Many students believe that the working world only “begins” after graduation. In reality, without realizing it, professional training has been taking place since the very first day of college. Not through formal suits or corporate jargon, but through simple habits that are often underestimated.
Time Discipline and Responsibility
The working world does not place much importance on excuses; what is valued is punctuality and consistency. When students learn to arrive on time, submit assignments by the deadline, and keep commitments in group work, they are actually being trained to face the rhythm of real professional life. It is not merely about diligence, but about being reliable.
Ways of Thinking and Problem Solving
College assignments, presentations, and classroom discussions are not just academic formalities. They are the space where the working world trains systematic thinking, argument development, and problem-solving under limitations. The workplace does not require perfect answers, but reasonable and well-considered decisions.
Conclusion
College life is not a waiting room for the working world, but a training ground. Students who understand this are usually not surprised when they enter professional life. Those who are often shocked are the ones who see college as merely a path to graduating quickly. The working world does not ask how long someone studied, but how they work.
Tentang Penulis
Gusti Ayu Tita
Penulis — Universitas STEKOM
Penulis aktif yang berfokus pada isu-isu akademik, teknologi pendidikan, dan pengembangan sumber daya manusia di lingkungan kampus.