5 Ways to Give Yourself an Education That Kicks the Crap Out of the One You Got in School

345712329 f1375f13c0 5 Ways to Give Yourself an Education That Kicks the Crap Out of the One You Got in School

 

One of the biggest reasons that people are denied the privilege of education is because they can’t afford it. However, today we live in a world where knowledge and information are at our finger tips like never before.  Technology has leveled the playing field so that anybody with an interest and an internet connection can receive a world class education. Bloggers, podcasters, search engines and digital content creators of all types of have made it possible  for us to learn virtually anything we want to even if we don’t have the money. If you want to learn anything chances are there is somebody creating content about the subject and sharing it with the world at no cost.

Self Motivation is Not Optional

Taking this kind of approach to educating yourself requires an extremely high degree of self motivation. You’re not going to have any teachers or professors holding you accountable. You won’t be measured by grades.  Therefore in order to receive this world class education you’ll have to be extremely disciplined in terms of how you go about it. You’ll have to do everything from figuring out what you want to study, to determining what the course materials are going to be. In order to make sure your efforts to self educate don’t get scattered, I recommend limiting your “course load” and focusing on 2-3 areas for at least 6 months.

Resources to Get You Started

 

1. Free College Curriculums

There are a handful of  traditional education institutions that have started to embrace this trend. Fortunately one of the very first to do so was MIT, a world class institution where tuition would run you a hefty chunk of change. However, through open courseware an MIT education is suddenly available to anybody who wants one.  Courses are available in engineering, management, science, architecture and a number of other areas. If other institutions start to follow suit, people who have been denied the privilege of education for financial reasons will finally have an opportunity if they want it.

2. The Blogosphere

In a recent feature, the CBS Sunday morning show said that there were approximately 50 million active blogs online. There are blogs on nearly every subject you can possibly imagine.

What’s interesting about the blogosphere is that it has created a trend of unconventional education and the opportunity to study any subject you have an interest in. You’re no longer limited to the confines of assigned reading, class lectures, and your major. You have an opportunity to be a much more well rounded individual than ever before.

3. Books

In the movie Good Will Hunting Matt Damon’s famous quote was “You just spent 150 grand on an education you could have gotten for $1.50 in late fees at the public library.”  While it was a bit facetious, anybody who has received a college education probably had a bit of a chuckle because there was a kernel of truth to what was said.  One of the biggest expenses for any college student is textbooks.  But, the beauty of a public library is that it makes books accessible to everybody and it’s completely free. When I spent 9 months unemployed, the local library in my town became one of my stomping grounds. Unlike a book store, if I wanted to take something home and read it, I didn’t have to fork out $15.00. It might be tempting to dismiss the library as an obsolete resource, but today libraries have their whole book selection available online  and even have audio books that can be downloaded directly from some of their web sites.  To add to that many published authors today have their own blogs where you can read their content as well.

4. Podcasts

Do a quick search through the iTunes directory and you’ll find podcasts on a wide variety of subjects ranging from learning a language to online marketing. The other thing that makes a podcast a fantastic option for increasing your knowledge is the fact that you can listen it while you’re working out, stuck in traffic or cleaning your house. Podcasts can turn our most mundane day to day experiences into time well spent.

5. Online Video

  • TED: One of the most inspirational educational resources at everybody’s disposal is the TED web site. World class authors, entrepreneurs and scientists share their very best ideas with the world. I’d recommend watching at least one TED talk every single day. Most TED talks are an average of about 15 minutes and will inspire, entertain, and inform you.
  • Youtube can also be a great educational resource. These days just do a search for the words “How to”, fill in the blank and you’ll have numerous options at your finger tips.
  • Instructables:  If there’s ones site that really provides an opportunity to type in the words  “how to” followed by whatever you want to learn how to do, it’s Instructables. This user generated community has over x videos specifically designed to teach you how to do something.

Education as we know it is changing rapidly. The classroom is  no longer the only option to receive a world class education. With nothing more than internet connection and a computer you have the potential to develop knowledge and skills that will far outweigh the things you would learn just by attending school.  The great thing about the school of life is that there are no grades, no tests, or requirements. It’s purely about the joy of learning.

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"The problem with quotes found on the internet is that it's almost impossible to determine their authenticity" Abraham Lincoln

 

Despite not completing high school, my mother could literally narrate any surgical operation on TV with as much detail as time would allow. Personally, I've stopped going to salons because I've realized I have a 50/50 of screwing the job up myself, but that doesn't make me any more likely to let my mom perform my surgery...

Joeldb 5 pts

Free audio book www.awareofyourthoughts.org

Vanexe 5 pts

If only the law firm downtown will accept "I taught myself to be a lawyer by reading things on the internet and listening to mp3 lectures!"

Shelia 5 pts

It seems to me the real point in this post is to take action. Invest in yourself, whether that be formal education or school of hard Knocks. The beauty is you have a choice and the opportunities are endless. I too have an advanced degree, but some of the smartest and most creative people I know don't have big credentials behind their name. Great post.

nickgofly 5 pts

In someways i agree with this article. with the internet you can learn just about anything, the problem is relevent information is hard to find all in one place. However, anybody who is good at finding resources can thrive from the internet. for example young curious minds can go ahead in their studies with khanacademy.com. for people seeking college level materials i would strogly encourage to use OCW Consortium. OCW is a collection of all the opencourse ware material published by universities world wide including MIT and other prestigius universities, it also includes other opencourseware sources like p2p.com or openlearn/com. everything is orgnaized and readily available to you in the OCW Consortium(to find the webpage just search it). Even if links it sends you too dont have full materials (like mit opencourseware) just look at the calender, syllabus, and books to kind of figure out the topics you should research. One of the big problems pointed out in this forum is that even if you do give yourself an education you cant prove it to employers so there is no point to it... well surprise MIT recently launched something called MITx. MIT is providing for the world online courses and online tools that their students use themselves. MITx will also award a certificate of mastery on every course it publishes for a low shipping cost. The certificates will only be awarded to students who prove mastery in the subject studied. if a certificate from MIT doesnt convince employers that you have a master of that subject, then i dont know what will. anyways, MITx only has one course right now, i think its on circuits. however, the course was lunched as a test run. By fall this year they said they would have MITx fully functioning with more courses. so for now, if you have nothing else to study i would pick up a linear algebra book, learn it because it is a requirement to take the circuit course, and then dedicate yourself to circuits to earn a certificate. this will give you a sense of what college courses are like. in conclusion, there are plenty of sources out there, the hard part is finding them all, so do a little googling and find them and keep them in your booksmarks, and lastly... learn!

meworld 5 pts

Not to be a bummer, but it would be near impossible to learn engineering online. I would love to save the money too, but reading various documents isn't the same as having professors, teaching assistants, tutors, advisers, labs, tutorials, group projects, etc. I mean the work load is already designed to be just bearable for the moderately above average student WITH all the resources the university provides. Working with other students face to face is nearly essential to getting work done on time, and engineering is really group based at its core. Of course that's only one field, but this applies to all of them really. It seems like all you're paying for is a paper that says you've learned a bunch of stuff that you could easily find on the internet, but you really do get what you pay for (Although I have to agree, textbooks are a rip off). I use things like Khan Academy and blogs all the time but it is absolutely no more and no less than a supplement. The advice you get from something like the Harvard Business Review isn't a class, it's a few key points that people have gleaned from the vast body of knowledge they've acquired through thousands of hours of studying.

Wrongful Death Attorney 5 pts

The only thing that's missing with teaching yourself is the spectrum is too broad and it's important to have a teacher to show you what means something and what doesn't. Every college class I've ever taken, we NEVER read through the entire text book, we skip around usually.

freewebcoach 5 pts

I'd like to get a law degree online for free... Is that possible? I'm too broke to afford it...

agostinotv 5 pts

The whole library thing is frankly a bunch of bull and so are ebooks. Try this, enroll in any college class, free or not, and then go to the library and see if they have the textbook you want. While your at it, check if there is a digitized version of it - there isn't. Sorry to be the bringer of bad new, but one of the major points in this article is false. Publishers are making way too much money off the education industry to allow their books to be available in a library or an ebook. There might be a handful of exceptions that are publicized by idealists, similar to the one who wrote this article.

Jhiggins 5 pts

agostinotv You're ibrary can order in anything published. Unless it was printed under a private distributuion act, but then if it was im guessing it wont be needed for coursework :/

Great tips, I found(well, figured) that happiness and motivation was required to take a step like this, a great deal of motivation or just pure sweat needs to be put into any learning project unless its very brief, I went through a guide I found at http://finest-review.com/the-lasting-happiness-and-success-formula-review/

I studied it and now I found happiness that motivates me to succeed in my area. Just a tip, like the article agrees with, there is so much information available at so many places - you just have to ackgnowledge it!

davespeed 5 pts

I agree with your recommendation about TED. With the exception of three days when I was in the hospital, I have watched a TED talk every day this year. Well worth the small investment of time each day!

Your post is really inspirational. I'm

You should list the Khan Academy

I love having the ability to teach myself almost anything from the internet and other free resources, and have already greatly benefited from readily available information. The only problem I see is that while you may, in fact, be able to teach yourself anything and everything with self motivation, discipline, and the right resources, what is truly of value coming out of the education system is the diploma, degree or whatever, the actual proof that you have successfully learned and mastered what you've been studying. It's not what makes you qualified to do whatever job it is you end up doing, but it is necessary in that it tells other people you are qualified to do it. The day we figure out how to provide proof of our self education such that it is accepted on the job market, in a practical setting, is the day we make our current system totally obsolete and end up with a much better lifestyle. (This may already be somewhat possible by simply taking different tests designed to determine whether one is qualified or not. For example, I believe the bar exam could be taken without actually attending law school). Think about it; everyone will learn at their own pace, motivated by wanting to get somewhere in life, where they want to be, and their learning will be not only more thorough but also better retained and used. Certainly there will be some without motivation and they will get nowhere, but at least the successful will be those that earn it, not those that buy it. That's a society we need to work towards.

Yea we truly are in the information age. Information is at our fingertips. It is those who grasp this and learn new skills quick will flourish in the years ahead..

lifeinoleg 5 pts

I'm a big proponent of continuous learning so naturally I really enjoyed the spirit behind and the specific suggestions within this post. I do suggest, however, adding a class of indispensable resources that you've missed.

As a public librarian, I'm really glad you mentioned the library as a resource for independent education. One essential service that you forgot to mention is the subscription databases many public libraries provide absolutely free to card holders. Databases is a bit of a misnomer though, I really mean online resources - but stuff that's in the deep web, not available to Google, or any other search engine. Let me give you two examples just to whet your appetite:

Say someone comes to me and wants to learn a foreign language...Great! I can point them to audiobooks, textbooks, the Foreign Language Institute (http://fsi-language-courses.org/Content.php), and all of those things are cool. BUT, many people come up and ask for Rosetta Stone. I say, "Why spend $50 when you can get similar services for free from the library? Check out our Research & Learning page: http://www.colapublib.org/periodicals/#lang -- the County of Los Angeles Public Library provides not one, but two really nice solutions for you that you can access from any place with an internet connection." Needless to say people are ALWAYS happy to see that.

How about literary research? Well, most public libraries subscribe to Gale's Literature Resource Center which provides at least undergraduate level access to scholarly journal articles on many popular and less popular texts. I'm talking about literally 140 articles that discuss Poe's "The Raven", and that's just one example.

Online resources provided by public libraries should be an autodidact's best friend. Combined with a library's print collections and the tons of great resources you have in your post, almost any subject could be conquered.

Caracr 5 pts

Just wanted to mention another GREAT site to watch lectures from some of the best Universities (Yale, MIT, and many many others) is AcademicEarth.com Enjoy!

EricPierce 7 pts

re:" That is why colleges have to form curriculum and pass accreditation, so that there will be legitimate standards"

What is missing in your analysis is the battle for the soul of education that happened 100 years ago. At that time, one group wanted to make education a mass production system, on the model of industry: Factory Learning (information as a commodity).

This was the "soul-less" (dehumanizing, un-creative) version of education that became prominent.

An older form of education didn't need factory certification, it had a smaller, more "authentic" cultural basis that had other methods of quality control via "shared value commitments" and informal community pressures. Please note that for most of human history, creative, innovative forms of learning were normal, local, and started not in institutions removed from family and culture, but in homes, churches, backroom shops, the barn, etc., and was taught to children by people that loved them: their families and neighbors. The first lesson was in decency, honesty and respect, things that are appallingly absent in Factory Learning.

skooloflife 119 pts moderator

EricPierce Thanks for your contributions to this post. You've brought some very thought provoking insights to the discussion. It's funny because your quote reminds of this scene from the movie Accepted where Lewis Black says "College is a service industry." But as you have pointed out, education has become more like a factory and it' just a mass production effort. They might as well says "here's your diploma, would you like fries with that?"

My latest conversation: blogcastFMEmailcap | BlogcastFM: The Blogger's Podcast | BlogcastFM: The Blogger's Podcast

fi.cooper 9 pts

EricPierce Great point Eric. There are many of us parents who are baulking against the factory education our kids are getting. Some are home educating and some are trying to change the system from within.... not at all an easy thing to do. In the UK we have an opportunity to start up alternative state funded schools which might not be educating along standard lines.... it remains to be seen how liberal our govt will be with this idea, but a change is LONG overdue. We are not educating ourselves or our kids for the future they will live in.

About 25 years ago I attempted this idea but only had the library as my resource back then so it was hard to stick with it and I gave up after awhile. This post motivates me to start again!

skooloflife 119 pts moderator

Glad I could be of assistance. Let me know how the journey goes.

My latest conversation: LaraKulpa | BlogcastFM: The Blogger's Podcast | BlogcastFM: The Blogger's Podcast

Good advice, mostly. However, the blogosphere can easily be the (and usually is) the source of more bias and disinformation than any 1950s-era history book.

EricPierce 7 pts

The information age (postmodernism) is the age of the greek god Hermes (archetype). Hermes was the god of not only information, but deception and "boundary violations". The industrial revolution was about the archetypes of Prometheus and Apollo, Industry and Reason. (integral theory - Bernie Neville @ latrobe.edu)

The dominance of the age of Reason is over, as is the control of the social elites that were privileged to decide for everyone what was "correct" information.

Ironically, now that the "freedoms" of the internet allow everyone to decide what is "correct" information, information has become a commodity, and its "real " meaning is of less value.

Cecilia 5 pts

Let me tell you, this is one of the best post I EVER read. Thank you very mucho to cheer your knowledge in a really easy and simple way.

skooloflife 119 pts moderator

Cecilia Thank you Cecilia. I'm glad you enjoyed it.

My latest conversation: LaraKulpa | BlogcastFM: The Blogger's Podcast | BlogcastFM: The Blogger's Podcast

I think you're missing the point on with a few of your resources. For example, reading blogs and looking at the Instructables website aren't anything near the kind of education you'd be seeking by going to college. Blogs aren't scholarly materials, they're just opinions, and anyone can write one. I think you come closer when you cite podcasts of actual lessons that actual professors have given. Actually, if you knew what material the kids attending those classes are reading, you could have almost the same standard of education that they've had, minus the class discussion and access to office hours.

So, that being said, I think anyone studying a subject with these methods would be far less educated than a self-motivated college student.

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skooloflife
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successfulWT
successfulWT

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successfulWT
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skooloflife
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RoadsToMoscow Thanks for the RT.

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RockTique
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DrSampyRoy Hi Sampurna, thank you! How's your weekend going, love? :) X

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RockTique. Everything is perfect. All ready for a busy week ahead. Luv & hugs to you (specially to your little rockstar)

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DrSampyRoy Glad to hear it, you're a few steps ahead of me! Love & Hugs back...from me and my sleepy little rockstar! :)) xoxo