What I Wish I’d Known in College

Happy Monday, everyone! As you can imagine, I spent this weekend thinking a lot about the New York Times Magazine cover story, “What Is It About 20-Somethings?” I’ve submitted a Letter to the Editor and will post it here if the Times doesn’t publish it. In the meantime, I’d love to hear your comments here or on Twitter.

In the meantime, on to my newest post. Looking forward to your comments!


What I Wish I’d Known in College

As someone who spends my days interacting with college students and thinking about their career prospects, I often think back to my own days on campus. I’ll admit that I experience a mix of nostalgia, relief and regret. I enjoyed college, but I also struggled to find direction during those four years.

While I know I can’t change the past — and my struggles transitioning from college to career led me to the work that I do now — there are definitely some things I would have done differently. For what it’s worth, here are three things I wish I’d known in college that I know now, in my 30s:

1. Great teachers and mentors are rarer than you think. I wish I’d taken classes in college based solely on the amazingness of the professors, regardless of the subject of the classes they taught. If there is a “star” teacher at your school, take his or her class, even if you just audit it from the back row. No matter what that person teaches, his or her passion will inspire you.

2. It’s okay to fail (or get a D). Those who’ve read my book, Getting from College to Career, know my deep, dark, terrible secret: that I got a D on my first test in college. It was a calculus test — a subject I’d hesitated to sign up for in the first place — and I thought my academic life was O-V-E-R.

Sure, I moved on, but I made many future course decisions based on which classes I thought I would do well in. What a stupid thing to do! Imagine all of the interesting classes I never considered because I thought I might not get a good grade. Never let fear hold you back from trying something new or different.

3. College is the beginning of your career. A few years after graduating from college I had an appointment with a career coach because I couldn’t figure out what I wanted to do with my life. She asked me to describe some of my “peak” experiences, and one of the experiences I shared was my role as a Freshman Counselor (my university’s equivalent of a Resident Advisor). I absolutely loved the position — advising students, mentoring them and learning about their perspectives.

“Why don’t you make a career of that?” she asked.

I can honestly say that the thought had never occurred to me. For some reason, I thought that job was just “college stuff” and not relevant to the Real World. Of course now I know that being a Freshman Counselor was my first step to starting the business I have today.

As you think about your career, don’t discount all of the things you are doing as a student — your coursework, volunteering, extra curriculars, sports, social activities and more — and think about how these might be the seeds that will grow into a future career.

(Image: Montclair Public Schools)

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6 Comments

    Comment: Posted by Lindsey Pollak on September 22, 2010 at 11:21 am

    @Sally – thanks for the comment!
    Lindsey

    Comment: Posted by Sally on September 18, 2010 at 11:08 pm

    I agree with what you said about the notorious “D” on a transcript. While I’ve been asked for my GPA before, a corporate employer has never asked for a transcript. The only time a perspective employer has asked for my transcripts was for a position in academia.

    Comment: Posted by Lindsey Pollak on August 25, 2010 at 5:09 pm

    @Kilks – I completely agree. You’ll be interested in this response on the Atlantic blog: http://bit.ly/aOeTOX
    Thanks for the comments,
    Lindsey

    Comment: Posted by Kilks on August 25, 2010 at 2:14 pm

    The NYT magazine article is pretty good, but it downplays the recession way too much. The article mentions the recession twice in an off-hand way, but as a minor reason, not the major reason 20-somethings are moving home. It also focuses more on 20-somethings who’ve graduated from college, when the majority have not.

    Comment: Posted by Finance Jobs on August 25, 2010 at 3:50 am

    Nice post, and i feel that there are many student out there who dun really realise that the learning process is also as important then getting the end degree. and i guess this is also the reason some companies prefer to recruit ppl with working experience. Even job search website (ie. headhunt.com.sg) are also leaning to recruit only middle to senior executives.

    thanks for the insights. cheers.

    Comment: Posted by DC Jobs on August 23, 2010 at 12:02 pm

    Regarding your point #1, your right, passion is contagious. That habit of seeking out people with passion is something we can apply the rest of our careers.

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