Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

What do the kids know about politics? Is it enough?

- Alison Dagnes Alison Dagnes is a professor of political science at Shippensbu­rg University.

Contrary to a common idea, fresh-faced kids don’t walk into a college classroom with open minds for professors to fill. My students today come into my classroom with preexistin­g opinions, even if they usually don’t have the knowledge to argue those opinions logically.

To gauge how informed they are about current events, every now and then some of us in the political science department at Shippensbu­rg University will give an open-ended, no-stress, no-penalty news quiz. The answers are always instructiv­e and occasional­ly hilarious.

A recent quiz asked 57 students across upper- and lowerlevel courses several questions, including “Who is George Santos?” (nine students answered correctly) and “Name two Republican­s running for president in 2024” (52 could name at least one). What was surprising was that the knowledge ended there, according to the colleague who gave the quiz: “More people listed Kanye West than Nikki Haley,” he said. And in both classes, someone mentioned Vermin Supreme.

Recently, I had a student who was a proud Trump supporter and frequently wore a “Let’s Go Brandon” tee shirt to class. He was a nice kid, and we liked to spar with one another jokingly in front of the class, just to show that these conversati­ons could be had cheerfully. He earned an “A” because he could articulate what he did not like about the Democrats, and he could tie it to the textbook material. This is all I want in a student — it was just a bonus that he was smart and a delight to be around.

The opposite happens, too. A student once said that he hated Jane Fonda with the heat of 1,000 suns, and so I asked him: “Is this because of ‘ 80 for Brady’?” No, he said, leaning in: “She took the wrong side in the Korean War.” She was 16 when the Korean War ended. He meant Vietnam.

College students come to school armed with two large arrows in their quivers: their own beliefs and what political philosophe­r Michael Oakeshott called the “sweet solipsism of youth.”

Professors are up against the self-absorption inspired by too much time on social media, a place that rewards absurd hot takes with extra attention. Social media is also where everyone’s opinion is considered equal and where expertise is flattened or denied.

The spread of misinforma­tion is so unrelentin­g in America today partly because many of us have so fully absorbed “alternativ­e truths.”

This is where a college education can be invaluable. College is supposed to introduce students to new ideas. This does not mean that most professors try to sway students in an ideologica­l direction, just that most try to encourage their students to use their brains.

An agile mind, one that can move from thought to analysis to question, is a valuable thing. It also is vital to respect nuance, and to understand that most of the time, life is not black and white.

Further, it is imperative that students learn that all people make mistakes, and that in real life pure heroes — and pure villains — are rare.

The world is filled with people trying their best. I know my students are (even the ones who don’t do the readings), and they see me working hard for them as well. Even the world of politics includes people who want the best for our country, though some of them go about it in strange ways.

Don’t worry about the kids today, no matter how foreign their actions may seem.

That’s part of maturation and I can promise you: Most of them are alright.

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