Sunday, October 30, 2005

1696 Dr. Sanity and self-esteem in children

She's on the couch for Sigmund, Carl and Alfred, and has this to say about the dumbing down of students, a problem that Bill Gates addresses rather bluntly.

Given your experience in a university setting, in your opinion, do lowered academic standards impact campus life and social development?

What worries me more than the low college academic standards is the “dumbing down” of the K-12 curriculum Having a daughter in school has made me all too aware of the extent to which the “self-esteem” gurus and the priests of multiculturalism and political correctness have infiltrated even the hallowed halls of kindergarten! Students are propagandized from age 5 on these days (OK, so I’m exaggerating a little bit) and this is the place where the primary aspects of social –and intellectual—development should begin to flourish. By the time these kids get to college, they have learned that their self-esteem is everyone else’s concern; that their feelings are primary; and that thinking is for suckers. Such an outlook on life is bound to have an impact on campus life and any further social development. Sadly, for most college students, lowered academic standards are what they feel entitled to, and most university professors aren’t highly motivated to take on the consequences of challenging the system. Besides, many of them like the system; particularly since they can have much more of an influence on students who have been properly discouraged from independent thinking."

Unfortunately, this goes back quite a ways. I remember going to an awards banquet over 20 years ago when my daughter was in junior high. I sat through interminable presentations and realized that my daughter wasn't really being honored--every kid got something, not for excellence or skill, but for effort and showing up. She was already pretty and smart, but I guess they wanted her to be an athlete too.

2 comments:

Bonita said...

Lowered standards are the norm because kids today don't cater to the humdrum of academic pursuits, homework, testing...they've been accustomed to making more of their lives than acadamia. We can't even sell academic excellence anymore. They aren't interested. Again, it is a matter of Universities screening out this type - soon - and vesting their interests in that odd student who has learned the ropes and stuck it out.

Randy Kirk said...

Found your comment at Mike Williams blog, liked what you said, decided to come check your blog out. I love this one, and have just noted it at mine, probably only for the first time. When I get around to adding some more favorites, I intend to add you there as well.

I really think you'll enjoy this posting on self esteem. http://ideaplace.blogspot.com/2005/01/study-self-esteem-not-so-esteemed.html