Docendo Discimus
As Pink Floyd famously sang… ‘ we don’t need no education..’
Leaving university after the first year is probably something I would totally dissuade my children from doing and yet the fates have a strange way of intervening and without me doing it there would almost certainly be no KARMA today. I then drifted into the music business…then into Timeshare in Tenerife…and eventually washed up on the shores of Goa in 1993. And the rest, as they say, is history!
Being a total non-academic, you can imagine my surprise and incredulity when I was put up for an honorary fellowship to YALE University five years ago, arguably one of the most elite academic institutions in the world. They had seen that I had won the Entrepreneur of the Year title and someone had suggested that I would be a good addition to the teaching staff for a term.
YALE is incredibly perceptive in realising that while they have the smartest students and professors, a huge amount of money and facilities, yet often the students are shielded from how things actually work in the real world.
The purpose of this honorary fellowship is to invite a non-academic to teach a class for a semester and to give the students some street smarts. So…. I duly turned up for my interview with the Dean, rather nervous and feeling slightly like a naughty schoolboy who must have done something wrong!!
YALE was and is an amazing place and institution and its list of alumni is stellar…. I must confess to feeling rather out of place! Luckily the Dean had a sense of humour and was totally interested in me and my business and we bonded over a bottle of red wine and a long lunch. Bizarrely he offered me the Fellowship on the spot.
For my first Fellowship, I worked with Patrick Bellew, a leading sustainable engineer who had recently constructed the super tree and greenhouse project in Singapore, and Andy Bow, a partner of Sir Norman Foster, who was personally responsible for the design of the Gherkin building in London … clearly seriously smart people!
I remember turning up to do the lecture which opened the school year ( a tradition fulfilled by the Honorary Fellow ) and feeling that I was in a Harry Potter movie, as I was surrounded by proper professors in long gowns with very important sounding titles and strange archaic hats and caps.
Our project, or problem as we term it, was for the students to design a bodega in Rioja complete with hotel and tourism related facilities that was commercially viable as well as architecturally attractive and sustainable.
Our class was 50% architecture students and 50 % business management students
To a certain extent it was about teaching the architecture students that things needed to be commercially viable and the business management students that it was not all about making money and that development projects needed to look good and be sustainable.
It was a great success. I never would have believed that I could enjoy teaching so much and I can honestly say that I got as much out of it as I gave. Anyway, since then I was approached and accepted for similar assignments by the ULCA and the University of Pennsylvania.
So that brings us to now and I am delighted that YALE has honoured me by offering me a second Honorary Fellowship to return to campus this Fall Semester. (Please excuse me for blowing my own trumpet slightly but the is the first time they have offered a second Honorary Fellowship to the same person.)
This time the ‘problem’ is a very real one. We are asking the students to consider our resort in the Gili Islands … Karma Reef. Their assignment is to design a hotel and related amenities which looks amazing, is commercial, benefits the community and is resilient to earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and tsunamis. Clearly very relevant as our resort there was recently seriously affected by an earthquake.
We will partly be teaching this assignment in YALE and partly bringing the students over to Bali and the Gili Islands, so they can fully understand the environment and conditions.
So here we go ….
I am extremely privileged and fortunate to be accepted by an institution like YALE and I look forward to hopefully adding some value to what the students learn, but I know that whatever happens I and all of us at Karma Group will come out having learnt more and benefiting from the experience.
As Seneca the Younger said
DOCENDO DISCIMUS!!!
(By teaching we learn)
Speak soon.
John Spence