Don't go to college. It's super expensive and super hard. Seriously, don't waste your time and money unless you want to be a doctor, then I totally get it. No one's going to let you take out their spleen unless you have a degree. The rest of you, go read some books.
Jack Black
Montverde Academy Commencement 2015, 2015
这句语录背后的故事
Black's most provocative piece of advice was delivered with his trademark comedic exaggeration, but it touched on a genuine and increasingly relevant debate about the value of traditional higher education. Speaking to high school graduates likely headed to college, he deliberately challenged the assumption that a four-year degree is the only path to success. The joke about doctors and spleens acknowledged that some professions genuinely require formal credentials while suggesting that for many others, self-directed learning — 'go read some books' — might be equally or more valuable. Black himself had attended UCLA but didn't complete a traditional degree path, instead finding his way through comedy and performing arts. While parents in the audience likely squirmed, the advice resonated with a generation facing unprecedented student debt. The underlying message was less about literally avoiding college and more about questioning default assumptions — thinking critically about whether the conventional path is the right one for you rather than following it simply because everyone else does.