Showing posts with label university. Show all posts
Showing posts with label university. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Les 4 phases de la vie d'un étudiant

Phase 1: Ayant fini le secondaire et ne sachant pas quoi faire avec sa vie, tu te dis que ce n'est pas bien grave puisque tu as toujours le CEGEP pour le découvrir.

Phase 2: Ayant fini le CEGEP et ne sachant toujours pas quoi faire avec sa vie, tu te dis que bah ça peut être pire et que 3 ans d'université te donnent du temps en masse pour réfléchir à la prochaine étape et qu'à la fin tu sauras surement par où te diriger.

Phase 3: La fin de l'université approchant à grands pas, tu te trouves DANS LA MERDE, puisque t'es pas plus proche de savoir comment tu gagneras ta vie que tu l'étais il y a 4 ans à la fin de ton secondaire.

Donc la question suivante se pose: quand sommes-nous supposés savoir que faire de notre vie? Est-ce qu'il y a une date limite pour trouver la réponse à cette ultime question existentielle? En voyant des gens qui se cherchent encore rendus à 30 ans, je me dis que peut-être pas...

Phase 4: Arriver à la conclusion que la vie n'est qu'une suite d'essaies et erreurs et qu'avec un peu de chance on tombe sur la bonne variante avant 30 ans. Sinon, on est DANS LA MERDE.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Superhuman race

As the years go by and you get through high school, CEGEP and university, the pressure put on students to perform continuously increases and you get to the point where you desperately need a reality check.

You start school, an innocent 6 year-old thinking that good grades is all you need to get through life. Then the years go by and before you know it, you have to apply to university and suddenly having good grades is only enough to keep you afloat among the masses of high achievers. But what makes you unique? That is what universities want to know. And unless you've won some beauty pageant, all the while being the president of the math club, there's no chance that anyone will take notice.

Extracurriculars have become the new buzzword in the academic world and even in the world of job searches. It is no longer enough to be good at what you do, but you need to care about your community, you need to change things, you need to leave a mark. And if that wasn't enough, you also have to network and have the right connections if you want to get into a really good school. I read this old article in the New York Times about athletes who were trying to gain admission into select colleges through their achievements in the world of sports. Now these aren't brainless people who weigh 200 pounds of muscle and who only know how to kick a ball. They are intelligent people who manage to juggle school work and intense training programs. But still, some are left out. Because even when you're the best, there are still people who are better than you.

But how do you live with this knowledge? Always pushing yourself, always expanding your horizons in every possible direction, hoping that you have what it takes to secure a good future for yourself. Another New York Times post talks about students in the US applying to as many as 30 universities in hopes of being accepted in a good school. 30??? That is freakishly insane! Besides the fact that you get yourself in debt even before you start college in order to pay the application forms, the time it takes to complete those applications which in competitive programs require long autobiographical letters and references from teachers is incredibly long even for one application.

This leads me to think, what about the normal people? Do they even exist anymore? People who struggle in high school, what do they do in this case? Or have they already been submerged in the academic ocean? Did they give up? Have they been absorbed by society into Walmart cashiers and restaurant waiters? Or on the contrary, are they faring better than us nerds by simply rejecting the system and becoming entrepreneurs?

I remember someone once telling me that it's better to be the smartest in a group of stupid people, than to be the idiot in the genius bunch (or something along those lines). Maybe the answer doesn't lie in going to Harvard or McGill Med, but in making your own way. But then which one of those two is easier?

Maybe, in the end, the problem is not with the system, because after all, there will always be limited places for a larger number of candidates, be it in universities or in the workforce. Maybe there's a problem with our values and the perception we have of ourselves. Maybe the philosophy exposed in Fight Club is right. Maybe Tyler Durden is right when he says: "You are not special. You are not a beautiful or unique snowflake. You're the same decaying organic matter as everything else". Maybe we should stop concentrating on being the best and just concentrate on enjoying life. And what if you have to be the best in order to enjoy life (aka high achievers such as myself)? Well then sucks to be you...

New York Times articles here and here