Tuesday, August 19, 2008

How to Achieve Learning Goals as an Adult

Learning is a life long process if you want to be successful, and sometimes as an adult it's harder to make learning a priority in your life. It's worth pursuing however. Right now there's still a message in society that your education ends with your final diploma or degree. Several independent studies have shown that somewhere around 20-30% of adults out in the U.S. never read an entire book after they graduate from high school or college.

When you willingly put yourself in a position where you're ignorant of changes going on around you, it impacts you financially and can hurt your overall quality of life. Many people want to do better, but it can sometimes be hard to know where to start. I want to offer a few ideas that helped me through college and later when I became a business owner and writer.

1) To Achieve Any Goal, You Need a Plan.

Don't go blindly into college, a new career, or a new business without having some idea of where you are, where you're going, and how you're going to reach your goal. I think half the battle in learning is knowing what you want. It's through this that you develop a passion about learning certain topics that both interest you and will help you become a better person.

2) Don't Fear Doing Something New.

Though failure is often seen as bad in the academic world, it is a form of learning. You can talk with successful people in any field and a lot of them will tell you they didn't get things perfect the first time. Learning and success are both processes, not destinations. You're never going to reach a point where you feel like you've "arrived." You can however continue to set more challenging goals as you meet your existing ones.

3) Take Some Time to Figure Yourself Out.

I wasted a lot of time in college trying to be just like everyone else around me, and it only made me miserable inside. In my case, I had an entrepreneur mentality and was surrounded by people who wanted jobs. It doesn't make either option bad, but my point is don't let what makes you unique be a curse when it should be a blessing. Don't be afraid to pursue your passion in life even if it makes you stand out from the crowd a little.

4) Find a Learning Pace that Works for You.

In college or just studying things on your own, don't get yourself to the point you're so overwhelmed with information that none of it is sticking. Trying to do too much not only doesn't work, but it will cause you to associate learning with negative stress.

There's nothing wrong with challenging yourself, but keep yourself in check when it comes to that issue. Don't feel like you have to compete against other people younger or older than you to prove yourself as a student. The whole point is to learn, not to compare yourself to others.

5) Make Learning Fun.

Like anything else in life, the more you enjoy learning the better you'll become at it. There are aspects of learning that are skills that you have to develop, but how you do that can be very flexible. There's no point of forcing yourself to do something if you can come up with a way where you can look forward to it.

I hope these tips have been helpful to you! Good luck and best wishes for your future!

More Tips:

  • Want an alternative to spending a lot of money on college? Consider "real world" educational sources as well such as books written by people in the field you're interested in, getting mentored by someone in that field, and accessing Internet resources.
  • There is a danger in feeling like you're too busy to learn when you become an adult and get out of formal schooling. The sad thing is a lack of knowledge may be holding you back from an extraordinary life. You're never too "grown up" to learn.

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