Erasing the finish line The new blueprint for success beyond grades and college admission

Ana Homayoun

Book - 2023

"What if a getting into top four-year college is no longer the holy grail of success that it once seemed to be? What if the key to kids achieving their potential in life has less to do with grades or test scores and more with critical skills overlooked in schools? Erasing the Finish Line directly addresses those points by highlighting a reality about our education system that we seem to hear about more and more these days-college acceptance is a faulty finish line to adolescent development, and this false finish line feeds a heightened level of anxiety and uncertainty. Erasing the Finish Line is a groundbreaking new way of thinking about education, for parents, teachers, administrators, and policymakers deeply invested in our children&...#039;s well-being, happiness, and success. Academic counselor Ana Homayoun argues that we have to fundamentally change how we think about education and learning if we want to focus on eliminating barriers and helping students navigate systems in a way that helps students explore, discover and build in a way that allows interests and abilities to grow and thrive. She shows how to look beyond assessments, grades, and college acceptance as indicators of long-term success and shares new strategies, including, including how to: - Ask open-ended questions without judgment - Tie answers to those questions to the underlying foundational skills needed - Acting as a resource, connector, and sponsor as applicable - Suspend notions of disbelief, negativity, and general malaise - Convey compassion and empathy while having high expectations With this new blueprint, we can focus on critical and undervalued executive functioning skills, social capital, sponsorship, shared experiences, and greater exposure to a broader range of opportunities. In her work across tens of thousands of miles, she's seen how these foundational skills allow kids to reflect, adapt, redirect, and thrive in a world so different from the one their parents grew up in"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Hachette Go 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Ana Homayoun (author)
Physical Description
xxiii, 230 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 207-221) and index.
ISBN
9780306830693
9780306830709
  • Author's Note
  • Introduction
  • How to Use this Book
  • Chapter 1. Expanding Our Vision Beyond the Faulty Finish Line
  • Chapter 2. Navigating the World with New Foundational Skills
  • Part 1. Develop a System
  • Chapter 3. Start at the Beginning
  • Chapter 4. Deliverables
  • Chapter 5. Learning Takes Longer
  • Part 2. Develop Connection
  • Chapter 6. Floating
  • Chapter 7. Optimism and Openness
  • Chapter 8. Levers
  • Part 3. Develop Perspective
  • Chapter 9. Opportunity and Access
  • Chapter 10. Expanding Possibilities
  • Chapter 11. Online and Irl (In Real Life)
  • Part 4. Develop Acceptance
  • Chapter 12. Different Pathways
  • Chapter 13. Living With Heightened Uncertainty
  • Chapter 14. The Never-Ending Checklist Of To-Dos
  • Part 5. Develop a Blueprint
  • Chapter 15. The Blueprint Can Pivot
  • Chapter 16. Neurodiversity
  • Conclusion: Notebook Checks
  • Acknowledgments
  • References
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this innovative guide, academic adviser Homayoun (Social Media Wellness) urges parents and educators to reconsider how they can help high school students succeed. Debunking "outdated narrative equating college admissions and success," Homayoun argues that "the belief that... one decision can fundamentally alter the entire trajectory of a young person's life" reinforces "downright false" notions of what lends students drive, purpose, or happiness. By focusing on holistic skills, such as organization, flexible thinking, and relationship building, students are better equipped to flourish in a "fast-changing world," she writes. Drawing on her experience counseling high schoolers, college students, and professionals, Homayoun discusses the wisdom of building predictable routines (consistent bedtimes, study schedules); cultivating "openness and curiosity in approach to socializing," as understanding and using social capital is essential to being a "well-connected, well-resourced adult"; and paying attention to proper "energy management" instead of squeezing an endless litany of items into to-do lists (students are encouraged to consider the activities that drain them and those that energize them, and to brainstorm how to "recharge energy on a daily/weekly basis"). Homayoun offers a welcome, experience-backed alternative to the "current one-size-fits-all" model for life success--driven by test scores and an obsession with college rankings--that is often only available to the wealthy. This is a valuable resource. (Aug.)

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