Some parents have assumed new roles in their childrens' lives:
There was a time when children did their own homework. Now parents routinely “help” them with assignments, making teachers wonder whose work they are really grading... Having had their parents organize play and social activities, many young people now arrive at college expecting the institution to operate similarly, in loco parentis... “When they identify what they think is lacking, they say, ‘You haven’t organized other things for us’—things like ‘trips to bowling alleys"... The “helicopter parents” who hover over nearly every choice or action of their offspring have given way to “snowplow parents” who determinedly clear a path for their child and shove aside any obstacle they perceive in the way.Students do not appear to resent the parental influence:
A survey carried out, in collaboration with Cornell and several other colleges, by associate professor of psychiatry Paul Barreira, director of behavioral health and academic counseling for the University Health Services, showed that one-third of undergraduates are in contact with their parents daily.One reason for the change at Ivy League schools is a change in demographics:
New financial-aid initiatives have accelerated change in the last five or six years; consequently, for many students now, “This is their big chance,” Fitzsimmons says. “They have no safety net, no family money—or ‘social capital’—to fall back on.”And the students they are competing with come from different backgrounds:
Harry Lewis explains: “People who come, on average, from more comfortable backgrounds are less worried about getting a job after college than those who are very strongly motivated to do better than their parents did. The second group are their parents’ best hope for moving the family up in the world...
“To get in, you’re competing with people all over the world,” he continues, “which makes it an incredibly selective process.”These are brief excerpts from an extensive six-page article. The content and conclusions may not apply to all colleges/universities, but I think the article offers worthwhile reading for those interested in education or those with children of college age.
Hard-working, enterprising international students may well be raising the benchmark on achievement for everyone, as well as enlarging students’ reference group to global scale. “The average American kid does very little homework,” explains Fitzsimmons. “You can find statistics that show high-school seniors averaging 45 minutes to an hour of homework per night. In many other countries, the norm is four, five, or six hours of homework each day.”
Photo credit Stu Rosner.
In my previous professional life, I worked as a contractor with the federal government in D.C. I wound up working with a 24 year old "kid" who had just graduated with his MBA.
ReplyDeleteIt was SHOCKING what this guy turned in as "completed" work. It was no where near complete. It was sloppy and inappropriate but he kept assuring us that his work had always been sufficient for his professors . . .
Then there were his incessant attempts at telling us that no one, including our client (the government) was "above" anyone else.
Um yeah, they are.
This isn't about someone having more rights. It is about a young kid realizing that his fancy degree does not permit him the right to waltz into a job and speak to his boss who has worked in his professional longer than this kid has been alive in any way other than respect.
The whole experience made me wonder what exactly is being taught in schools, not to mention the homes across America.
I read this article yesterday in the magazine. Craig's Lambert's undergrads sounded so much more elite than those inhabiting the yard 40 years ago. Then I took a look at the Ivory Tower, Harvard's answer to the Young and the Restless. They are so young and even less sophisticated than what I remember.
ReplyDeleteGod bless them, what a world we have given them.