Learning life skills
Coral Wilson
With graduation approaching, Huntington Beach High School seniors are
about to enter the real world. Jill Hardy’s students had just
completed the advanced placement economics exam they had spent the
year preparing for, so she decided to focus the day’s lesson on a
skill essential to her second job as a city council member --
networking.
Handing out name tags, Hardy instructed the seniors to adopt new
identities and new personalities. She asked them to gather
information such as full names, hometown, occupation and interesting
facts. Hardy had divided the class into three groups: modest,
self-absorbed and right in the middle.
What happens when self-absorbed teenagers meet? The room quickly
filled with the chatter of conversation.
“Do you believe in genocide?” Robert Wills, 17, asked his friends.
Wills, who had written Vladmir on his name tag, immediately and
dramatically fell into his role. Spewing an incomprehensible mix of
English combined with Russian imitations and a heavy accent, he
quickly walked away before his partners had a chance to respond. He
was in the self-absorbed group.
“They all have to die,” he declared to anyone who would listen.
Kristin Salaya, 18, introduced herself as a yoga instructor and
excitedly discussed fitness-related topics.
Against the wall, Brock Boyce, 18, stayed slumped in his chair and
then reluctantly got up.
“I hate this game,” he said and then announced with outstretched
arms. “I’m Tom.”
Spotting a group of his female classmates, he saw opportunity in
the class exercise and the game took on a new meaning.
“Everybody hug Tom,” Boyce said.
He pulled an armful of five girls toward him.
Hardy sent the students back to their seats to write everything
they could remember about their classmates’ new personas. Then, by
sharing the information, she demonstrated how those most successful
at networking were students in the third group who had balanced
giving and receiving information.
Too much modesty makes others uncomfortable, she said. And talking
about oneself makes it hard to get to know others.
“Some people need to take a break from talking about themselves,”
she said. “Believe it or not, even some people in this class.”
She discussed other tips such as shaking hands, which side to wear
a name tag and taking notes about new people to help remember them
later.
The tips, which she had learned in Sacramento, had become
essential in remembering the many people she meets as a council
member. She said she had spent six months trying to sell herself but
after obtaining the position, she found it hard to recall the many
people who recognized her.
“It is important to not only make sure that others know about you,
but that you also learn about them,” she said.
* CORAL WILSON is a news assistant who covers education. She can
be reached at (714) 965-7177 or by e-mail at
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