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Learning Outside The Lines

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Criticism for the public school system in the United States is nothing new; kids of all skill levels are slipping through the cracks at every age and in every city. Rather than attempting to change the system or point out it's failures, Jonathon Mooney and David Cole have created a practical guide to help kids jump through the necessary hoops to achieve whatever larger, postschool goals they may have. While much of the material is written for kids who've received the label LD or ADHD, many of the suggestions can be just as helpful for those who've been labeled "gifted," or any other student who feels frustrated with the daily routine of standard education.

The introduction (personal histories of the authors) is great reading for parents of LD or ADHD kids, and much of it has a humorous tone that makes it equally appropriate (and approachable) for discouraged adolescents. From the terror of weekly spelling tests to the few inspiring teachers and tutors the two encountered, the tales are equal parts entertaining, poignant, and encouraging to others who may well be experiencing quite similar events. There's little discussion of what methods are right or wrong--ultimately, both authors take a fundamentally pragmatic view, and it's "right" if it worked. A steady focus on study skills fills the majority of the book, and Mooney and Cole take what are generally pretty familiar stands on note-taking and test preparation and break them down into easily digestible concepts. With different methods for different types of learners (visual thinkers are encouraged to use maps and brightly colored markers), students will find plenty of help in creating notebooks, focusing their attention, and even appropriate ways of conducting the infamous all-nighter. Including information on how to recover lost class notebooks, how to make the most of a syllabus, and "The Seven Habits of Highly Disorganized People," Learning Outside the Lines provides students with plenty of tools to further each reader's personal idea of success. --Jill Lightner

290 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 5, 1999

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Jonathan Mooney

8 books53 followers

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5 stars
180 (30%)
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219 (36%)
3 stars
143 (24%)
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39 (6%)
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12 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 51 reviews
Author 4 books7 followers
August 2, 2017
Appreciate the effort, but wasn't terribly useful.

The first part of the book is personal history -- how two people overcame difficulties to get into the Ivy League. It is interesting to see that in both cases the key to admission seemed to be to build up years of working very hard and being very determined -- and to have the audacity and aggressiveness to push the admissions office to take them.

The second part of the book is a long list of habits, tricks, strategies, and advice. I thought it was a little too directing -- the whole point of the first part of the book was that everyone does things differently, but the second half had to kind of be "do it our way!" or you don't really have a book. I also didn't care much for how much of the advice was about how to hit the checkpoints without doing the work. To be clear, the authors value learning for its own sake, but they clearly learned from their years in school that learning for the sake of a teacher is a fool's game, and gaming the system is perfectly acceptable. I don't disagree with that, but I'm not sure why you would be strive to enter a system you don't value -- why go to Brown just to work to get the grades without doing the work? Why not spend your time on something else?

It was interesting to pair this with some of what "Excellent Sheep" detailed -- the author there says that getting into an Ivy League school is difficult, but once you are there it is almost impossible to fail a class. Everyone expects at least an A- in every course, there is ridiculously high grade inflation, you don't have to work hard at all to pass a class. I don't know if that's true, but he makes an impressive case for it being so, and Learning Outside the Lines certainly backs that up -- much of the advice, for example, is about how to not read the assigned books.

Again, I'm not criticizing, just wondering why the authors went so far and no farther. Why, for example, be so justifiably disgusted with the school system but not recommend or discuss home schooling? Why disdain college but write a book about how to get into the most competitive schools and graduate? And I wonder, did they pay the $50,000 a year tuition in full for the privilege of attending a school they did not respect? Could they not have done more with their resources?

In any case, not a bad book to read, gives interesting perspectives and handy tips. There is a decent amount of cussing and other content that makes it not a good choice for a younger child to read alone, probably -- which is too bad, because I can see adolescents and upper elementary kids getting a lot out of the personal stories. Also, they discuss their youth organization, which is a good thing.
Profile Image for Emma.
Author 5 books90 followers
January 28, 2020
Not bad. Decent methods, but it's told in a hyper-sexual way that feels cringey -- like the authors aren't comfortable talking about their advice without leaning heavily on innuendo.
Profile Image for Grant.
622 reviews2 followers
January 3, 2021
In what could've been summarised into a pamphlet, LOTL is a slightly helpful guide for getting study done. There's nothing new here and the personal stories don't add anything to the work.
Profile Image for Sophia.
289 reviews2 followers
March 22, 2023
Some interesting and helpful tips. However, I did not car for the author’s sense of humor. They were filled with adolescent sexual innuendos which was so not necessary. Without them I would have taken the book more seriously.
Profile Image for Liv Oland.
3 reviews
November 19, 2023
One of the best books I have ever read. I wish I would’ve read this book in high school… not my 5th semester of graduate school! This is so helpful, for all learners. It embraces all aspects of academic success.
Profile Image for Lance Eaton.
403 reviews48 followers
March 30, 2024
Though slightly dated (from the turn of the 20th century), this book actually has a lot of great tips and ideas for nontraditional learners (read: everybody) to consider and utilize to maximize their learning in environments where educators come to teaching and learning with a one-size-fits-all model. The authors provide a great many strategies for college success and I think in some ways, much of what they have said has been integrated in parts to first-year seminars and college-prep courses. They manage to pack a lot about how to get the most out of any course and provide lots of practical approaches to learning. In the wrong mindset, one could read this as "hacks" to college but realistically, they provide meaningful support structures for learners who "study harder" just sounds like dumb and unactionable advice (most of us, really). In that way, I'm grateful for such a book and will draw on the many ideas they provide to include and advise students in the future. What they offer in total is in some ways a "hidden curriculum" that students can activate to do much better than how teaching and learning may traditionally happen. However, the book is very much the product of two guys whose editor was too impressed with their story (framed as two kids who somehow managed to graduate from Brown despite having learning disabilities) to really push them to write better. What's most jarring is the repeated references to sex and orgasms and similar commentary that is sometimes meant to be funny but falls flat at least in contemporary readings and distracts from the more poignant advice that they offer. Thus, it's a book I might pull tips from but not necessarily recommend.
Profile Image for Cate.
8 reviews5 followers
June 26, 2008
Absolutely every teenager with LD/ADHD should read this book. Jonathan Mooney and David Cole know what it feels like feel to be on the business end of an F. Mooney is dyslexic and didn’t learn to read until he was 12 years old. Cole has ADHD, and spent more time in the hallways of school than he did in the classroom. But they both managed to turn their lives around, and with enormous feats of resilience and determination, managed to graduate with honors, from Brown University. They know how it feels to be a kid with LD/ADHD who has to face the fact that every day schools, teachers, peers and even some parents measure intelligence according to standardized tests and other narrow-minded constructs. Mooney and Cole found themselves on the outside of the norm, and they learned differently from their classmates, they were expected to fail.

Mooney and Cole teach encourage young people to take control of their education in order to find true success and happiness. They show them the whys and hows of persevering. Funny, triumphant, inspiring, and disarmingly heart-felt, Learning Outside the Lines guides the reader on a quest toward personal empowerment and educational transformation, proving once and for all that rules are made to be broken. Also, look for Jonathan Mooney’s second book: The Short Bus: A Journey Beyond Normal.
Profile Image for Kendall Minet.
5 reviews2 followers
July 11, 2017
This book was an eye opening book from an educators standpoint. The book is a memoir of two students with learning disabilities, and how they overcome them to attend Brown University. The book includes advice and tips for other students with learning disabilities. Overall, a great read that I would recommend to others.
Profile Image for Aaron.
43 reviews2 followers
August 3, 2019
Mooney and Cole offer an honest and insightful look into their lives, both successes and struggles, as students with LD/ADHD. In addition to their personal stories of failure and triumph, they also discuss their non-profit, Eye-to-Eye, designed to help elementary and middle school students that suffer form LD/ADHD and struggle in school. However, most of the book is dedicated to tips and pointers for LD/ADHD students to find success in college, specifically. Among the wisdom they offer, including recommendations for organization, test taking strategies, essay writing, and note taking, there is some questionable advice as well. This suspect insight includes a continued advocacy against reading entire assignments. As a student who suffered form severe dyslexia, and overcame a great deal of academic failures to graduate from an Ivy League school like Mooney and Cole, I appreciate the encouragement and guidance they offer students like me. Mooney and Cole stand as an example for other LD/ADHD students and show what someone with LD/ADHD can accomplish with the right attitude and determination.
Profile Image for David.
8 reviews
April 20, 2023
Their story and struggles resonated with me. That alone was worth reading. I also appreciate the mission of this book and bringing awareness to the idea of both alternatives and Eye to Eye.

While I imagine it’s authentic to the authors it still felt unnecessarily crass at times. I didn’t feel like it was necessary to swear to get their point across, or the constant use of very sexualized metaphors. It’s not that it’s wrong, but it’s distracting from what is otherwise already a relatable, good story.

I’m studying my masters and while some of the tips were helpful, it also feels a bit dated and less applicable as we transition into online degrees.

That said, their story and struggles will always be relevant. That is absolutely worth reading just to feel like I’m not alone.

A solid 3.5.
Profile Image for Sunshine .
43 reviews1 follower
December 7, 2022
As someone with multiple learning disabilities I love and appreciate this book! There's not many self-help books or any books at all about learning disabilities and ADHD. But this book made me feel seen. 🙂

This book has very helpful tips of how to be successful in college for neurodivergent college students. I currently use their tips for school and it really helped me. After reading this book I'm a straight A college student and I am currently a member of the most prestigious honor society in the world for colleges.

This book help me reach my full potential. Thank you Jonathan Mooney and David Cole. ❤️🙂
Profile Image for Carol Blakeman.
340 reviews7 followers
March 4, 2020
Excellent book! Great tips for anyone, not just outside the box learners. It was well organized and I felt that it covered everything that a college student faces. It should be read by any classroom teacher as well as by parents of outside the box learners. But most of all, it should be read with the outside the box learner maybe even starting with junior high (though there are some age inappropriate comments thrown in now and again--parental discretion advised). I think it would be an encouragement that he/she isn't the only one, and that there is no one best way to learn.
5 reviews
June 11, 2025
No offence to the authors, but this was an awful book. I appreciate their vulnerability to share their experiences, but that’s all it felt like in the book. A memoir of what helped and what didn’t growing up and then explaining strategies that literally everyone knows nowadays. Not only was it completely useless and not giving any good information you don’t already know. It is weirdly sexual. It is completely unnecessary to throw in sex and porn analogies, it gives nothing to the content of the book and makes it give off a weird vibe for the rest of the book.
7 reviews1 follower
July 8, 2020
Learning Outside the Lines is a great tool for students, especially if you are that "bad" student, you don't get good grades, you are not organized. However, if you are a "good" student, many of those tips you probably already do it.
Concluding, the title says something really important. If two students with learning disabilities got in Ivy League school, why can't you either? Everything is obtainable for who really wants it.
Profile Image for Adrienne.
197 reviews3 followers
February 9, 2023
I strongly recommend this book for high school and college students!

This book would have helped me SO MUCH in college, and I plan to implement the research strategies in my freelance writing. I listened to the audiobook and now I plan to buy the hard copy version of this book so I can see the examples for note-taking for research projects. I also want to share this with my kiddos, who both have learning differences.

Profile Image for Arielle.
357 reviews11 followers
July 29, 2023
This book is incredibly dated (which isn't the authors' fault, it was published in 2000) but it was also incredibly juvenile and I'm disappointed in the podcast that recommended this book for what now seems like inexplicable reasons. Based on the rec I expected it to be more about the story, which I was interested in, and less about the tips for how to get by in school with a learning disability, which I was not. But the title leans heavily into the tips part so that's on me.
Profile Image for Jules Lawliss.
44 reviews1 follower
September 26, 2025
I was given this book years ago after an evaluation. Never read it until now. I think my mind was resisting for a reason, and yikes. Yeah. There’s a ton of mixed emotions here; it’d take all day to explain why this book is insufficient and not worth any attention. Primarily, though: very outdated and written by manchildren with very inappropriate humor. There’s better resources on this sensitive topic.
Profile Image for Lili Nilsson.
45 reviews
October 28, 2021
I liked the stories in the beginning, especially appreciating the personal struggles the authors went through because it really shows anyone can be successful academically. However it falls short on "giving the tools" part. The advice is just regular study advices combined with common sense. I did not find anything special/new/groundbreaking with this book.
8 reviews
December 20, 2021
This book is amazing to understand how someone with a learning disability and what they are going through. It was very well detailed and I actually took many things away from this book as an educator.
However, if you are looking for useful tips and tricks and practical activities, this is not the book you should go with.
Profile Image for Lieve.
80 reviews1 follower
October 28, 2018
I'd recommend this for all kinds of students who have to learn from a book; it explains a lot about different ordening systems, how to process your information... It may give a head start, even for students with no disability whatsoever.
Profile Image for Maria Verwey.
10 reviews1 follower
May 14, 2021
This is a helpful read prior to the commencement of post secondary. If I could go back in time and hand it to my pre post graduate studies it would have been more helpful.
Profile Image for Ruth Minkov.
15 reviews
September 4, 2021
Funny and engaging. Numerous helpful tips for unconventional learners. Quite oriented toward younger college students who might find the crudeness less tiresome.
3 reviews
October 5, 2022
I was super excited for this book but, unfortunately, it fell short for me. Ditto to the pamphlet comment
Profile Image for Emily Shea.
24 reviews
September 11, 2024
Not super relevant to my situation or what I thought the book was about. The info is very outdated being 20+ years old.
Profile Image for Griffin.
114 reviews1 follower
November 3, 2020
It's a good book for people trying to pass college and not a very helpful one for people who are just trying to learn stuff on their own and are having a hard time with it. Useful advice, I guess, but not the one i was looking for.
Profile Image for Ottilie.
Author 45 books104 followers
October 14, 2011
I had to read this book for one of my education classes, and when I started to read the opening the book I was shocked with how it was written. The book is written by two college aged young men who talk about their horror stories of their education career before they started college. A story of determination is then developed into all these different kinds of tips about writing essays, reading homeowork, note taking, and much more! I found some of the tips or parts of their story I could relate do or did with my own assignments. Whether you have a disability yourself, you know someone who does, or want to go into education, the book is a very light read, and very funny, so you should read it!
Profile Image for Beatriz Andrea Fernandez.
105 reviews
February 15, 2015
I bought the book for the study tips, but in my opinion, that was the weakest part of the book. Sure, there was some usable stuff in there (the section on writing was especially useful, especially for someone who suffers from severe writing anxiety), but most of it was pretty obvious. What lifted the book most where the first and last chapters. Reading Mooney's and Cole's mini autobiographies of their experience in the modern American education system is moving and really awakens you to the many flaws of the system. The last chapters on looking for success and fulfilment beyond academics and cultivating a full and balanced life is something we often need to remind ourselves of. Overall, it is a quick, easy, and pleasant read with a good number of gems to take home.
Profile Image for Jason.
69 reviews21 followers
September 2, 2007
If you are a teacher of any kind, you really NEED to read this book. I saw Mooney at a conference in Breckenridge and he changed the way I view kids with disabilities. His story is amazing enough, but the strategies he puts forth to help kids of all kinds get through the maze of public education are invaluable!
Profile Image for Jena.
4 reviews1 follower
June 2, 2012
This book is brilliant. The strategies outlined in it are valuable whether or not you have learning disabilities. It should be read by all! One caveat: it contains swearing (mostly in the first few chapters) and lots of references to sex throughout the book, in the form of childish humor. Even if you would normally walk away from such a book, I would still recommend it. The ideas are that good.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 51 reviews

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