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Valedictorians rarely become rich and famous — here's why the average millionaire's college GPA is 2.9

Research shows top performing students avoid breaking rules, which has a damaging affect on their ability to accumulate wealth

Joe Avella,Shana Lebowitz
Monday 05 February 2018 15:30 GMT
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Abstaining from pursuing more common occupations can lead to financial success
Abstaining from pursuing more common occupations can lead to financial success (Shutterstock)

Eric Barker is the author of Barking Up The Wrong Tree. In this video, Barker explains what it takes to be a billionaire, and it isn't a high GPA.

So Karen Arnold did research at Boston College looking at the success levels of valedictorians. And, In general, high school valedictorians do well but they don't actually reach the highest level of success metrics. They don't become the billionaires. The people who run the world in general.

And that’s because what the research found was that school teaches you to comply with rules. So valedictorians often go on to be the people who support the system, they become a part of the system, they don’t change the system or overthrow the system.

And so what we see is that the average GPA, college GPA of American millionaires is actually 2.9. And while valedictorians generally score high in the personality trait of conscientiousness. What you see among the millionaires with their 2.9 GPAs is they’re known for grit.

Maybe they don't comply with rules that well but they stick with goals over the long term. And that how they do really well. And sometimes they don’t play by the rules, sometimes they do things differently. Because in school rules are very clear, but in life rules are not so clear.

So a certain amount of not playing by the rules is advantageous once you get out of a closed system like education.

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Read the original article on Business Insider UK. © 2018. Follow Business Insider UK on Twitter.

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