To 'Put America Back to Work'
We Must Rediscover How to Work
In 1860, a lithographer by the name of Milton Bradley introduced The Checkered Game of Life to the nation. His game took players on a journey from infancy to happy old age, earning points for qualities like perseverance, honesty, ambition, and industry. Players lost points for idleness, intemperance, gambling, and a number of other vices.
Bradley wasn’t focused on making money with his invention; he had a much larger vision. He wanted to exemplify and promote the values his game espoused. And he had the right environment in which to do it: the late 1800’s were a golden age when it came to formulating America’s unparalleled, unabashed, uncompromising work ethic.
The old world view of labor as a distasteful practice best avoided by the upper classes had been replaced by the spanking new notion that a man could earn his place in the upper class through determination, discipline, and self-sacrifice. Parents, schools, and churches stressed the value of hard work and taught children how to live a virtuous life. Bradley’s game struck a resounding chord by perpetuating these principles.
It was not a coincidence that one hundred years later in 1960, the U.S. was one of the two international super-powers. A century of applied work ethic had seen the nation grow incredibly, and with this growth Milton Bradley became a highly profitable toy manufacturer. A hundred years after its original release, their signature product The Checkered Game of Life had been updated to reflect the prevailing mindset of the baby boom generation and was rebranded as The Game of Life.
The object of this revised edition was no longer to accrue points, but to accrue money. The ultimate destination of Happy Old Age was replaced with the wealthy neighborhood of Tycoon Estates. Losers didn’t gamble themselves to ruin or wind up impoverished as a result of their intemperance; they simply moved onto The Poor Farm.
The great religious and moral charges of the sixties—like the civil rights movement and the fight against communism— centered on the way individuals viewed others rather than the way they viewed themselves. Schools focused time on developing social responsibility leaving parents in charge of developing work ethic and virtues. However, the emergence of the dual-wage earning family meant less face-time for accomplishing this task at home.
The next version released in the 70’s and 80’s brought three significant ‘something-for-nothing’ changes to Life. A new “Share The Wealth” card enabled players to either steal 50% of an opponent’s cash windfall, or force them to pay half of their personal tax burden. Additionally, players were now ‘entitled’ to receive cash presents from other players for ‘life events’ like getting married or having children. “Lucky Day” spaces were also added to the game board offering players lottery-like cash prizes just for landing on them, with the option to keep the cash or risk it on a roll-of-the-dice gamble to multiply it. This was a far cry from the original version in which gambling was punished, rather than encouraged.
Revamped again in 1991, Life began to reward players for community service activities like recycling and helping the homeless, and there have been additional modifications since then. While civic-minded activities are certainly admirable, what is totally absent from the 1991 revision of The Game of Life is any reward for honesty, hard work, perseverance, and ambition. But when teaching and reinforcing these kinds of values and virtues are no longer a priority in our homes and our schools, why should they be tenets in today’s version of Life?
If you want to test this, go survey your friends and co-workers who have kids under the age of 25 and ask them what they want for their children. Seriously, try this. You’ll find out that the goals of Baby-Boomer/Gen X parents are to make certain their kids are safe, happy, healthy, and have a high self-esteem; not necessarily in that order. Work ethic won’t be mentioned.
It is into this environment that Generation Y has been born and nurtured.
I’ve spent the last fifteen years working with organizations of every size and kind and I’ve heard thousands of business owners, executives, and managers lament the resulting carnage that the absence of work ethic/values training has wrought. Employers demand it, and yet schools and parents don’t teach or encourage it.
Even if math and science scores improve dramatically for American students, I believe that we’ll continue to lose our global advantage if we don’t address the fundamental cause of the problem: our unwillingness, inability, or refusal to teach and reinforce the work ethic that made our nation great and our citizens strong.
Six years ago, I decided that I could either eulogize the American work ethic or take steps to restore it. Through the combined efforts of a great team, a stellar advisory board, and 18 leading educators and corporate trainers from throughout the country, what began as an idea that day has evolved into The A Game, a fully integrated work ethic training and certification program for teens and young adults.
Unlike Milton Bradley’s Checkered Game of Life, “The A Game” is not a game. It’s a comprehensive, fully integrated curriculum that can train and reinforce work ethic at home, at school, and in the workplace by promoting the seven fundamental values that are the prerequisite to success in every job and every career, in every field and industry.
Most importantly, the curriculum teaches the emerging generation to bring their very best (their “A Game”) to work, just as they would bring their very best to their recreational pursuits like sports, music, and video games. Furthermore, The A Game is counterculture in that it destroys prevailing myths like, ‘work is a bad thing’ and ‘do only the work you’re paid to do and nothing more’. (Read the quotes to the right to see how legendary figures in business, medicine, politics, education, and entertainment view work.)
After a series of very successful pilot tests, The A Game is being officially launched this week, and you, the loyal readers of WhysNews, are the first to hear about it.
I encourage you to take a few minutes to tour the website and learn more about the A Game. I’m confident that news of this revolution will spread fast as schools rediscover the importance of teaching students these indisputable values, parents recognize their role in preparing teens for success in the workplace, and employers discover how work ethic training of their front line will decrease turnover and increase performance, profitability, and customer satisfaction.
Join the movement to return work ethic as a centerpiece in the development of our nation’s youth. Hit the website, share it with two or three friends and ask them to do the same. With your help, we can show America’s youth that when they win at work, they truly do win at life.
back
to top
If The A Game video does not appear, click here to view it on YouTube.
Famous Quotations about Work
There is no place where success comes before work, except in the dictionary.
Donald Kendall – Founder of Pepsi Cola
I believe that good things come to those who work.
Wilt Chamberlin
There's no labor a man can do that's undignified, if he does it right.
Thomas Edison
It is the working man who is the happy man. It is the idle man who is the miserable man.
Benjamin Franklin
See only that thou work and thou canst not escape the reward.
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Nobody ever drowned in his own sweat.
Ann Landers
Work is life, you know, and without it, there's nothing but fear and insecurity.
John Lennon
Far and away the best prize that life has to offer is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.
Theodore Roosevelt
The highest compliment that you can pay me is to say that I work hard every day, that I never dog it.
Wayne Gretzky
Talent is cheaper than table salt. What separates the talented individual from the successful one is a lot of hard work.
Stephen King
Laziness may appear attractive but work gives satisfaction.
Anne Frank
Nothing will work unless you do.
Maya Angelou
When you cease to make a contribution, you begin to die.
Eleanor Roosevelt
The reward for work well done is the opportunity to do more.
Dr. Jonas Salk
Pennies do not come from heaven -- they have to be earned here on earth.
Margaret Thatcher
Whatever your life's work is, do it well. A man should do his job so well that the living, the dead, and the unborn could do it no better.
Martin Luther King
The object of living is work, experience, and happiness. There is joy in work. All that money can do is buy us someone else's work in exchange for our own. There is no happiness except in the realization that we have accomplished something.
Henry Ford
We should so live and labor in our times that what came to us as seed may go to the next generation as blossom, and what came to us as blossom may go to them as fruit. This expresses the true spirit in the love of mankind.
Henry Ward Beecher
Hard work is the price we must pay for success. I think you can accomplish anything if you're willing to pay the price.
Vince Lombardi
A hundred times every day I remind myself that my inner and outer life are based on the labors of other men, living and dead, and that I must exert myself in order to give in the same measure as I have received and am still receiving.
“Channel One” delivers a daily 12-minute news broadcast to nearly six million teens in approximately 8,000 middle schools and high schools across the country. The ‘almost live’ video news program provides global and national headlines as seen from a teen perspective. A recent segment called “Then and Now” compares the attitudes and values between teens of 1969 and those of 2009. Thought provoking - click here.
Whys Cracks
FINGER LICKEN' FRESH - Alexander Dwight Rodrigue, 23, was arrested in Regina, Sask., Canada, for hanging around in the bakery section of a supermarket and "opening cake boxes, touching them and then licking the cakes," alleged Crown Prosecutor James Fitz-Gerald. When the store staff asked him what he was doing, Rodrigue "said he was checking for freshness." (Regina Leader-Post) Wonder if he uses the same method to determine whether the litter in his cat box is fresh?