Why Being a “Good Student” Makes You a Bad TOEIC Test-Taker
The habits that made you a "good student" are sabotaging your TOEIC score. Inspired by Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad, this article reveals why the school system teaches you to fail. Learn to unlearn old rules and adopt a resilient test-taker mindset that turns mistakes into power.
(Inspired by Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad Poor Dad)
The Student Trap: Why Your “Good Habits” Are Hurting You
“Study hard. Get good grades. Don’t make mistakes.”
That’s what school taught you. And you listened.
You became a “good student” — quiet, diligent, always seeking approval.
But here’s the hard truth:
Those “good student habits” are exactly why you’re stuck in TOEIC score hell.
Robert Kiyosaki, in Rich Dad Poor Dad, explains how the school system rewards obedience, not creativity.
The very habits that made you a model student are the ones sabotaging you on test day.
TOEIC Isn’t School — It’s a Real-World Decision Test
The TOEIC doesn’t care how much English grammar you memorised.
It tests how fast and accurately you can solve problems under pressure.
If you’re still:
Afraid to make mistakes
Overthinking every answer
Waiting for “confirmation” before acting
…you’re playing the wrong game.
Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad taught him that success isn’t about having the “right” answer — it’s about making decisions and learning from the outcome.
That’s exactly the mindset MTC trains into every test-taker.
“Good Students” Freeze. “Good Test-Takers” Adapt.
At MTC, we see it every day.
Good students:
Panic when they’re unsure.
Waste precious seconds re-reading questions.
Spiral when they hit a difficult section.
Good test-takers, on the other hand:
Make fast, calculated guesses when needed.
Recover quickly from mistakes.
Trust their process, not their feelings.
This is the core of Kiyosaki’s philosophy:
Don’t train to be right. Train to be resilient.
How to Break Free from the Student Mentality
Stop chasing perfection.
Perfectionism is school training. TOEIC rewards speed and efficiency.Reframe mistakes as data points.
(See MTC’s Challenge Mindset article for practical drills.)Practice decision drills, not grammar drills.
Your score improves when you can make better decisions faster—not when you study more English.
Summary — Unlearn “Student Thinking” to Pass TOEIC
Good students hesitate. Good test-takers adapt.
TOEIC tests decision-making, not memorisation.
Kiyosaki’s “Rich Dad” philosophy applies: Action beats theory.
At MTC, we don’t reward you for knowing more.
We coach you to perform under pressure — even when you don’t know.
If You Want to Pass TOEIC…
The education system you went through is why you're struggling with TOEIC. Inspired by Robert Kiyosaki, this article reveals how old rules about mistakes and competition sabotage your score. Learn why you must unlearn these habits to pass the test.
Stop Studying Like a Student
(Inspired by Robert Kiyosaki’s If You Want to Be Rich and Happy, Don’t Go to School)
“If you want to be rich and happy, don’t go to school.”
It sounds like the last thing a teacher or educator would ever say.
But if you ever sit down with Robert Kiyosaki—author, investor, and son of a lifelong educator—that’s exactly what he’ll tell you.
Kiyosaki, known worldwide for his best-seller Rich Dad Poor Dad, has been saying this for decades. In his very first book, If You Want to Be Rich and Happy, Don’t Go to School, he explains why the traditional education system fails students.
And—whether you realise it or not—that’s exactly why you’re struggling with the TOEIC.
The Prussian Factory Model: Why School Trains You to Fail TOEIC
The education system you went through wasn’t designed to make you smart.
It was designed in Prussia to train obedient soldiers. Later, England adapted it to create factory workers—just skilled enough to run machines, but not independent enough to stop “needing” work.
You were trained to:
Obey instructions.
Avoid mistakes.
Seek approval for every answer.
But the TOEIC isn’t testing you on how well you follow rules.
It’s testing how you make decisions under time pressure.
And if you're still waiting for a teacher to tell you when you're ready, you're trapped in a system designed to keep you dependent.
Mistakes Are Not Failures. They Are Data.
Kiyosaki argues that school teaches you to fear mistakes.
Make a mistake? You lose points.
But in real life—and in the TOEIC—mistakes are the only way to get smarter.
This connects directly to what we teach in MTC’s Challenge Mindset Drill (from The Upside of Stress article).
A wrong answer isn’t a verdict. It’s feedback.
The top TOEIC scorers aren’t the ones who get everything right. They’re the ones who make mistakes, analyse them, and adjust—quickly.
Test-Takers, Not Students: Why Self-Education Wins
In Rich Dad Poor Dad, Kiyosaki makes it clear:
Your success depends on what you teach yourself, not what others teach you.
At MTC, we coach you as a test-taker, not a “student.”
We don’t teach English. We train you to:
Make faster decisions.
Recover from mistakes.
Stay mentally sharp under exam conditions.
Just like Kiyosaki's "Rich Dad" told him—skills beat knowledge.
You don’t pass TOEIC by knowing more English than others.
You pass because you’ve trained yourself to navigate a testing environment better than others.
You’ve Been Trained to Be Passive — MTC Breaks That Loop
Remember our article on Passive Listening & The Elephant Who Grants Wishes?
That “wait for the answer” habit?
That’s school training at its worst.
MTC’s coaching is designed to flip that mindset.
You are no longer a passive listener waiting to “get better.”
You are an active test-taker training your ability to control stress, make decisions, and use mistakes as stepping stones.
Summary — Kiyosaki’s Truth for TOEIC Success
The education system taught you to obey, not to think under pressure.
Mistakes aren’t failures—they’re learning accelerators.
Passing TOEIC is about training skills, not memorising content.
Self-education (like Kiyosaki’s “Rich Dad” approach) is the key to scoring higher.
At MTC, we don’t “teach” you how to pass TOEIC.
We coach you to unlearn the habits that are holding you back.