Across The Pond


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Across The Pond by Paddy Duffy

University qualifications - what do they really mean? Confidence goes a long way

Posted on Saturday, March 03, 2012 at 04:58 AM

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Recently I started a new job in Belfast, namely as a question writer for a TV quiz show. As you might expect it’s a conversation-starting occupation, as proved to be the case when talking to a taxi man a few days ago. When I jokingly asked him if he’d ever take part in a quiz on telly and maybe win a bit of money, he said back without much consideration: “Ah sure I’d be no good on things like that, I don’t have any qualifications or that."

It’s an attitude that is sadly pervasive. Be it through a lack of opportunity, a lack of application at the time, a lack of self-esteem or a combination of both, there are a distressing number of people who link intelligence to knowing capital cities or remembering what an ox bow lake is. Worse yet, they underplay the talents they actually do have and won’t be convinced they’re anything but a social misfit. Never mind the fact that maintaining one’s calm while navigating round a city center at rush hour is a pretty invaluable skill, that taxi driver thought of himself as stupid.
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I’ve seen this all my life in Donegal. People of an older generation were spat out of schools where being given a clout across the head featured heavily on the syllabus, where the focus was getting a job, inevitably in a factory or some such, getting some money into the family home, and that was about it. Bettering yourself was not an option, and if it was it was often actively discouraged through ridicule and a significant dearth of opportunities in the first place. Sometimes it’s so severe that even when opportunities do appear they aren’t taken up: Donegal sometimes feels replete with men of a certain age who turned down offers to play football abroad because they didn’t have the confidence to make it stick. That bad educational experience has in a lot of cases transmitted to their children’s generation, and low self-esteem dogs them for the rest of their lives. 

If the value of education can or should be defined at all, it should be to widen people’s base of knowledge and to pursue the fields people enjoy without obstacle of any kind. More than that, it should widen the base of things we deem worthy of study and pursuit. Up and down the country there are people young and old with talent, talent submerged and undermined and eroded. Helping those people is the smartest thing we could possibly do.



2 comments

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It's about taking up an opportunity that's in front of you-- whether it's third-level education, a public role in your community, the kind of work that no one in your family ever did before you, etc., rather than thinking you would no longer be humble if you went for it! Sadly, I've seen both men and women of my parents' generation pass up brilliant opportunities because they had "no formal education," even though they were literate and self-educated to a high level. The author's right: it is an Irish trait that has much more to do with humble socio-economic origins than with lack of intelligence or unwillingness to work hard. Mol an óige agus tiocfaidh sí. Our roots shape us, but should never limit us.
I don't understand what this article is about. The title mentions university, but the body of the text doesn't. Is this a pro-university article, or is it saying that you don't need a degree?
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