The report card is not good. I am not talking about the
academic achievements, such as they are, of America’s college students. I am
talking about their mental health, what the researchers gingerly call their
resilience.
Over the past five years college students have increasingly
been availing themselves of the services of mental health counselors. Emergency calls have doubled and students
seek help for increasingly minor matters. Peter Gray explains the situation in
Psychology Today:
A year
ago I received an invitation from the head of Counseling Services at a major
university to join faculty and administrators for discussions about how to
deal with the decline in resilience among students. At
the first meeting, we learned that emergency calls to Counseling had more than
doubled over the past five years. Students are increasingly seeking help
for, and apparently having emotional crises over, problems of
everyday life. Recent examples mentioned included a student who felt
traumatized because her roommate had called her a “bitch” and two students who
had sought counseling because they had seen a mouse in their off-campus
apartment. The latter two also called the police, who kindly arrived and
set a mousetrap for them.
One is not surprised that these same students do not know
how to deal with poor grades:
Faculty
at the meetings noted that students’ emotional fragility has become a serious
problem when it comes to grading. Some said they had grown afraid to
give low grades for poor performance, because of the subsequent emotional
crises they would have to deal with in their offices. Many students, they
said, now view a C, or sometimes even a B, as failure, and they interpret such
“failure” as the end of the world. Faculty also noted an increased
tendency for students to blame them (the faculty) for low grades—they
weren’t explicit enough in telling the students just what the test would cover
or just what would distinguish a good paper from a bad one. They described an
increased tendency to see a poor grade as reason to complain rather than as
reason to study more, or more effectively.
For those who work in the field the change is palpable.
Moreover, the change is redefining the role of the university:
Colleges
and universities have traditionally been centers for higher academic education,
where the expectation is that the students are adults, capable of taking care
of their own everyday life problems. Increasingly, students and their
parents are asking the personnel at such institutions to be substitute parents.
There is also the ever-present threat and reality of lawsuits. When a
suicide occurs, or a serious mental breakdown occurs, the institution is often
held responsible.
In offering his diagnosis, Gray blames helicopter parents,
parents who refuse to give children the chance to deal with any issue on their
own:
I have
described the dramatic decline, over the past few decades, in children’s
opportunities to play, explore, and pursue their own interests away from
adults. Among the consequences, I have argued, are well-documented increases
in anxiety and depression, and decreases in
the sense of control of their own lives. We have raised a generation of
young people who have not been given the opportunity to learn how to solve
their own problems. They have not been given the opportunity to get into
trouble and find their own way out, to experience failure and realize they can
survive it, to be called bad names by others and learn how to
respond without adult intervention. So now, here’s what we have:
Young people,18 years and older, going to college still unable or
unwilling to take responsibility for themselves, still feeling that if a problem
arises they need an adult to solve it.
He adds that parents themselves are suffering the influence
of the larger culture:
Parents
are in some ways victims of larger forces in society—victims of the continuous
exhortations from “experts” about the dangers of letting kids be, victims of
the increased power of the school system and the schooling mentality that says
kids develop best when carefully guided and supervised by adults, and victims
of increased legal and social sanctions for allowing kids into public spaces
without adult accompaniment. We have become, unfortunately, a “helicopter
society.”
So Gray suggests that parents should start giving children
the opportunity to learn how to take moral responsibility. I would certainly concur
that children are not brought up to be moral beings; they are being brought up to define themselves by their desires.
This is well and good, but only up to a point. One
understands that helicopter parents exist, but we should also ask how many
children are brought up in broken homes. How many of them belong to blended
families where roles and relationships are ambiguous and confused?
At a time when more and more women work outside of the home,
one is skeptical that children suffer from too much parental presence and pressure.
It is impossible for a parent to work outside of the home and also be intimately
involved in the every aspect of a child’s life.
The notion that children are coddled beyond reason must be
balanced against the fact that a significant number of children are brought up
in unstructured homes, in blended families and in families where neither parent is at
home after school.
Surely, the crisis that Gray describes is real. But it is
symptomatic of the fact that we, as a nation, have undertaken a radical
experiment in social reorganization and parenting. We have chosen to dispense
with traditional family structures and we encourage everyone to seek self-fulfillment.
We have made the quest for personal satisfaction more important than the need to fulfill
one’s duties to others.
The resultant anomie has fallen on the most vulnerable, on
children. One assumes that many psycho studies show that children are
flourishing under the new regime. The evidence from college mental health
services tells a very different story.
Among other problems, these children have no real security. They
do not know where they belong. They feel unmoored and dislocated. When they go
to college and meet other children who feel the same way seems to compound the
problem. They start feeling that it’s the new norm.
The result is a form of mental anguish and depression, of
being thin-skinned, of being overly sensitive to the least slight. All of the
empty-headed empaths out there will respond by saying that they feel the students’ pain.
These students do not need anyone to feel their pain. They do not even need
another pill. They need guidance.
And they need rules of the road, especially when it comes to
dating and mating. Apparently, these no longer exist. Students do not date;
they do not learn how to develop relationships. They might engage in the random
sexual encounters with students whose names they do not know or they might
withdraw to the library and avoid it all.
If they hook up they are likely to get drunk or stoned
before doing so. They might find themselves in a state where they did consent, but were so completely out of their minds that they do not know what they consented to.
After the fact, they feel shame over acts that they would
never have done if they had been sober or compos
mentis.
A dating scene where there are no rules or no norms is one
where everyone feels equally lost. Some exploit the situation. Others are
exploited. Often they do not know which side of the equation they are on.
A situation where there are no rules or norms produces, by
definition, anomie… which means rulelessness or normlessness. As if that were
not bad enough, young people today do not even know whether they are men or
women. They all consider themselves to be persons. Confusion reigns.
Keep in mind, however wonderful today’s psychiatric
medication is, students and everyone else are being told that it can cure
whatever ails you. And yet, if all these thin-skinned college students are all on
their meds, clearly the meds do not work as well as they are supposed to.
Moreover, the society’s love affair with neuroscience has
persuaded people that it’s all a matter of biochemistry. This has led children
to believe that if something does not feel right, or if they do not feel good
about themselves, they need merely find a chemical substance that will make
them feel better. Obviously, that substance need not be a prescription drug. It
can be alcohol, which functions-- we have recently discovered-- like oxytocin, or marijuana or any one of a number of illicit drugs..
We no longer teach children how to deal with adversity or
even how to deal with success. We teach them how to numb themselves to life by ingesting or imbibing a chemical substance.
And let’s not get started on the damage done by the
self-esteem movement. If everyone gets a trophy, if children go to school to be
fed a constant diet of unearned praise, it makes good sense to say that they do
not know how to fail. They have never been allowed to fail. The educators and psychologists who have
promoted self-esteem bear a significant responsibility for the problems these
college students face. We should start sending them the bills.
One hesitates to say it, but when children fail parents feel
that they have failed. When parents insist that their children have not really
failed they are trying to assuage their guilt for not being the best parents
they can be.
We should also mention the winner-take-all economy we live
in. Students are under the impression
that if they do not make their way to the Promised Land of Silicon Valley or
Wall Street they will be consigned to misery and deprivation. In the past
certain professions offered good career paths. Students could become doctors or
lawyers; they could work in academia. They could even become journalists. No longer. The legal profession has
nearly been shut down to advancement. If you did not do very well at a top tier
law school, you are going to have a hard time have a good career as a lawyer.
The medical profession has been thrown into chaos and is increasingly
controlled by government and insurance. It has become increasingly unattractive
to young people. Those who join the profession today are-- older physicians
will tell you-- less competent and less intelligent than their predecessors.
And of course, in the academy just about the best a young person can do is to
become an adjunct somewhere, outside of the tenure track, without benefits or
job security. About the fate of the journalism, no one is very optimistic.
And then there is the constant assault on national pride. As
I argued in my book The Last
Psychoanalyst, mental health and well-being is not merely a function of
individuals. It is a function of group pride and group confidence.
If you live in a great and successful country, you will feel
pride in its accomplishments and pride in your own contributions, potential or
actual, to those accomplishments. If, however, you live in a culture like today’s
America, where national pride is constantly being trashed in the media and the
school system, where flying the American flag is controversial, where children
are taught that the nation is an organized criminal conspiracy, where the
president feels embarrassed about the nation’s power and is apologizing for its
actions… your morale will be systematically undermined.
How good can you feel about yourself for having been born
into such a horror show? People who are constantly bad-mouthing the nation are producing depression.
From the evidence presented by student health services,
today’s young Americans are crying out in pain… not for fewer helicopter parents
but for a coherent social structure, a sense of where they belong, a sense of
what it means to be a morally responsible adult, a feeling that they belong to
a great nation. They want to know what their roles are and they want someone
who will judge them fairly and honestly.
America’s great experiment in social anomie has failed. And
those who have suffered and are suffering the most are its children.
8 comments:
I don't know if Peter Gray's helicopter parenting is a primary cause for why colledge kids are now traumatized by mice, and I am more partial to the idea that broken families are a bigger factor, along with the anxiety of modern social media.
Still I find suggestions like "People who are constantly bad-mouthing the nation are producing depression." rather over the top, at least its a sort of strawman rhetoric which is not serious, but rather a way of dismissing "people" you don't want to be heard, while ignoring your own home team's depressing bad-mouthing.
On that regards, coincidentally today is Columbus Day, or Indigious People's Day for the politically correct.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_Peoples%27_Day
And it opens up the question of what sort of reality "we" can handle. Should we, can we rewrite history to contain simple morals that allow youth to separate moral from immoral behavior, and make sure they know that the moral behavior was done by their great ancestors while the immoral behavior was done by outsiders who we properly defeated?
Well, for that matter, you could say we do that, in regards to the Civil War. The North gets to feel smug over never having slaves, and fighting for the freedom of the opposed. Meanwhile the south 150 years later is still supposed to feel ashamed of their past, and if they ever try to rewrite history to suggest that some slaves were treated well, with cradle to grave social welfare by their owners, and are better off that modern blacks under the federal welfare system, well, that gets the northerners upset because their ancestors fought those evil southern slaveholders, and the idea that we killed people because a small minority of slaves were mistreated, that would be morally ambiguous, and confusing, and well, risk the slippery slope of future benevolant slavery.
So its curious to imagine how we should deal with history in a way that can avoid the problem of feeling the sins of your ancestors (or those who look like you) are your sins too, and you can never be clean of those sins. And even if a minority of adults can face that predicament, probably there'll always be a majority of adults who can't handle the truth, and prefer sweet dreams, and whose defense mechanisms will never let them know what they don't want to know.
Anyway, the easy answer is you have to think college can't be for people who need a sanitized history to feel good about themselves. At least everyone might accept this for what it is propaganda, and we know where propaganda leads - scapegoated minorities who can't defend themselves.
Oh, but I forgot, scapegoated minorities have the power of the gun to equalize justice against a brutal majority. Ben Carlson told us, so anyone who gets themselves killed should have worked harder to take down their government.
Maybe we just need a Social Darwinism Day, and then we don't have to feel guilty or depressed about nothin'.
Anyway, happy whatever-we're-supposed-to-celebrate-today!
There were slaves in the North.
Ares, you seem in bad humor today.
"At a time when more and more women work outside of the home, one is skeptical that children suffer from too much parental presence and pressure. It is impossible for a parent to work outside of the home and also be intimately involved in the every aspect of a child’s life."
It sounds contradictory, but maybe it is not. Perhaps the mother's not being there most of the time often leads to micromanagement during the time she *is* there. For many people, stress combined with the feeling of being out of control leads to *overcontrol*.
There used to be a time when only a small number of people went to colleges.
Colleges were dignified places of higher learning.
Later, it was hoped that if more people go to college, more people will become learned and cultured.
But the opposite happened.
Instead of colleges elevating the increasing body of students, the latter vulgarized the former into social hangouts.
If colleges take in more people, it will mean more dummies. As colleges have to cater to lots of dummies, the standards have to slip.
And then, in the name of 'social justice', every aggrieved minority group, women, and homos got their own departments, and they all began to bitch about 'racism' and blame whites for everything.
Politicization also made many courses(at least outside science and math) easier to 'master'. You could take English and just bitch about 'racism' of 'dead white males' and pass with an A. How did Michelle Obama graduate with honors from Princeton? She bitched about lack of privilege.
And then, with the rise of pop culture as The Culture(the only one that matters), the discourse generally got stupider and trashier. Whatever one thinks of Susan Sontag, she went to college when people still took serious philosophy classes and discussed books by Thomas Mann and the like. What passes for a thinker nowadays is Amanda Marcotte who writes for Salon or Slate. The likes of Emma Sulkowicz graduate with honors from the Arts.
This is what passes for college debate:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmO-ziHU_D8
Long way from the days of Bill Buckley and gang.
And here is Harvard team condescendingly 'losing' to prison inmates to show that it's made of wonderful 'progressives' committed to 'equality'.
How sickening.
Speaking of mental health...
What is sane and what is insane in a nation where 'gay marriage' is law of the land?
A nation where Bruce 'Caitlyn' Jenner wins 'courage' awards?
A nation where a nut like Sulkowicz is showered with prizes?
A nation where Lena Dunham is treated like an artist and role model?
A nation where blacks kill fellow blacks but bitch about 'black lives matter', as if whites are doing all the killing?
Colleges are crazy places.
http://www.msnbc.com/msnbc/columbia-university-require-students-take-sex-respect-course
When crazy is the New Normal, what is sane, what is insane?
Remember colleges say that you are suffering from 'homophobia' is you find the idea of 'gay marriage' to be ridiculous.
Colleges ought to be called funny farms.
Fabulous post. Epic.
Daycare had its role, an experiment as well.
I often wonder if the barrage of "you can change the world" has a role in this is as well. That's a tall order to put on children--it starts in grammar school, and really ramps up at the college level.
Somewhat related to the Dr.'s comment: "Students are under the impression that if they do not make their way to the Promised Land of Silicon Valley or Wall Street they will be consigned to misery and deprivation..." I just read on a master's degree program website that is seeking students for training in Silicon Valley-ish startups a similar theme, yet they too, pushed the "you can change the world" line.
My children told me when they were older that they were freaked out by Smokey the Bear when they were young, as they thought the constant "only YOU can prevent forest fires" meant it was their fault when they did happen. (We lived in the Sierra Nevada and thus there were many Smokey signs and many forest fires.)
So I can't help but think that the push to "change the world" messes with them as well, and by the time they are older and realize that is likely not going to happen, it feeds their sense of failure. It also has to have a weird effect on their sense of perspective--constantly being told "change the world" and then they realize it is dang hard enough to navigate their own little life, never mind somehow care for even another person and/or a child, versus every person in the entire world.
Mr. Olympia: All families are broken. And social media is a social scourge. But the mental health of these students has far more to do with having no idea what the world is about. No one did anything to them, it was the real world experiences parents didn't allow to happen to them that has them in this predicament. They cannot think, choose or act for themselves. Someone else is supposed to come save them. Wake up from your contrarian psychology-driven elitism. These kids aren't fragile. They've just never lived. Get them on a gun range, have them slop manure in a barn, or dig a road ditch. Something of consequence where they learn to be responsible for something so they can appreciate what they have. Their heads are in the clouds. Yours, too. -$$$
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