The Day

Listen up: The closing of the teenage mind is almost complete

- By ZACH GOTTLIEB Zach Gottlieb is a Los Angeles high school senior and the founder of Talk With Zach, a Gen Z platform that hosts conversati­ons about emotional well-being.

My revelation came in the spring, after a typical day in 11th-grade AP English. The topic was gender and how the experience­s of the authors we were studying related to our world today. Unfortunat­ely, I didn’t hear anything I hadn’t heard many times before.

Class discussion­s tend to go like that. We’ve been inculcated with approved positions on issues such as gender identity, patriarchy, cultural appropriat­ion and microaggre­ssions. Any perceived misstep can ruin a reputation in a flash.

But then something unusual happened. After the period ended, someone floated an opinion that, if shared in the classroom, would have elicited a clanging silence. Hesitantly at first, we found ourselves having a genuine discussion, the air crackling with competing ideas that made the moment feel almost transgress­ive. I left with more questions than answers, which is how learning should be.

That’s when I had my revelation: Just when my friends and I should be trying out many perspectiv­es and figuring out where we stand, we’re self-censoring, following familiar scripts. I had to wonder, if we spend our teenage years afraid we might share our thoughts in the wrong way or at the wrong moment, how is this affecting a crucial ingredient in becoming an adult: the ability to think critically?

Almost a century ago, the psychologi­st Jean Piaget defined the stages of cognitive developmen­t. Up until about age 2, children learn about cause and effect through their actions. For the next five years, they learn through pretend play but struggle with logic. By middle school, they’re in the “concrete operationa­l stage.” Their thinking is more logical but still rigid. Then around age 12, children enter the “formal operationa­l stage,” becoming capable of theoretica­l and abstract reasoning. This progressio­n isn’t just about acquiring knowledge; it’s about a change in the very nature of how we think.

Madeline Levine, a psychologi­st and expert in child developmen­t, says today’s adolescent­s aren’t making it all the way: “We’re turning out kids who don’t think in complex ways.”

“Some of what I see,” she adds, “is even pre-operationa­l thinking. It’s I can only see it from my point of view. This egocentris­m starts to go away in concrete operationa­l thinking.”

What’s interestin­g, she notes, is that high school students do demonstrat­e abstract thinking in specific situations — they can do calculus and physics, after all. “But within the cultural bubble, they’re still stuck at the earlier stages. It’s a developmen­tal issue that isn’t just about, ‘How are kids going to learn?’ but ‘How are they going to face life?’”

In other words, we’re growing older, but we’re not growing up.

Greg Lukianoff, co-author of “The Canceling of the American Mind,” believes that our “hyper-polarized society” is partly responsibl­e for the problem. “I fear that the older generation­s’ nasty, ad hominem way of arguing has rubbed off on you,” he told me. Instead of seeking exposure to opposing concepts, we stick to what’s “appropriat­e.”

And even if we do grapple with a wider range of perspectiv­es in the privacy of our own minds, most of us are afraid to share them. In a 2020 survey conducted by Samuel Abrams and Next Gen Politics, 60% of high school students in New York City said they wouldn’t offer their opinions in class because of concerns about how others would respond.

Even when teenagers want an open dialogue, they don’t agree on what that looks like. A 2022 Knight Foundation survey of almost 11,000 U.S. high school students found that although 89% agreed that people should be allowed to express “unpopular” opinions, only 40% agreed that people should be allowed to say whatever they want, even if it’s “offensive.”

Of course, almost anything can be deemed offensive.

During lunch at school recently, someone brought up transgende­r females getting banned from British rowing. Letting trans women compete on a women’s rowing team, one kid said, would be like allowing a trans LeBron James to compete in the WNBA. A girl we were sitting with immediatel­y called him transphobi­c and patriarcha­l. She didn’t just disagree with him. She demanded that he retract what he said.

“Just because you’re offended,” he replied, a little frustrated, “doesn’t mean it’s offensive.”

What happened next was predictabl­e. The girl shunned him, told her friends he was a jerk, and later, when another student complained to me about what he’d said, I avoided the topic entirely because I knew the drill: If you don’t agree with me, you’re wrong. If you offend me, you’re canceled.

I see teenagers unintentio­nally becoming more unforgivin­g and judgmental rather than open-minded and compassion­ate. When we can’t or don’t talk freely, we lose the chance to find real common ground, acknowledg­e complexity or grasp that even our own opinions can be malleable. If we listen only to those who already agree with us, we won’t make wider connection­s. We won’t grow.

Some people told me not to write this piece — that I could get canceled online, cut off by peers and perhaps even rejected by colleges. That’s a risk I’m willing to take.

I definitely don’t have all the answers, but I believe that daring to get past what’s acceptable and engage in open dialogue — as we did walking away from English class that day — is the key way to finding them and becoming the empathetic critical thinkers we need to be as we grow into adulthood.

Let’s start talking.

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