Saturday, October 8, 2011

STEVE JOBS TEACHES US

Dr. Wendy Ghiora – Posting #98 – October 8, 2011

We lost a great teacher a few days ago. His name was Steve Jobs. Most of us know him as a young genius and creator of the Apple Dynasty. I was one of more than nine million who viewed his 2005 Stanford University Commencement Speech. I found his message to be a profound teaching tool. Mr. Jobs used three stories from his life as the means to deliver his wisdom.

1.Follow Your Heart

The first story was about “Connecting the Dots.” This is where each of us tries to make sense of a path we have taken, we are on, or we are about to embark upon. He described how after he had formally dropped out of Reed College, he informally “dropped in,” only this time he only attended classes that caught his interest. One of these happened to be a Calligraphy class. He learned all about typography, spacing and the art of hundreds of beautiful fonts. At the time, he figured none of this would have any practical application. As it turned out, this led to Apple being the pioneer computer company to include multiple typefaces with beautiful spacing and typography, for which they are so well known.

Mr. Jobs teaches us that “connecting the dots” can be done only by looking forward, not by looking backward. Somehow, he knew dropping out was not looked on as a very wise thing to do; and even though the “drop in” classes seemed impractical, they “called to him.” In his words:

Don't let the noise of others' opinions drown out your inner voice.

2.Be Courageous

The second story he told was about “Love and Loss.” This is where each of us loves something very much, loses it, and how we deal with this loss. Steve Jobs and a friend started The Apple Company in a garage when he was twenty years old. It soon became an enormous organization with several thousand employees. He had a falling out with someone who had a different vision of where Apple should go. The Board of Directors agreed with the other person, and Steve Jobs was fired at the age of thirty.

So, there he was, Jobs was jobless and had to start all over again. He believes this was the best thing that could have happened to him. He was forced to begin freshly and in a new time. This led him to conceive of and develop two new companies: NEXT and PIXAR; both of these became giant, new successful businesses. Eventually Apple bought NEXT, so he was working for Apple once again.

Steve’s message here is to be courageous, find what you love and to love what you do. He prods us to “never settle.” His exact quote was:

The only way to be truly satisfied is to do great work.
And the only way to do great work is to do what you love.

3.Live Each Day as Though It Is Your Last

His third and final story was: “Live each day as though it is your last.” Steve Jobs was faced with pancreatic cancer and faced death. Luckily, he survived. From that moment on he looked in the mirror each morning and asked himself if what he planned to do this day would be enough if it turned out this was his last day on earth. He advises us to follow our hearts and our intuition each day, and included this quote:

Your time is limited, so don't waste it living someone else's life.

As teachers we must refrain from only giving answers to students. Instead, we should strive to give them examples in life so they can discover the answers themselves. Steve Jobs is one of those examples in the way he chose to live his life.

Steve Jobs’ attitude toward and actions taken in his life speak to students at the brink of finding their own calling. Many children have dreams of who or what they want to be one day. Steve Jobs was the embodiment of those dreams attained.

We don’t get a chance to do that many things,
and every one should be really excellent.
Steve Jobs

1 comment:

  1. Thanks, Wendy, for posting this.

    For me, there are some people you just expect to ALWAYS be around. For me, Steve Jobs was one of him.

    Most of us only knew him from afar, but I can say with certainty the man's life was a pretty long "teaching-by-example."

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