine you get 95% on a maths test. Perhaps you forgot to carry one of the adverbs. That looks like a good score right. We’ve been taught to see that as a good score.
But what it really says is that you failed to achieve “right”. You got close, but you failed. “Perfection” was available, but you came up short.
Loser.
Same story with grades like A,B+, C etc. It’s all relative to some ideal. What a perfect student would have done. The further you get from A++, the less ideal you are. The more of a loser you are. Until you get to C-, where me and my mates used to hang out. At that point you’re closer to total failure than you are to ideal.
50 shades of loser.
And that might sound like sour grapes come from where I sit. But I remember a young girl in my class. Her parents were refuges from Vietnam and they had drummed an incredible work-ethic into her. She was amazing. Every assignment looked like a hand-written invitation to the Queen.
She killed it. And then one day, she slipped up on something, and she got 95% on her test.
She was devastated. She burst into tears.
For the first time, she had tasted failure. The system told her that she was ‘wrong’.
And from that day on, like the rest of us, she had to get used to the system telling her she was a loser (to greater or lesser degrees) until we graduated, acclimatized to the idea that you can never win.
(We don’t like the cogs in the machine getting too uppity.)
While it was a painful process at the time (mostly for my parents), ultimately I was lucky to crash out of the system so early.
But I still had a need to prove myself, so I turned to…
… money.
Money is a much better metric than %’s or grades. And that’s because there’s no upper limit.
So I started wheeling and dealing. From then on, 100% wasn’t my reference point. Break-even was. If I lost money, I felt like I’d lost. But if I broke even or better, I felt like I won.
And it’s not hard to do break-even or better, so slowly I got used to the feeling of winning. I liked it, and it drove me further and harder, til I was making big deals and enjoying big wins.
Something the school system never gives you, by design.
So my suggestion of course is that we should do away with grades and gold stars, and reward school performance with money. Less gold stickers, more gold coins. If we do that, our kids will slowly get used to the feeling of winning.
I know it’s radical. But I think it’s got merit.
Board of Education, I’m waiting for your call.
JG.
V says
Good on you, Jon, for becoming a self-made (or self-proclamed) millionaire despite failing high-school. twice. But you have to admit that not all of those who failed high-school twice become millionaires. Most of them end up in jail, on the dole, or in low-level jobs.
Also, with all respect to your success, what is your profession? And yes, our schools are not designed to prepare graduates who will have no profession. They are preparing people who will design, manufacture, build, treat, etc.
Just wondering, when you drive your car, do you want its brakes to be made by those who failed high-school. twice? If you fly in a plane, do you want those who failed high-school. twice to design and fly it? If you live in an apartment or stay in a multi-store hotel, do you want those who failed high-school. twice to design and build that skyscraper? If you need to go to hospital, do you want someone who failed high-school. twice to operate on you?..
D says
Yeah good on you Jon for being open and honest. Some poetic language and my experience of school being a tough time resonates somewhat with the expletives from the point of view of a 17 year old.
V has a strong argument and I agree with her. My interpretation of Jon’s message is to illustrate you can hit rock bottom and still jump for the stars.
I also am on my way to hitting the stars.
Recently I realise we need to be a financially savvy country to be successful. I’m enjoying the abundance of money and appreciation of property. However we all need to watch our spending. The US is now on a trajectory of spending that can’t be stopped. Which in turn will continue to drive up property.
I’m summary we need all Australians to be successful at managing their budget to compete at the top long term on the world stage and that includes generating more GDP.
Christine says
Love this! I think everyone is getting different things from this piece. Having children with private school education the focus is extremely heavy in getting the score to get into your preferred uni course, is there any mention of starting your own business…. haha of course not! I constantly tell my kids that I don’t care what they do, or what their grades are as long as they gave it their best shot. I am going to get them both to read this article