You start thinking the world is a certain way and forgetting that there's another world outside of the campus boundaries that has nothing to do with what is your world at the time.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I consider the world, this Earth, to be like a school, and our life the classrooms.
I haven't even graduated from high school yet - and I've realised in the last four years, with all the travelling I've done and all of the movies I've made, that the world is my classroom. I've experienced things I don't know you can necessarily get from reading a history book.
If you're trained in metaphysics, you don't see the world as distinct from yourself. You are one with the world.
As a senior at Princeton, I felt like the whole world was open to me. In our country, that's not a given. We aspire to be a place of equal opportunity, and yet where you're born determines your prospects.
I like the fact that I'm living in the world rather than in a university.
I think the world is run by 'C' students.
With Yale, my world got so big all of a sudden. At school, if you could dream it, someone would make it so that you could do it. It was magical. I had a lot going on, as you do when you're 17, and didn't necessarily capitalize on all of it, but it made me see possibility in a way that I hadn't before.
The world is the true classroom. The most rewarding and important type of learning is through experience, seeing something with our own eyes.
The world is a place that is so interconnected that what happens in another part of the world will impact us.
A student of life considers the world a classroom.