Posted on 05/10/2006 11:56:47 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
"Bluto"
All those years in college and he hasn't studied one yet?
Another "thing" this meathead hasn't done is graduate. Geez.
I'm thinking more "Dauber."
Is he assistant coach for the football team?
Paraphrased
....I'm a liberal and this environment really fits my thinking.... If I could get someone to pay for my expenses and tuition, I would never leave....
Doesn't that really just define a liberal perfectly.
Johnny Lechner, Professional Student -- Afflicted With On-Set Career Crisis, Says Gen Y Career Coach
Twelve years of school & thousands of dollars on a college degree hasnt taught Johnny what he needs to be successful. Gen Y Career Coach says CNNs Heidi Collins interview with professional student proves hes got On-Set Career Crisis.
(PRWEB) May 5, 2006 -- When CNN reporter Heidi Collins interviewed Johnny Lechner, a college student on the twelve year plan, she asked him what he was afraid of. His answer: regretting not doing one more year of school. But Gen Y career coach, J.T. ODonnell, says Lechners real fear is for leaving the only thing he knows how to do well -- being a professional student. ODonnell is so familiar with this problem as a result of her work with college students and young professionals that shes given it a name: On-Set Career Crisis. ODonnell says this type of affliction comes from being overwhelmed by the decision to choose a career direction without any clear guarantee of success. Kids are graduating from school today without any idea of what they want to do or how they are going to achieve the success they believe is expected of them. They're also having a much harder time finding their internal motivation for work and the best way to find professional satisfaction on their own terms. (See CNN's interview with Johnny at this link http://news.yahoo.com/i/2448.)
ODonnell says this can be attributed to the now popular discussion around helicopter parenting and the effects pop-behaviorism has had on the way young people today have been taught to motivate themselves. Gen Y has been guided from an early age to focus on the prize. The on-demand, instant gratification generation has been coaxed into desired behaviors using all sorts of bribes. Presents, praise, stickers, grades; you name it, this generation is used to being given an incentive to do whats expected of them.
ODonnell says the problem of On-Set Career Crisis becomes acute when a professional student is forced to leave the comforts of an externally motivated world in order to seek satisfaction from internally motivated efforts. Their first decision as an adult is to choose a career. But thats like telling them to go pick one food out of a mega-grocery story, without reading the labels, and then being told that it will be the only food theyll eat for the next two to five years; a pretty unappealing thing to do. Its no wonder why people like Johnny Lechner would rather stay in school. ODonnell says that in spite of spending thousands of dollars on expensive college degrees, Gen Y hasnt learned how to assess their professional strengths and preferences and then translate them into viable career options. Career success and satisfaction comes from knowing what you are good at and what jobs will let you shine. While there are thousands of career paths a young person can take today, after proper analysis, the list can be shortened dramatically, enabling a student to make an informed and effective decision with respect to their first job out of college. Unfortunately, this process hasnt been taught to Gen Y, leaving them overwhelmed and unhappy at the prospect of becoming part of the American workforce.
ODonnell says the number of Johnny Lechners in America is on the up rise and will continue to grow unless educators recognize Gen Ys need for tools that will help them understand and tap into their internal motivation for work. She also says that parents need to recognize that as their childrens first and most impactful teachers, their own personal and professional success has influenced their childrens perceptions and thoughts on career.
It's sad, but a lot of young people I meet today think career is a four letter word. Theyve watched their parents struggle and stress over their careers and have decided to rebel against a life strained by professional success. But at the same time, they have no role models or resources to find the work-life balance they seek, says ODonnell.
Is history destined to repeat itself with Gen Y? It already has. On-set Career Crisis shows the same symptoms as Mid-Career Crisis. Depression, anxiety, frustration, confusion, denial, avoidance, distractions; they all come from not knowing how to find the professional satisfaction a person desires. And its going to keep on repeating until our society starts to recognize that career success as The American Way seems to have many Americans paying a heavy price: personal dissatisfaction and an unhappy life.
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/5/prweb381064.htm
Yeah - imagine my dismay when I found out what Women's Studies was really about...
But...but! We can't criticize Johnny! He has "On-Set Career Crisis." It would be mean if we expected him to just get on with his life like the rest of us, LOL!
What a dork.
This guy makes Bluto and his seven years as an undergraduate look like a piker!
lol !!
But I bet his ignorance is astounding.
"That's what I love about these high school girls, man. I get older, they stay the same age." --Wooderson, DAZED AND CONFUSED
He can always start grad school and teach. That's an alternative definition of liberal.
Heck, I study broads, and I never graduated from college.
Got that beat...I met a guy in college who's been working on "arts" degrees since 1957! He's a career student, living off grants and such.
I'm thinking that the majority of his courses were taught out of the Liberal Arts department.
What really sucks for Johnny is that he's got the white-hot spotlight shining down on him and an audience (in his case, the entire world) staring at him waiting to see what he does next. Twelve years of college should get him close to a phD, so most people are expecting him to do something great, like go into medical/scientific research, become a hotshot lawyer/banker/businessman, etc. If he ends up doing what he's qualified to do (waiter, male stripper, sign waggler, etc.), there's going to be a whole lot of embarrassment raining down on him and the college that allowed him to hang out for twelve years (at taxpayer expense, no less).
Another thing is that guys who have been on campus for six or eight years get pretty good at nailing freshman girls.
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