What Works in Public Education

Learning Curves: The Best-Laid Plans Can Go Awry -- Amen!

Seven accomplished people share their personal stories.

by Owen Edwards

Print Forward Share Comments(0) Comment RSS
christiane amanpour
daniel handler
alice waters.jpg
barbara lee
carey winfrey
donald trump
frederica von stade

Sometimes, the long path through school to a career is unswerving: A first grader decides to become a doctor, and, after years of hard work and study, she does. More often than not, though, the educational road is unpredictable, full of bumps, unmapped detours, and sudden forks. Many of us end up at destinations far different than those we set out for. Each time a teacher works with a student, there exists the chance that a random remark, a single homework assignment, a well-deserved compliment, or a shared story will trigger a lifetime enthusiasm. This possibility, always waiting in the wings of every classroom, represents one of the most significant responsibilities of educators, and one of the greatest sources of hope and excitement in teaching.

Successful lives are often the result of what is learned when we are supposed to be learning something else. The following seven personal stories, from accomplished men and women in fields ranging from music to magazines, from real estate to restaurants, from television to literature -- CNN correspondent Christiane Amanpour, U.S. Representative Barbara Lee, author Lemony Snicket, builder Donald Trump, mezzo soprano Frederica von Stade, restaurateur Alice Waters, Smithsonian editor in chief Carey Winfrey -- illustrate the crucial importance of such hard-to-measure factors as serendipity, curiosity, and coincidence, and often a teacher with a keen instinct about a student's unsuspected potential.

Christiane Amanpour  |  Daniel Handler  |  Alice Waters  |  Barbara Lee  |  Carey Winfrey
Donald Trump  |  Frederica von Stade

Owen Edwards is a contributing editor for Edutopia and Smithsonian magazines.

This article was also published in the Jul 2007: School to Career issue of Edutopia magazine .

Sign In

Please sign in here
Not yet a member of the Edutopia community? Create an Account

Create an Account

Almost there! As soon as your account is created, your new comment will be posted.
Mollom CAPTCHA (play audio CAPTCHA)
By creating an account, you agree to Edutopia's terms of use.

Advertisement

@edutopia on Twitter Edutopia on Facebook YouTube link RSS feed link

Advertisement