Tuesday, May 19, 2020
How to compete with Generation Z
How to compete with Generation Z Im convinced that the biggest impact Generation Z will have on the workplace is in their schooling. They will be lifelong, self-learners, who take more personal responsibility for their ongoing education than any generation in history. I am not talking about graduate school here. I am talking about a more creative, independent way of learning that does not stop at college, but rather, picks up pace remarkably after college, when real experiential learning starts happening. The question is, how do we get this lifelong learning bug now, as adults, so we can compete with the young people when they enter the workforce. I thought about this question a lot last week, while I was at cello camp with my son. 1. When it comes to learning, keep your bar very high. At cello camp my sons classes are about 80% Asian. Its like being a Jew in NYC sort of a demographic optical illusion. We are at ground zero for the Tiger Mom. We are at a camp where six-year-olds play cello for five hours a day. I am used to being the crazy, overbearing mom in the rural farm community where we live. Im asked, Why do you have to drive two hours to a music lesson? Theres a piano teacher in Darlington! because I ignore the advice of my neighbors and I drive four hours round trip so my son can take lessons from a music professor at the University of Wisconsin. And I think Im on the right track, because Lisa Nielsen, an education reformer working in the New York City public schools, says that lifelong learners are great at creating their own networks of experts. 2. Walk a narrow path so you can keep learning to jump off the path. But at cello camp I find that Im the laid back, bar-is-low mom. My son played ping-pong with little white girls in between classes. There was one soccer ball in the whole camp, and my son joined the other kid. Who was white, of course. And in group class, my son is the one who wants to try his own rhythms just once I promise please please mom. At first I was thinking I am in a race to keep up with the Asian parents. But then I think about Wesley Yang, the Asian guy who recently wrote an extremely controversial article in New York magazine. The article is about why Asian families are obsessed with childhood achievement at the expense of social skills and creativity. Yang writes about the famously merit-based magnet high school, Stuyvesant, in New York City. There is no way to get in except to have high test scores. And while the Asian population in NYC is only 12%, the Asian student population at Stuyvesant is 72%. At Stuyvesant, the white kids who actually get in do less homework than the Asian kids do, but white kids do as well in school. But when those kids graduate from college, the Asians dont do well in corporate America. Because Asians are generally taught to follow rules, learn whats on the test, and dont make a scene: The exact wrong stuff to learn if you want to succeed in corporate America. So then what traits create a lifelong learner? I think it has to do with knowing oneself and knowing how to ask creative questions in areas of personal interest. And then I get scared being surrounded by Tiger moms. My kid has great social skills. No small feat in a family full of Aspergers. I want my son to be creative and fun. But I want him to have the self-discipline to reach goals he sets for himself. Theres a great TED speech from Sir Ken Robinson that addresses just this topic: how to protect creative thinking from being squashed by adult institutions. I tell myself that my challenge at cello camp is the same challenge that I tell people they have at work: follow enough rules to be relevant, and foster enough creativity to bring joy and surprise to the things you do. 3. Learn by way of discovering what you care about, and not the other way around. Learning doesnt happen insides a box schooling does and these are two very different things, says Nielsen. Her subversive opus The Teenagers Guide to Opting Out Not Dropping Out explains why education ideas like unschooling and natural learning are great because they are student-directed. And she says we should not divide learning by subject or location. Rather, the whole world is a learning environment and the student learns by doing whatever he or she is interested in. I wonder, Is my son becoming a robot when I drag him to Suzuki camp for hours on end? Certainly hed rather be playing video games. But he is developing opinions about his learning, which is part of the process of asking good questions. For example he wants to play Witchs Dance instead of Minuet 1. I let him. Its against the rules to skip around, but I sneak it. And, anyway, his teacher at University of Wisconsin is not such a stickler for Suzuki rules. But what Im saying is that you can follow your passion within constraints. I dont think lifelong learning is about turning on a dime, switching on a whim. I think its following old paths and layering them with new, internally generated questions. But you need to be on some sort of path to have a stable place to form a question. 4. Cater to your learning style. By the third day of camp, we are the only ones who lost our nametags. This is probably better because we are also the only ones who are late. So maybe no one will know who we are. But they do. Because I have a kid who is an EFJ. Thats not a typo there are only three Myers-Briggs letters for kids under 12. (You can be obsessive with your kids, too. Heres the test.) My kid is my personality type opposite. He loves people and people love him. (This is such an unlikely outcome from my Ex and me that my ex has accused me of having had an affair.) So my regular way of coping with lots of people is disappearing into the background, but that doesnt work with him. His favorite way to learn is to be in a room full of people. Charming everyone. I threw a (minor) fit that his private lesson is not actually private its with three other kids. In a group class like it, I would tune out because I dont like groups. But he is totally happy, and I realize that as adults, we seldom learn by watching other people learn. We watch and judge instead of watch and learn. 5. Accept that lifelong learning is a huge time investment. In school, kids do not see their parents investing in lifelong learning. In fact, school teaches kids that adults do not belong in learning environments. In the Suzuki method, where the parent is the music teacher, I have no idea what Im doing. I dont play an instrument, I dont read music, and my musical knowledge is about one month ahead of where my son is. So my son sees me in every single class, learning right alongside him. The payoff is being able to get through the song without getting lost. Which, like all good learning, is not really an end goal but rather just one more step down the path in this case, the path to learning how to play in an orchestra. 6. Spend as much time unlearning as you do learning. I think a lot about what our adult learning needs to look like in order to succeed at work in the next ten years. We will be competing with Generation Z. We will have to learn as effectively as they learn. Alvin Toffler, a futurist, has the answer: The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn and unlearn and relearn. (via learningdoorway.com). Starting over is a key to lifelong learning. Starting from that feeling of knowing nothing, over and over again, will eventually yield learning on a grand scale. Theres a teacher institute within our camp program. I cant help wondering: Why are the students mostly Asian but the teachers in training are mostly white? Maybe my lifelong learning will include unlearning stereotypes I am peppering throughout this post. Its difficult to know what to unlearn. If you have a teacher who can tell you: shes a keeper. One of my sons teachers at camp was the inimitable Amy Barston. She spent the first two days of class making him sit differently, hold the cello differently, and place his feet in a new spot. At the end of that second day, he wrote a note on the chalkboard:
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