THE CARROLL NEWS: Staff Commentary: Calculating the Future Staff Commentary: Calculating the Future ================================================================================ Meredith Snow on 24 April, 2008 01:55:00 At the beginning of my senior year, I had most of the classes completed that John Carroll University demanded from me. However, I was still required by my father, a chief investment advisor at a money management firm, to take what he considered to be the most important class offered on any college campus. Last semester, I took a personal finance class. I think, after months of reflection, I’m finally ready to talk about it. As a communications major, I had mixed feelings about venturing into the Boler School of Business. I worried about being assigned homework that had right and wrong answers or that I’d be asked point-blank the date of Warren Buffett’s birthday. I was, however, super excited to use my calculator again… if I could only find it. I may be graduating from the College of Arts and Sciences in a few short weeks, but I wasn’t a total financial idiot walking into the unwelcoming classroom. I’ll admit that I liked watching Jim Cramer rant, rave and pop pills on CNBC before I enrolled in this class. Thanks to Accounting 201, I knew about balance sheets and the importance of looking at numbers conservatively. But, I had a lot to learn. And by learn, I mean get scared out of my mind. I’m not being dramatic when I say I had a new fear at the end of every class. I called my dad in a panic each week about what I could do to prevent identity theft or ask him if I should invest in overseas markets. I demanded to know why I wasn’t told to start saving my kindergarten milk money for retirement. I told him that in case he hadn’t heard, I couldn’t depend on Social Security because the system needs a major overhaul. “You’ll be fine,” he assured me from an entire state away. “Your mother and me won’t let you go homeless.” “Your mother and I,” I screamed into my phone. Aside from learning that I had a homeless protection plan, I did learn a lot in the BSOB. I learned why companies issue convertible bonds and that clothing is typically the only expense that decreases after retirement. Now, I look back on the semester I spent in the BSOB with a bit of nostalgia. Non-business majors, I encourage you to venture into the unknown. The information taught in FN 142 is useful to you now. And, as an added bonus, you get to use your calculator again.