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""Excellence is not an exception, it is a prevailing attitude." Colin Powell

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Seth Green’s observation on my favorite quote:

Seth: so your gchat quote….I’ve actually been thinking about a variant of this recently. Because I took the GREs and I’m reminded of when i took the SATs, and how in my HS, excellence was just the norm. And excellence begets excellence, because belief, faith, really matters! For instance, a lot of people I knew got an 800 on the SAT verbal. I think once a few people did, and people knew it, other people not only started shooting higher, but also starting believing that it could happen. It also seems true with sports teams. For whatever reasons, a few schools routinely turn good to very good high school recruits into stars on the track, because when you’re training with people who can break 4 in the mile, you start to believe it’s possible for you too. One of the challenges of my work these past two years is that excellence has NOT been the norm. in City Year, compliance and “do-no-harm” were the standards and when I was doing a good but not great job as a corps member, someone who had extremely good rapport with the kids but who needed to work on controlling my temper and also not letting everything bring me down, there was no one there to coach me on it, because my performance was so above the norm that resources had to go elsewhere.
 
The situation was even more extreme in Thailand, where the expectations were zero. And that was extremely frustrating. Self-motivation can only go so far! A norm of excellence drags everyone up. Creating that, cultivating that, SUSTAINING that – these are some of the critical challenges facing any organization. If you can figure out how to do it, let me know.
 
Enjoy Work.”
– Seth Green
 
 
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Great post by @nikeverellen on creating cultural exchange to bolster entrepreneurship.

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When a Man Becomes More Than a Man

Batman Begins and V for Vendetta are two of my favorite movies. Both movies work through the idea of people becoming more than themselves and standing as a symbol in an imperfect world. By becoming a symbol, you become a perfect idea. Batman embodied the idea of justice. V in V for Vendetta embodied the idea of revolution. Both characters inspired and pushed others toward action.

Joe Paterno isn’t a revolutionary or super hero. He was a head coach for a very successful football program at Penn State for 46 years. Throughout Paterno’s tenure, he became synonymous with Penn State as an institution.  He is revered and celebrated by previous and current students and is the face of PSU. By understanding his transformation from coach to the face of PSU, it’s helps to understand why students are rioting at PSU now. They feel that the firing of Paterno is a direct attack on their experience at PSU

Jim Prisching / Associated Press / October 22, 2011)

I’m not judging the situation. I don’t have enough information to decide whether PSU administration is purging all parties associated or if Coach Paterno was really involved. However, I question the system in which coaches are held as larger than life figures on campus. Football coaches are human, therefore flawed and work in less than perfect institutions. Coach Paterno is just a man. A man who is susceptible to making mistakes. A man who is replaceable.

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Has hard work become an exotic concept? (via Emma explores)

Emma does a great job of highlighting values of eastern and western culture and what we have to learn from both.

A few weeks back, I came across an NY Times piece that basically expounds the innovation-driven, creativity-centric values that encapsulate Steve Jobs' life and career and brands America as the all-encompassing hub for such risk-taking pioneers. I already wrote an entire post about Jobs' ideologies, but I have to comment on them again, perhaps because they strike such a deep, personal chord in me. Before I delve into personal technicalities, thou … Read More

via Emma explores

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How to argue on the internet (via Measure of Doubt)

How to argue on the internet is a precursor to a series I’m starting this week, On communication. Be on the look out for new posts!

How to argue on the internet It's plenty hard enough to get someone to listen to your arguments in a debate, given how attached people are naturally to their own ideas and ways of thinking. But it becomes even harder when you trigger someone's emotional side, by making them feel like you're attacking them and putting them automatically i … Read More

via Measure of Doubt