YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    The Connection Between Education, Money and Happiness

    Tom Katsouleas is the Jeff and Penny Vinik dean of Duke university’s Pratt School of Engineering. He joined Duke in 2008, where he is also a professor of electrical and computing engineering. He serves as Chair of the National Academy of Engineering’s Advisory Committee on Engineering Grand Challenges for the 21st Century.

    Recently entrepreneur and educator Vivek Wadhwa took on PayPal founder Peter Thiel’s premise that students would be better off starting businesses without finishing or even starting college. By framing the argument in terms of cost of education versus long-term earnings, both overlooked one of the most important factors in the decision -- the connection between higher education and happiness.

    [More from Mashable: 15 Celebrities Before They Were Famous [VIDEO]]

    SEE ALSO: Dear Peter Thiel: Let’s Fix College, the Right Way

    A few years back Richard Easterlin, an early economist in the econometrics of "happiness" published a surprising study. After looking at many things that correlate to happiness, including economic success and having kids, which surprisingly did not correlate, he found three correlations: health, marriage, and education.

    [More from Mashable: 5 Video Trends Shaping the 2012 Election Campaign]

    The first two stuck out as consistent with what people most often answer as important factors. The third correlation, education, was a surprise. What he found was that education was related to making a better living in that those with more education tended to have higher incomes. However, as a person's income rose over time, their happiness did not. Yet, the bump up in happiness that began early in life for those with more than a high school education persisted throughout their lives. In essence, Easterlin dispelled any lingering notion of the old stereotype of "dumb and happy.” In fact, people with more education were happier than those with less.

    Although Easterlin’s study statistically proves a connection between more education and happiness, it tells us less about why. For this, insight can be gained from biology as well as history. Even lowly amoebas show evidence that boredom and unhappiness occur when subjected to repeated stimuli without new ‘learning.’

    More to the point for humans, Socrates asserted in the 4th Century BC that the purest form of happiness was sharing with someone else something you have learned. In some sense, Thiel with his Academy of Fellows is intuitively responding to a basic human desire by attempting to share directly with a group of bright young minds what he learned to be of value to him. Even so, Thiel and Socrates are both brilliant contrarians. Socrates argued (unsuccessfully) that his students shouldn’t learn to write and that doing so would give them a crutch that would harm their ability to think. (We know he said this, amusingly enough, because his student Plato wrote it down). Similarly, Thiel has argued that if he had gone to Harvard, what they would have taught him would have led him astray. In reality, the gap between the form of “higher education” that Thiel is offering to his select fellows and what is taking place at leading colleges is actually narrowing.

    Many schools now offer undergraduate programs in entrepreneurship to complement those at graduate schools in business and engineering. At the University of Miami, entrepreneurship mentoring is tied to the career services office. At Duke, a new undergraduate pathway is rolling out in the Fall that includes a three-course sequence in innovation, Prototype and Design and Entrepreneurship, coupled with mentoring, internships, a Duke in Silicon Valley program (think semester abroad but in Menlo Park instead of Madrid), and an Idea Fund to seed fund the very best ideas. Much of this program is not unlike what Thiel is offering.

    In addition, students have the benefit of a broader setting in which to develop a perspective on what it means to be human and discover where they fit in the world. In so doing, they may not only come up with better ideas, they may also make better decisions. But by focusing on the shortest path to success students will fail to fully develop as people and ultimately short-change their own happiness.

    This story originally published on Mashable here.

    Loading...
    • The Gruesome Details of London's Horrifying Machete Attack

      An attack in broad daylight in London on Wednesday is drawing a swift response — and a possible terror link — from the highest authorities. Reports suggest two men chased down another man with their car before getting out, attacking him with a machete, and dragging him through the city streets. 

    • ‘Teen Mom’ Farrah Abraham teaches teenage girls a very bad lesson

      “Teen Mom” and “Backdoor Teen Mom” star Farrah Abraham has successfully taught teenage girls everywhere a very bad lesson: If you get pregnant as an unwed teenager, star in a reality show, then a porno, you, too can be super famous!

    • Florida high school suspends teacher for touching girl on head with banana

      Is a cigar sometimes just a cigar? That debate will remain unresolved, but The Daily Caller can say with confidence that a banana is definitely not always just a banana at North Marion High School near Ocala, Fla.

    • Cycling-Road-Giro d'Italia classification after stage 16

      May 21 (Infostrada Sports) - Classification from Giro d'Italia after Stage 16 on Tuesday 1. Vincenzo Nibali (Italy / Astana) 67:55:36" 2. Cadel Evans (Australia / BMC Racing) +1:26" 3. Rigoberto Uran (Colombia / Team Sky) +2:46" 4. Michele Scarponi (Italy / Lampre) +3:53" 5. Przemyslaw Niemiec (Poland / Lampre) +4:13" 6. Mauro Santambrogio (Italy / Vini Fantini) +4:57" 7. Carlos Betancur (Colombia / AG2R) +5:15" 8. Rafal Majka (Poland / Saxo - Tinkoff) +5:20" 9. Benat Intxausti (Spain / Movistar) +5:47" 10. Domenico Pozzovivo (Italy / AG2R) +7:34" 11. Tanel Kangert (Estonia / Astana) +7:43" ...

    • The World's Most Powerful Women 2013

      Our annual snapshot of the top 100 women in business, politics, celebrity, philanthropy, billionaires, media and technology.

    • Ohio kidnap case hero gets burgers for life

      CLEVELAND (AP) — The man who famously put down his Big Mac to help rescue three women held captive for a decade in an Ohio house will never have to pay for another burger in his hometown.

    • Is Greek yogurt hurting the environment?

      Good for your body; terrible for the planet

    • Dog Found Standing Guard Over a Tornado Victim Reunited With Her Owner

      There's a happy ending to the story of a dog, found alive in the rubble after a massive tornado devastated Moore, Oklahoma: she's been reunited with her owner.

    Loading...

    Follow Yahoo! News