Wednesday, March 11, 2009

You Cannot Make an "A" Being Afraid to Make an "F"

What do I look like on paper? It has come to my attention that the criteria for admissions to graduate school has intimidated blacks to the point that they do not even apply. Let me share for a second. On paper, based on the admissions criteria I have no business being a third year Ph.D candidate in Criminology. I did not score well on the GRE, my undergraduate G.P.A. was below the required amount and I know that my writing skills were in need of serious attention. What I did know and have is AMBITION. I requested and made a (which I paid for ) visit to my school of choice and met with 15 of the faculty members. I expressed the need for a man like me to be a part of their program and how I would use their degree to affectionately make a difference. I had something that they would benefit from if they would take the chance of accepting me in lieu of the "paper trail" being the only measure they had to of me. I believe that we must have confidence, ambition and an attitude that is willing to step out on faith. We must be told no,we cannot assume and own failure without trying. There must always and will be a rule breaker or a first for everything. Who says that it cannot be you? Who says that you are defined by numbers such as standardized tests or grades. We have so much more to share with the world that it may take a little more, such as a face to face interview in order for us to get that opportunity to chase that dream. I say all this to say that the time has come for us to not be defined by admissions criteria alone, believe in yourself and do what it takes to get in the program. We cannot be afraid to be rejected without even applying. You cannot make an "A" being afraid to make and "F".

2 comments:

  1. The common thread to the post is fear...only if we can overcome it or use to our best interest....

    Fear of rejection delayed applying to medical school for EIGHT YEARS...what changed? My perception of me. I am not suppose to be graduating in June, because my undergraduate grades and my medical schol entrance exams weren't good enough. I said it to myself and "they" only repeated it, until I began to see differently. Did the fear ever leave? No. In fact it became a progressive tool in my life. Failure/fear allowed me to be creative....this is not only in education but also in society when some one pulls up your credit score or size you up based on your attire. Maybe the problem is not fear but insecurity?

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  2. Fear is self manifested. It is learned and can only be conquered by being successful. we can not and must not accept mediocrity. Fear is the "father" of average. So we must learn to use our fears in a positive manner. The fear of losing is one of the best motivators to push you to go farther and obtain that elusive prize. p-u-g

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