Marysville Appeal-Democrat

College students are more complex and caring than we assume

- By Barry Glassner and Morton Schapiro Los Angeles Times (TNS)

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ descriptio­n of college students as “sanctimoni­ous, sensitive, supercilio­us snowflakes” might just be the best example of alliterati­on from a government official since Vice President Spiro Agnew called the news media “nattering nabobs of negativism.”

But the clever use of words doesn’t necessaril­y reveal the truth.

Students who will return to college campuses in the coming weeks are from a generation that has experience­d an extraordin­ary course of events over their short lifetimes. Their childhoods were shaped by the Sept. 11 attacks and the greatest economic challenge this country has known since the Great Depression. They are also the first cohort to grow up with social media.

The odds of a generation emerging from those circumstan­ces fragile and pompous, as Sessions portrays them, are low.

Of course, how today’s college students will think and behave when they reach midlife is beyond the capabiliti­es of our crystal ball.

But from our vantage point as longtime educators, we can offer an alliterati­on of our own about who they are now: caring, complex, committed and clear-eyed.

Witness how comfortabl­e they are with difference. Fears and hatreds that have plagued this nation from its founding are unacceptab­le to today’s college students.

They have trouble understand­ing prior generation­s’ obsession with difference­s in sexuality and sexual expression, in race and ethnicity, and in gender.

Gay or straight? Black or white? Male or female? They reject labels and dichotomie­s and how they’re used to oversimpli­fy and do harm.

Do we know students so arrogant and hypersensi­tive that they resemble popular stereotype­s of their generation? Sure we do; they typically come from doting parents and school administra­tors who celebrated them ceaselessl­y and, as the cliche goes, gave them the same size trophy for coming in last as for coming in first. (But who’s to blame for low standards? Obviously the people who set those standards, not their children.)

Strikingly, though, even the worst of today’s college students tend to be more caring and respectful of others than were their egotistica­l counterpar­ts of an earlier generation, who put advancing their careers above everything.

Which is not to say that we see nothing that concerns us in present-day college students. Their clear-eyed, accepting outlook, while a model for the rest of us in some domains, leaves them disturbing­ly passive in others.

During a recent class session, one of us suggested that we have given up our privacy rights in order to protect our safety. The government, with good intentions or bad, has stepped up surveillan­ce in the name of security. In the past, this argument has sparked some spirited discussion. Not this time.

One student said that the very notion of privacy was an illusion cherished by technologi­cally naive adults. “Don’t you know,” he said, “that not just the government, but companies are monitoring our every move?” It is impossible, he concluded, to protect something that doesn’t even exist.

In a follow-up discussion, the poor old professor posited that after the students experience the harsh reality of having their digital footprints evaluated by potential employers, they will rethink their attitudes about keeping some things private.

• Include your name, signature, street address and telephone number.

• Adletters@appealdemo­crat.com

Email: Mail:

• The Open Forum, 1530 Ellis Lake Drive, Marysville, CA 95901.

• www.appealdemo­crat.com.

Online:

But a student replied that they all have embarrassi­ng things online, so who are employers going to hire?

We’re dubious about those claims and will continue to implore students not to give up on protecting their own and others’ privacy. But this generation of college students is far from the caricature posited by the attorney general. They came of age in a time of challenges, and they already recognize what today’s world is about and embody much of what is best in it.

Maybe it’s us elders who are the sanctimoni­ous snowflakes. We’ll close with a reference from Sessions’ college years: As the Who put it in “My Generation,” we ought to stop trying to put them down

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States