Hacking Your Education... or as I like to call it: An Introvert's Guide to Honing Street Smarts, Building a Network and Embracing Self-Directed Learning
The Physical Book. HYE was published by Penguin Books USA. It's paperback with a page count of roughly 200 pages. It's small enough to carry around and fit in the pocket of a light jacket. To be honest, it looks kinda like a software manual. From the back at least. But it is well edited/formatted compared to some self-published books on the same subject. As for the font, I was even able to read under low-light and make sense of the ideas.
Main Sources. As a hackademic and serial unschooler, Dale's big on real world experiences. There are oodles of anecdotes from daring individuals who either dropped out of college, opted out or finished but gained entirely new skills through good ole' self-directed learning. Often what you find in this genre are people who actually did go to college but recognized the opportunity costs of college after the fact. Dale gets instant street-cred for having lived out the advice in this book. By including short profiles of many others, the argument becomes more convincing that taking on big projects at 18 is a viable way to launch one's adult life.
Is College Worth it? The first chapter was dedicated to assessing the value of college. Most college-hacking books follow this format. Here's an opportunity I've noticed. A significant portion of the audience is already pretty much sold on leaving the Ivory Tower to pursue their own projects. In my case, the main value of this chapter was understanding why others decided on an alternative trajectory after high school. I think there's a market for a book which provides the case for education hacking from a "mature" perspective. These books exist, I think, and I will review them. It's just that they are rare and often pre-MOOCs or even pre-internet. I plan to read Anya Kamenetz's DIY U and then, I will see how well it makes the case to a wider audience.
By the voice in which HYE was written, I just get the sense that Dale's audience was basically his age group. Don't get me wrong, though. this is still a Romantic work. It inspires wonderlust, independence, and risk-taking. As a young person, I eat it all up. I'm just not so sure my dear quinquagenarian mother would.
Ideally, hackademics can move out on their own, but it helps to have the support of family because, to put it frankly: shit happens. If you watch any media coverage of programs like the Thiel Fellowship, reporters are always inquisitive about how the fellow's parents took the news that their Ivy educated children will be changing course. Of course, the answer is always that parent's didn't take it well. When you're trying to make it without a degree, the last thing you want is a resentful parent(s), so I think this aversion to risk is a cultural hurdle Americans have to get past and something we all need more advice on navigating. Dale's fortunate circumstances were that his mom was a teacher with an open mind to unschooling and so he got started in that community even before high school.
The Fun Begins. After the first chapter, that's when I got into the substance of the book. Instead of telling you "Find a mentor," Dale offers a template for reaching out to high profile people you're interested in learning from. Instead of just saying "Join a interest-based community," he tells you how to get in to an exclusive conference and how to pitch ideas. I could go on and on about the things I learned here. These are the areas where Dale takes the comparative advantage over older writers. As a Millenial, he gets to include the back-door solutions that make any sensible person squeamish. I wouldn't have it any other way.
Contents:
- Understanding the System
- The Hackademic Mind-set
- Identifying Your Talents
- Finding Mentors and Teachers
- Building a Community/Network
- Finding Educational Resources
- Learning from the World
These seemingly straightforward chapter titles do not speak for themselves. The gems are hidden under subsections called the "Hack of the Day." In these pages, Dale abstracts away the methods used by each hackademic he interviewed and so the reader is able to apply the steps in new situations. If you think you can't become a ship captain or live in Paris under $1000, think again. There are no guarantees, but this book makes it clear how much you can grow by forging your own path even if it backfires. Some might be skeptical about how well these ideas work when you're a minority, but Dale does a good job of addressing that skepticism through the diverse examples he includes.
In conclusion, I really couldn't come up with any criticisms of HYE. Dale has perfected the art of education hacking and distilled his experience into book form for us all to make use of. In fact, he started an organization called Uncollege that provides plenty more resources on education hacking as well as hackademic camps and a Gap Year program where the emphasis is on experiential and networked learning through travel, internships, and projects. I'll be checking out their collection of resources on the website and re-reading HYE from time to time. Going back to my alternative title, these skills are things many extroverts like Dale pick up on the fly, but after HYE even the introverts don't have an excuse.
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