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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. When Randy Pausch said "experience is what you get when you didn't get what you wanted" in The Last Lecture speech he gave shortly before his death, his intention was to get people thinking about the benefit of failure. It is not that the late professor wanted others to make a habit out of not being successful but rather he valued failure as a key learning tool in the lessons of life. His message in short was that from failure comes enlightenment. Most people are taught to avoid defeat and disappointment because it somehow equates to less than a winning character. Pausch wanted to make an obvious point about how absolutely off the mark that type of indoctrination is to the quest for achievement, so he incorporated the aspect of failure into his class curriculum by awarding one student team a stuffed penguin who took the greatest risk and experienced the greatest failure. Symbolic of Pausch's penchant for empowering others, the penguin stood for the need to try and fail in order to succeed in life. No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCPausch.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
to get people thinking about the benefit of failure. It is not that the late professor wanted others to make a habit out of not being successful but rather
he valued failure as a key learning tool in the lessons of life. His message in short was that from failure comes enlightenment. Most people are taught to
avoid defeat and disappointment because it somehow equates to less than a winning character. Pausch (2008) wanted to make an obvious point about how absolutely off the mark that
type of indoctrination is to the quest for achievement, so he incorporated the aspect of failure into his class curriculum by awarding one student team a stuffed penguin who took
the greatest risk and experienced the greatest failure. Symbolic of Pauschs (2008) penchant for empowering others, the penguin stood for the need to try and fail in order to
succeed in life. The person who failed often knows how to avoid future failures. The person who knows only success can be more oblivious to all the pitfalls.
Experience is what you get when you didnt get what you wanted. And experience is often the most valuable thing you have to offer (Pausch et al, 2008,
p. 149). Risks are not a thing to avoid in Pauschs (2008) philosophy; in fact, taking risks is part of learning the landscape of ones capacity for growth in
both personal and professional ways. This does not, however, mean someone who takes calculated risks is the same as another who jumps from a cliff not knowing if his
parachute functioning properly but rather a person who realizes the inherent value of taking a chance. Playing it safe in business or in life serves to keep people stagnant
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