57 pages 1 hour read

Jeffrey Zaslow, Randy Pausch

The Last Lecture

Nonfiction | Essay / Speech | Adult | Published in 2008

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Section 5, Chapters 35-37

Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Section 5: “It’s About How to Live Your Life”

Section 5, Chapters 35-37 Summary

At the beginning of Chapter 35, Pausch admits that “improving group dynamics became a bit of an obsession” for him (142). These short chapters provide some narrative examples of important collaboration skills he tried to teach his students. On the second day of classes he would go over these tips with his students:

  • Meet people properly.
  • Find things you have in common.
  • Try for optimal meeting conditions.
  • Let everyone talk.
  • Check egos at the door.
  • Praise each other.
  • Phrase alternatives as questions (142-43).

The main piece of advice offered in Chapter 36 is to seek out the best in everyone; Chapter 37 reveals that the best way to understand a person is to watch their actions rather than listen to their words.

Section 5, Chapters 35-37 Analysis

Pausch’s advice to his students is applicable to anyone, regardless of their career or subject of study. If the classroom is a microcosm of society, then Pausch’s lessons on collaboration can be transferred to any relationship or dynamic. In true “last lecture” form, the professor is offering his wisdom about what is really important when it comes to working with and understanding people, rather than just sharing his knowledge about computer science.

Earlier it was established that Pausch endorses big-picture thinking. True to form, he focuses his lecture and book not on a survey of his professional accomplishments, a subject with a limited

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