Beloit College Class of 2012 Mindset List has been released
August 22, 2008 at 5:51 pm (EDT)
Beloit College’s Class of 2012 Mindset List has been released. It’s a list of things that incoming freshmen – most of whom were born in 1990 – are familiar with, but things they also don’t know or comprehend. For example, Harry Potter could very well be one of their classmates, the Class of 2012 Mindset List notes.
The list was started by Beloit’s Keefer Professor of the Humanities Tom McBride and Public Affairs Director Ron Nief, providing insight into the life and realities — as they exist — for incoming freshmen. It provides cultural touchstones that shape the lives of the incoming students, sometimes making it easier for a professor to understand why some students don’t grasp course content. one such example, for which I must be an exception, is this year’s item #20.
Item 20 on the class of 2012 is: The Warsaw Pact is as hazy for them (the incoming freshmen) as the league of nations was for their parents.
Growing up, I had a lot of input from my maternal grandmother, among other elders, who spoke with me about many issues, as well as history. In many instances, some of these older people spoke with me about the United Nations, but also about the League of Nations.
It’s sometimes hard for older adults to remember that today’s young adults don’t have the same grasp on things that are seemingly universal knowledge, such as computers have not always been a part of life, or that Russia and China haven’t always had the relationships with the U.S. that they now have.
The class of 2012 has grown up in an era where computers and rapid communication are the norm, and colleges no longer trumpet the fact that residence halls are “wired.” It’s a multicultural, politically correct, and “green” generation that has hardly noticed the threats to their privacy, but also one that has never feared the Russians and the Warsaw Pact.
Students entering college for the first time this fall were generally born in 1990.
for these students, Sammy Davis Jr., Jim Henson, Ryan white, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Freddy Krueger have always been dead.
- Harry Potter could be a classmate, playing on their quidditch team.
- Since they were in diapers, karaoke machines have been annoying people at parties.
- They have always been looking for Carmen Sandiego.
- GPS satellite navigation systems have always been available.
- Coke and Pepsi have always used recycled plastic bottles.
- Shampoo and conditioner have always been available in the same bottle.
- Gas stations have never fixed flats, but most serve cappuccino.
- Their parents may have dropped them in shock when they heard George Bush announce “tax revenue increases.”
- Electronic filing of tax returns has always been an option.
- Girls in head scarves have always been part of the school fashion scene.
- All have had a relative — or known about a friend’s relative — who died comfortably at home with Hospice.
- As a precursor to “whatever,” they have recognized that some people “just don’t get it.”
- Universal Studios has always offered an alternative to Mickey in Orlando.
- Grandma has always had wheels on her walker.
- Martha Stewart living has always been setting the style.
- Haagen-Dazs ice cream has always come in quarts.
- Club Med resorts have always been places to take the whole family.
- WWW has never stood for World Wide Wrestling.
- Films have never been X rated, only NC-17.
- The Warsaw Pact is as hazy for them as the League of Nations was for their parents.
- Students have always been “Rocking the Vote.”
- Clarence Thomas has always sat on the Supreme Court.
- Schools have always been concerned about multiculturalism.
- We have always known that all I ever really needed to know I learned in kindergarten.
- There have always been gay rabbis.
- Wayne Newton has never had a mustache.
- College grads have always been able to “Teach for America.”
- IBM has never made typewriters.
- Roseanne Barr has never been invited to sing the national anthem again.
- McDonald’s and Burger King have always used vegetable oil for cooking french fries.
- They have never been able to color a tree using a raw umber Crayola.
- There has always been Pearl Jam.
- The Tonight Show has always been hosted by Jay Leno and started at 11:35 Eastern.
- Pee-Wee has never been in his playhouse during the day.
- They never tasted Benefit cereal with psyllium.
- They may have been given a Nintendo Game Boy to play with in the crib.
- Authorities have always been building a wall across the Mexican border.
- Lenin’s name has never been on a major city in Russia.
- Employers have always been able to do credit checks on employees.
- Balsamic vinegar has always been available in the U.S.
- Macaulay Culkin has always been home alone.
- Their parents may have watched the American Gladiators on TV the day they were born.
- Personal privacy has always been threatened.
- Caller ID has always been available on phones.
- Living wills have always been asked for at hospital check-ins.
- The Green Bay Packers (almost) always had the same starting quarterback.
- They never heard an attendant ask “Want me to check under the hood?”
- Iced tea has always come in cans and bottles.
- Soft drink refills have always been free.
- They have never known life without Seinfeld references from a show about “nothing.”
- Windows 3.0 operating system made IBM PCs user-friendly the year they were born.
- Muscovites have always been able to buy Big Macs.
- The Royal New Zealand navy has never been permitted a daily ration of rum.
- The Hubble space telescope has always been eavesdropping on the heavens.
- 98.6°F or otherwise has always been confirmed in the ear.
- Michael Millken has always been a philanthropist promoting prostate cancer research.
- Off-shore oil drilling in the United States has always been prohibited.
- Radio stations have never been required to present both sides of public issues.
- There have always been charter schools.
- Students always had Goosebumps.
To join the Beloit Mindset mailing list, which generally sends two or three email messages per year, visit the mindset signup page.
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2 Responses to “Beloit College Class of 2012 Mindset List has been released”
Edward Domain August 25th, 2008 at 4:01 pm #
This has always been amazing to me: the part that distresses me as most people I know that SHOULD know about the Warsaw Pact and significant historical entities/events don’t. It’s bad enough that kids too young don’t know, but when the people that SHOULD know DON’T.
Here’s an example. I have an educated friend. She is German, as in born and raised and educated in Germany and moved to the U.S. a few years ago. Smart girl, college, etc. We were having a few beers the other night, and start talking about Germany and I spoke about Reagan’s “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!” speech, and the Berlin wall coming down. She was 9 when the wall came down, but IT WAS NEVER DISCUSSED IN HER SCHOOL.
To her, she thought there was just two countries called West Germany and East Germany. Mission accomplished, Stalin! I couldn’t believe what I was hearing….. she knew nothing of the Berlin Airlift, never saw video of the thousands of people at the wall tearing it down….. WOW.
Sadly, the same thing happens here in America. So many people don’t pay attention to history in high school and certainly don’t bother to learn more after high school. And these people get the right to vote— that is some scary, scary shit.
One last thing: A reporter for the International Herald Tribune (I think that was the paper) recently wrote an article interviewing secondary students in Germany about their past. One student had never heard of COMMUNISM. Seriously, he told the reporter he’d look it up online to read about it.
And Germany is not alone– the U.S. is just as bad. Makes me sad.
Dave Jackson (Scoop0901) September 2nd, 2008 at 10:08 am #
The Russians, no, the Communists, did a great job of allowing the folks in their brain-washed, information-starved countries to know little-to-no truth about the world. The same thing is continues in China and North Korea, as well as at least one South American country.
What you didn’t mention was which “country” (gag me!) — either East Germany or West Germany — that your friend was from, or rather I say, in which portion of the now-combined city, your friend lived. If she lived in East Germany as a child, well, it’s logical she never learned of any of the things you mentioned. The press is scrubbed of all real news, being replaced instead, with whatever information the government censors allow to filter through.
I heard a high school student a few years ago tell me that we “fought Vietnam” to gain independence. You’re right, it isn’t just in Germany. Every country has a generation of idiots which will, in 20 to 30 years, be the leaders. That, my friend, is an even scarier thought!