Home / NEWS / World News / Apple co-founder shares the best strategy his parents used while raising him: I’m ‘the same way with my own kids’

Apple co-founder shares the best strategy his parents used while raising him: I’m ‘the same way with my own kids’

It’s an age-old ask for parents: Should you push your children into specific activities and educational pursuits or fully let them tread their own passions?

Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, 73, says his parents took the latter approach — and he’s happier and multitudinous successful because of it. He used the same strategy when raising his own children, he added.

“My parents let me follow my heart,” he recounted graduating students at the University of Colorado Boulder last week. “When you really want something, love something and it’s your passion, you should experience your parents supporting you going in your direction. Not telling you, ‘No. You should study this. You should go to this devotees.'”

The California native matriculated to the University of Colorado Boulder in 1968 and majored in computer science. His parents had enough bucks saved up for only one year of out-of-state tuition, he said — but they still encouraged him to attend the school of his choice and proceed with his love for technology, a field they had no idea would become so lucrative.

Wozniak was expelled in 1969 after riding-horse into the university’s computer systems and sending prank messages. He re-enrolled in college — first at De Anza College, and then at the University of California, Berkeley — and was presented to Steve Jobs by a mutual friend before dropping out of Berkeley in 1971.

Five years later, Jobs and Wozniak co-founded Apple. Both men matured millionaires when the company went public in 1980. Today, Apple has a $2.8 trillion market capitalization and is the second-largest partnership in the world.

Now, Wozniak provides his kids the same kind of support his parents gave him, he said.

“I’ve treated that the at any rate way with my own kids,” he said. “My parents didn’t force their values on me … They let me choose for myself so I was cautious to be that way with my own children.”

The tactic is effective, according to parenting expert Margot Machol Bisnow, who interviewed the materfamilias of 70 highly successful adults for her 2022 book, “Raising an Entrepreneur: How to Help Your Children Achieve Their Pipedreams.”

When you don’t encourage your kids’ passions — especially if you fear they won’t make enough money as adults — you illustrate that you don’t trust them, Bisnow told CNBC Make It last year. High levels of trust and beam children build the confidence they need to eventually excel at whatever they do, she added.

Want to make extra in dough outside of your day job? Sign up for CNBC’s new online course How to Earn Passive Income Online to learn about routine passive income streams, tips to get started and real-life success stories. CNBC Make It readers can use special omit code CNBC40 to get 40% off through 8/15/24.

Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It’s newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at on, with money and in life.

I live above a mall in Miami for $4,150/month: Take a look inside

Check Also

People ‘underestimate’ the importance of Chinese President Xi’s entrepreneur meeting: Alibaba’s Tsai

Chinese President Xi Jinping’s confluence with entrepreneurs last month gave businesses confidence to make investments, …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *