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UCLA won
ten national championships while I was the basketball coach, and Mr.
Lawrence Shidler played a role in all of them. How big a role did he
play? Let me tell you a story and then you can decide for yourself.
Mr. Shidler was a math teacher back at Martinsville High School in
Indiana when
I was a sophomore.
Occasionally
he discussed topics other that mathematics. One day in March he
instructed the class to write a paper defining success. Mr. Shidler
wanted to get us thinking about the concept of success and whether it
just meant getting rich or famous or beating somebody in a ball game.
Well, this got me thinking hard about the subject, and I continued
thinking about it for a long time after I completed Mr. Shidler's
homework assignment. In fact, I reflected on it for decades.
Later, when
I entered the teaching and coaching profession after graduating from
Purdue, the question continued to intrigue me because I found myself a
little bit disillusioned with what seemed to be expected from
youngsters under my supervision in classrooms.
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