College Activities: Not-So-Incidental Learning
by
Marie Hartwell-Walker, Ed.D.
|
So, you’re in college. Big question:
Are you having fun yet? If the answer is “no,” what I say is
this: get yourself out of the classroom, your nose out of that book,
flee the lab, and vacate the library. If you don't, you're going to miss
out on a large part of your
college education. That's right! The college experience offers a great
deal more than scholarship – it also offers countless opportunities to
gain confidence and know-how in making things happen. A long-lost college friend contacted me
the other day. She reports that she is now highly successful in college
development work: designing and producing an award-winning newsletter
and promotional videos, writing and supervising large-scale grants, and
planning and executing fundraising events. She loves her work and does
it well. "A lot of this stuff," she confides, "is just my
work with the Distinguished Visitors Program and the university concert
association ‘grown up.’" My friend was referring to her
undergraduate extracurricular
activities. As I thought about it, I realized that,
like her, a great many of my college friends are engaged in careers
related to what they did in their "free time" while at school.
Oddly enough, almost none of them are making a living at jobs related to
their undergraduate majors. Knowing this, I find it ironic that I
don't remember my professors, my parents, or my advisor talking with me
about what I did outside of the classroom (except when they thought it
was interfering with my grade-point average). The admissions people did
stress the sports, cultural activities, clubs, and opportunities for
"student life" as part of their marketing strategy. But once I
was in school, no one talked with me about how to take advantage of the
many enjoyable and rewarding opportunities available. No one helped me
to understand that, far from "goofing off," participating in
these activities would ultimately have tremendous value for me
personally and professionally. The activities of campus life are not incidental
to the "real" work of college. They are the forum for
mastering the organizational and people skills that are requisite to
being successful in almost any profession. Campus activities provide
practice in working with others to solve problems, meet deadlines,
prepare and spend within a budget, make money, make something happen,
and make sure that others know about it. And, unlike high school,
college-level clubs and activities often have little adult involvement;
students have the freedom to test their abilities, to make and learn
from mistakes, and to celebrate successes that are indeed all their own. Knowing
First-Hand My husband and I freely admit that we
spent as much time on campus activities as we did in our respective
majors. And both of us feel strongly that we use the skills we learned
in those activities almost every day. I met the friend quoted at the beginning
of this article when we both served in the school concert association.
Our little group had full responsibility for bringing famous musicians
and performing artists to campus. We negotiated the contracts, managed
the budget, arranged the schedule, worked with the tech people to set
the stage, did the publicity, designed and published the programs, and
hosted the performer for six to eight events each year. I've been managing human services
agencies for years. My three advanced degrees in education and
psychology taught me what I needed to know to be a teacher and
psychologist, but they offered nothing in the way of management skills.
The basis for my self-confidence and skill as a manager (the other half
of what I do) lies squarely in my experiences with those undergraduate
concerts. My husband was active in student
government. When he was in school, the student senate not only argued
for issues of student policy but also organized, distributed, and
monitored a multi-million dollar budget generated by student fees to
support the various campus student organizations. Student senators
learned about the politics of negotiation, became fluent in Robert’s
Rules of Order, served on sub-committees, developed a working knowledge
of constitutional law, and gained an intuitive understanding of
legislative process. My husband's degree in forestry does not
contribute to his daily work as an expert in electrical code or to his
involvement in town government. But his days as a student senator laid
important groundwork for his current expertise and political know-how. Join
the Fun! Involvement in campus activities is the
other piece (maybe even the more
important piece) of your college education. If you can find
something to do that is an extension of your academic work, so much the
better! But putting on a show, participating in student government,
publishing the student newspaper, staging a protest, or managing a team
all require you to stretch your skills in organizing people, ideas,
time, money, and material. It almost doesn't matter what activity you choose. It matters a great deal that you choose
something that takes you out of the books, out of your head, and into
the world of doing. It matters
a great deal that you jump in and find the competence and confidence
that comes from being really involved in something. It matters a great
deal that you discover the excitement and joy that comes from making
something happen. Go
ahead – join the fun! |
This article was originally published on HelpHorizons.com.
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