Los Angeles – Serving as a background, with a projection of philosophy for his “victory” philosophy, Pete Carol stood in front of a section of about 60 students inside a basement lecture hall in the USC premises.
73-year-old back and forth, her arms are animating her words, coming out with an infectious enthusiasm, as she spoke.
“The practice is everything,” Carol said, diving into the principles of his philosophy. “If you want something, you have found it good. … You have to find a way to make time, make scheduling, determine priorities, get your ST so that you can be available to get good on what you want to get well.”
Carroll, wearing a sand-colored linen button-down shirt, gray jeans and matching sneakers, looked like a fire-up football coach, who was getting ready to take the ground for his players.
But every Thursday evening during the spring semester of the USC, for two hours, the coach for the first time in the professor, the carol transition, a football ground for a class in the hope of changing a game plan, has helped him to win a super bowl with a seaital sehox and two national championships in the USC in some tangible form for his students.
“One thing that I have told to Pete is that this class is not a class for me,” said Shadi Angoti, a biological science chief. “This is a migration. This is something that I look forward to for the whole week.”
This feeling looks mutual for Carol, which was sitting with reporters to answer innumerable questions, including one about her current interests, at the Palm Beach of Florida three days ago.
“The class I am teaching in the USC,” he said, “and all opportunities to communicate and also to get information from young people in school as well as those who have become part of that class.”
The syllabus offered through the USC’s Marshal School of Business is called “The Game is Life”, and Carol teaches it with Varun Soni, Dean of religious and spiritual life, Dean and David Belasco, assistant professor of entrepreneurship. The classroom courses say that the intention is to “train students to perform at their highest level in all aspects of their career and life.”
Elina Khoshinivas, a junior business head, said, “I care about the deep conversation that we have and the lessons they have sparked,”.
Is on competition The origin of Carroll’s philosophy, so it is a little surprising that interested students needed to fill an application which included questions as to what they were made a competitor. The course had a pool of 300 applicants. Students come from different big companies and have various career aspirations from musicians to dancers, entrepreneurs, athletes and accountants. AP female basketball player of the year Juju Watkins, although this day is absent as her recent knee injury is also in orbit.
Carroll has formed a relationship with students younger for five decades, many of which were not born when he led the national title to the USC in 2003 and 2004, and due to his success with Sehox, or accepting a student, he knew after seeing a documentary about Carol’s USC teams.
“He can find a way to connect with each one (one of us) in any way,” said communication chief and lacros player Mia Triolo.
Carol presents examples of real -life of flexibility, inclination on his experiences of being removed as the coach of New York Jets and New England Patriots. He also emphasizes the commitment – as he created to teach the course a month before the Las Vegas Reders coach was nominated.
“He is a symbol of the game, life is life,” said Angoti. “Everything that has been done through him, what he has learned, he is the right professor.”
“To listen to the true passion that he speaks and vulnerability has gone so crazy,” Drew Lidel said, a business chief.
Students arrive early and live late. Even Carol entered the room with actor Rain Wilson, who played Dwite Shrut on “The Office”, Carol is the main attraction.
During the first 15 minutes of the class, students break up in small groups, where they often hold a hop-performance competition (a portable basketball circle is sitting in front of the room), to know each other, and discuss a topic of the day, because the “weekend” lectures of the wrapper Mac Miller play on the hall speakers. Carroll rotates in the room as he makes a sideline, greeting by throat and handshake. Students are eager to share their achievements or conflicts from the week while taking their advice.
“He gives his best to every person with a senior business head and lacros player Alexis Nibbalk,” he comes in contact with contact. “
Carol takes time to resume the previous class, when Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr was the latest guest speaker in a lineup, including actor Jason Sudikis, writer Deepak Chopra and Olympic gold medalist April Ross and Rai Benjamin. He calls students by name to contribute to his takeaways.
Carroll attracted her attention to today’s text: flexibility.
“Through hard work, the relation of passion, realizing that you can cross the luggage,” Carol said. “Flexibility is about hope. If you have lost hope, you are not jumping back. You are.”
He calls Mitchell, a student whom he remembered had to give a speech to ask how it happened. He recalled his experience and considered it a win. His classmates are happy for him, and gives a round of applause. Carol joins them.
Completely Courses, laptops live in backpacks and cell phones are nowhere, as students scribe notes inside the class-zari notebook. When Carol speaks, the energy in the room is clear.
At one point, he introduces another personal story – shares how, in five days, he will meet his reders squad for the first time.
Carol said, “I have a first meeting with the team. They are going to come to a room like this and I am going to ‘Wow’ his ass,” Carol said that his students’ faces in the room were burnt in a smile.
“We left the class,” said Nibok. “I am always writing stuff.”
Carol gives the floor to Wilson, which echoes the lesson of the day of flexibility by sharing his experience of rejection and finding his way to success in the entertainment industry.
The class wraps 40 minutes of question-and-north session, where Carroll, Wilson and Sony share flooring and provide fake reactions.
A student takes advice to handle his first job offer and salary conversation. Another student, a aspiring performing artist, asks for the work-life balance. Someone else asks what passion and fulfillment means and for any definition of it.
Through all the lessons, Carroll offers an entry that can be challenging for a match.
“I am actually ultimately unrealistic optimistic,” he said.
Time remains in the air. A new class starts filing in the lecture hall as it tricks a one.
Carroll moves around it with a herd. Many students are eager to share their latest win or look for Carol’s guidance at their next step.
“If we did not get out of there, we were there for another 30 minutes,” Carol said, “and this is what it likes. It is really special.”
Carroll slowly moves towards the lift, saying that he has to participate in the east of the USC quarterback matte layer, then hold a return flight to Las Vegas.
The lift doors open and another student walks into a jog, to jump before the door is closed.
Another chance to talk to Professor Carol before he comes back to the coach.