

“The best students from mediocre schools were almost always a better bet than students from the very best schools.”
There is no point being a small fish in a big pond. Aim to be a big fish even if the pond is small – it helps keep you motivated enough to learn.There is no fun being a student at the bottom of the barrel in an elite institution. Thinking that “everyone else in the class is much smarter than me” can actually be a huge barrier to learning. Learning is a social process. Being with people whose abilities you can match facilitates learning. So when colleges lower the admission criteria to make it easier for students from disadvantaged groups to join, they think they are helping the student. They really are not, says Gladwell. Students from disadvantaged groups often drop out of these elite institutions when they fail to cope in an academically demanding environment.The examples and arguments get more obscure as the book progresses. At the end of each chapter I found myself wondering whether I should read the next chapter at all. Let truth be told – after the first two chapters, I found myself getting bored. The lessons drawn are not new. We all know that the small start-up in a garage can often be more nimble while responding to the market than a giant corporation that has more resources but stumbles on its own shoelaces. Or that a tiny country like Vietnam could hold up against the military muscle of US. You have heard people say, “The recession is too good an opportunity to waste.”Malcolm Gladwell does well when he writes for the New Yorker. I must say that I like the short articles that he writes. However, if you take one idea and try to make a book out of it, as Gladwell does in David and Goliath, the result is less than impactful.”Being an underdog can be an advantage at times” – if that is something you have always known then reading the book will be a waste of time. If you have known it and have some doubts, then read a chapter or two of the book. If you do not believe that being an underdog is an advantage, then this is just the book you deserve to read.———-Join me on Twitter @AbhijitBhaduriRead: The recession is a great time to rethink
3 Comments
I would rather pick a person who came from disadvantaged background, studied in local Govt schools and worked hard to get into elite school even if he/she is not a topper.
gud review… I really enjoyed reading the whole book few months back…. I too reviewed this title…. thanx for sharing…vijay
It is impossible to generalise on basis of ivy league track record . Just because your parents are wealthy or you did not have to struggle to get into an Ivy league , does not always mean that you are not hungry for success …Sometimes having a very successful parent means you do try to match their acheivements … and you are probably born with a better set of genes ….i am being a devil’ s advocate here !I do agree though that when a hard working person from a disadvantaged background have an opportunity they generally try harder , if they do not get waylaid by the razzle dazzle of a plush envirnment and lose sight of the goal …..I have seen that happen few times .