Don’t Save the World

At my high school there is a lot of focus on college. It is expected that almost everyone in my class will attend some sort of four-year college, and there are visits every week from universities, trying to gain applicants. So much of what we juniors do is underlined by the fact that the work we do this year, the grades we get this year, the effort we put into this year, will be what universities look at when deciding our future. Yes, it’s a lot of pressure. But that’s not the part that gives me pause.

Activities.

What did I do this summer? For the most part, I stayed home. I started five knitting projects and almost finished three of them. I visited my local library and read a bit. I spent a weekend with my extended family in the Pocono mountains. I relaxed and had fun.

Then I compare that with an article my father showed me from the Philadelphia Inquirer. This article talked about the rising trend of exotic summer vacations for teens, often involving community service opportunities. One girl spent three weeks in Rwanda, advocating for the children of the genocide. Another teen spent her summer in Tanzania, building a house for the local schoolteacher. Someone else spent time in Costa Rica, constructing a water tower. Reading through college handouts, I can’t help but notice that the students they choose to profile have almost always saved the world in one way or another.
tiled world
This is the point where I tilt my head and sigh. Because, quite frankly, I don’t want to save the world.

Here’s my point: students should be able to participate in what they are genuinely interested in, and forget about whatever looks good on an application. Passion looks good on an application. So I’ll go get some of that, and forget about a humanitarian mission to Africa, because I’m just not interested. My summer this year? I’ll conjugate some verbs, learn some fancy purls, and pick up some books from the library. Oh– and volunteer at Habitat for Humanity. Hey, what’s a junior to do?

Picture: one world from genista

About Hannah Feldman

Hannah, a junior at the Science Leadership Academy in Philadelphia, spends too much of her time knitting and baking. Her brain is a ball of yarn layered with chocolate and pecans. She also really wants to learn how to play the banjo.

26 Responses to “Don’t Save the World”


  1. 1 Charlie A. Roy
    @ Hannah
    A great post. I think many students share your frustrations. I’m the principal of a private high school and I see many students doing projects, taking classes, and going on trips not because they want to and have a genuine interest but because they feel pressured that they must to meet some colleges expectations.

    I fear to many students pass on the interesting elective choosing a fourth or fifth honors class because they want the “point”. I’m glad to hear your thoughts on the issue.

  2. 2 Sean "The Bass Player"
    I can’t help but agree. I don’t want to participate in things I have no interest in, and I didn’t in school. That’s one of the main reasons I replaced time studying with time playing music, and establishing myself on the internet.
  3. 3 Rachel Hallowell
    Oh man, I am the *worst* about this. The absolute worst. And you know what it’s gotten me? A whole lot of obnoxious emails, reminding me about all the silly things I’ve joined over the years. I just delete them.

    I think part of it, though, that shouldn’t be discounted is how someone decompresses, gets rid of anxiety. If doing these things, joining these ridiculous organizations that I never actually participate in, helps me feel more comfortable in an unstable period of my life...then maybe it’s not too bad. If that’s not what helps you, though...well, each to her own. Good for you for not freaking out!

  4. 4 Arthus Erea
    Good article, Hannah. The reasons for all these initiatives are good—saving the world is an admirable world. The problem I see is too many students who don’t want to save the world, but want to put “saving the world” on their college applications.

    Whatever you do, the most important part of passion: depth and focus. If one truly does care about Africa, by all means demonstrate that commitment with continual humanitarian efforts—not because they look good on college applications, but because you care.

    Or, if writing and knitting is what you care about, that is fine too: just demonstrate your ability to commit to your passions.

    The good news is that colleges are catching on and realizing that such surface-level humanitarianism really doesn’t show anything.

  5. 5 Steven Kimmi
    How strange and mystic the college application has become. I think I came from a small enough community that the idea wasn’t to go away to college, it was to graduate from high school and stay, for survival’s sake. Nothing so grand as saving the world ever occurred to me. I do remember dreaming of attending universities in France when I was in the sixth grade. But by the time I made it to high school these dreams were gone.

    I would definitely agree that a non-genuine effort to change the world around us is not how we should spend our time. It leads to misinterpretations about one’s character. However, when the interests and opportunities align themselves, why not?

  6. 6 Lindsay Price
    It’s amazing how narrow the focus has become toward college. It’s just not the be all and end all students are lead to believe. It can only lead to a great disappointment in life to create some application persona instead of being who you (the generic ‘you’) are instead of following a passion. Finding and developing passion is what will lead one to a successful life...
  7. 7 Dillon Decicio
    Perhaps if society in general was willing to help people in general such application personas would not be necessary. I joined DECA (partially, there was the friend factor that helped for a little while too) and was about to help establish a SkillsUSA chapter at my high school in search of similar endeavors.... I’m glad amidst the breaking point of last year I dropped both, and got kicked out of US History A. It’s made me a relatively stronger person...

    Kudos to Steven... Another person from no whereville. As well as Sean.

    Having completed my Junior year I opted to concentrate on my personal life, which this time involved selling fireworks, trying to accommodate my now deceased grandfather, and dealing with a flea infestation... I had plans to work on a Linux server and make it possible to deploy Rails on a local machine. But that died there...

    Life’s an endless stream of challenges; it’s something to expect. Colleges, society, and people in general have not come to realize or accept this fact in egoculturalcentrism. It’s just a sad fact.

    I hope everyone’s enjoying the ‘holidays’ in the most secular sense, however.

  8. 8 Mitch Coley
    What are colleges really looking for? Maybe they shouldn’t really be looking. Maybe they should just allow students to come, pay their tuition, and build a life based on their learning. Then again, they run themselves like a business and will try get the best of the best so their institution doesn’t crumble.

    Seriously, the application of a senior that spent a couple of weeks advocating for victims of genocide does look better than a senior that knitted ninety-nine baby booties. But what you are doing is on this site is impressive, at least to me. Sure your probably not sweating and doing your work in a hut under a mosquito net, but you seem to be doing your own bit of advocating. Your just an advocate for your fellow students, not people being threatened by militias. At least your involved. A nice plus is that your involvement, thanks to the internet, spans well beyond an individual country.

    The problem that you face isn’t that your not doing anything or enough. The problem is that what you are doing with your summer, at least as it is proposed above, isn’t the exception. So when college admins review your application, there is nothing that sticks out, causes a shift in the perception of what a student is, and makes them want you. You may have to save the world, or a at least a person, depending on what college you are interested in. After all, as you’ve already determined they have a system for finding students. You may have to work with the system in order to get where you want to be. As long as you don’t become corrupted along the way, you can fix the things you don’t like from within.

  9. 9 piano tuning kit
    Вероятность того, что бутерброд упадет маслом вниз, прямо пропорциональна стоимости ковра.
  10. 10 peter lee
    I attend a college-prep international school in Korea, and I see kids doing community service, or going on a trip to Habitat for Humanity, or other places, without any genuine enthusiasm.

    The point of college applications are to distinguish the kids who go the extra mile. Yes, the application with 4 trips to Habitat for Humanity look better than none. But if it’s not genuine, it’s pointless.

    Great post.

  11. 11 Charles
    First of all thank you for finally pointing that out. My school actually made it a requirement for us to do community service and I’m pretty sure most schools are like that as well. But even the term is hypocritical: “Mandatory Volunteer Service”. If you’re forced into something, is it honestly volunteer work? I don’t even see how Colleges or High Schools would accept an idea as absurd as forced community service. You learn nothing if it becomes a job and rather than making it an obligation, they should just give examples. A lot of it has to do with the service providers as well. They need to be good judges and be able to establish who’s working for the hours, and who’s working for the involvement. This cannot be good for the future of our world.
  12. 12 Shaarangapanaye
    Knowledge is power and also a cost saving tool for the future. Read my sig for more info on getting faster more efficient and targetted search results with one simple step.
  13. 13 Dennis Harter
    A terrificly honest post. It’s why this blog is so great and why you will do well, despite what you feel your applications lack. The work you do here is “something” powerful.

    Having said that, I think it is also unfair to assume that everyone shares your cynicism when it comes to “helping the world”. Many do service because they discover a passion for it. I refuse to believe that your generation doesn’t care...in fact, I am often encouraged by how much it does. This is not to say that all students who do service do it for the right reasons, but from the perspective of those receiving the aid...it all helps and that should not be discounted. After all, whatever the motivation, isn’t the “help” the real point of it all (not what we can get out of it).

    As for some of the comments on schools requiring community service, it is not quite “Mandatory Voluntary Service”, but rather Service Learning. Like learning math, science, writing, collaboration, or anything, there is demonstrable benefit in service learning. Educators know this and so the requirement is to expose students to this learning and to provide them with the opportunity to discover a passion for it. Not all will, but some will. And that isn’t any different than sports, academics, technology or any other aspect of life from which we learn.

    Again, awesome post and honesty here. I really enjoy Students 2.0.

  14. 14 Caroline Saunders
    I love this post! Sounds like we’re cut from the same cloth. I loathe the idea of doing something because it will look good on a resume. I’ve always only done things that capture my interest 100 percent–and sometimes that means a summer just like yours. Save the world if that’s what interests you–but don’t be afraid to take on knitting or pizza-making or unicycle-riding if your interests lead you there. There’s value in any experience!
  15. 15 Kate Lucia
    I love that you have passion about SOMETHING! I am always trying to help my students figure out what their passions are and they always look at me with a blank face! You are in high school and you shouldn’t be consumed about what looks good on your resume. I think it’s important to be involved, but I find it unfair if colleges are favoring students who are spending their summers “saving the world”. I think your honesty is refreshing and I’m sure that you will find success in whatever you do because you do have passion!
  16. 16 A. Joost
    I am sure many students who read this will feel relieved that there are other students who feel pressured to participate in activities just to make their college applications look good. Good for you for following your heart and doing what is important to you instead of what is important to someone else. I think you have already “saved the world” in a way because you have helped others who have the same frustrations feel as if they are not alone. I hope you continue use your passions to better yourself and others.
    Here is a link to my blog:
    http://ajoost.wordpress.com/
  17. 17 Dawn C.
    Hannah, What DO you have a genuine interest in doing? I agree that you should do things that interest you — especially when you are still a young carefree person with limited responsibilities. Not only are colleges looking at students’ “world-saving” activities, but they should also be interested in the 2.0 talents of young people today. I can’t think of (m)any college majors that involve house building in Rwanda, but MANY majors (and jobs, for that matter) would be interested in your skills as a blogger who knows how to use the tools of the modern internet. Good luck in your endeavors, Hannah.
  18. 18 Dawn C.
    Hannah, just as you created your blog as a project, I also reviewed your blog as a project. I am a middle school teacher and wanted to see what types of blogs students were creating. Feel free to take a peek at my comments on my blog about your blog. Again, best of luck in all you are doing — whether you choose to save the world, or not.
  19. 19 sea
    I was looking for a stylish shoe and considered others but I loved the design and was confident in the nike brand so I purchased this shoe.89% nylon/11% spandex, striped pattern, halter and back ties, molded cups, Classic Fit, Imported Free shipping.
  20. 20 Chloe
    Give a man a fish, he’ll eat for a day. Teach a man how to fish, he’ll eat for a lifetime.
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