Here's a bold statement that is sure to make underachievers everywhere applaud:
Grades and test scores are overrated.
That's right. They're weak sauce when it comes to predicting what someone has to offer and how well they will do in life.
When I took the SAT test, I had a panic attack about not scoring well enough to get into Harvard. During the panic attack, which lasted 16 minutes (yes, I timed it), I couldn't fill in any little bubbles. As a result, I got scores that did not get me into Harvard.
And you know what? It didn't mean I'm a dummy. It didn't ruin my life. It simply meant that in that particular situation, my brain wasn't able to do what I wanted it to.
For me, the disastrous SATs were something new. Up until then, I had been a good, albeit extremely nervous, student. For a lot of people, though, anxiety about school and poor performance are a way of life.
Unfortunately, schools can be pretty hard on people who can't get their brains to fire in the "right" way. I'm putting "right" in quotation marks because I believe that schools often use a limiting definition of intelligence.
If you can spell, do math, and remember lots of facts--and if you can do these things well under the extra pressure of a test--then you will get good grades and are officially smart. You might even be a member of the "best and the brightest," which is often how academically elite schools refer to their students. Think about that for a moment: It's not just the brightest. It's the best, meaning you're a superior human being if you can do calculus.
Well, that's ridiculous. Calculus is useful for some people. But the true measure of a superior human being has nothing to do with the ability to derive the quadratic equation or translate Latin.