Sane people? Smart people? Historically literate people?Purple wrote:Well I say if its that old who are we to break away from tradition?
At least, "we" would like to be such people, for certain definitions of "we."
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
Sane people? Smart people? Historically literate people?Purple wrote:Well I say if its that old who are we to break away from tradition?
This is also my experience, but enough of them get it into their heads about now that they need that they need to do some work so they don't fail the year that it isn't ~30%. There will always be some that drop out, but is this number any different from 20 years ago. I doubt it. That being said going to university was a massive culture shock for me as I'm not such a party animal, but that's part of the point in going (aside from getting your degree etc) so that you meet that type of person.Eternal_Freedom wrote:Clearly you have never seen the students at my university. Aged 18-25 or so and about 30% of them are never going to amount to anything. They freely admit that and plan to have as many parties as possible before their student loan runs out.
Well, I'm not talking about those extremes. But I've heard it vented by various teachers I know that when you send a kid to the office for being disruptive, the Office doesn't back them up. The kids figure this out and act accordingly. I know I saw plenty of that during my high school years as well.Simon_Jester wrote:Of course, many of the means in question frequently involved arbitrary 'discipline' such as "I will beat you for doing things I don't like," and were often applied disproportionately to students who stood out for any reason other than "is teacher's pet."RogueIce wrote:I think it's been said that as time has gone on, teachers have had fewer means to enforce discipline in their classrooms.
So is it that kids these days are really worse in their general mindset, or that they can just get away with more than kids of old could? IOW, kids "back in the day" may well have been as 'bad' as kids today, but they just couldn't get to that point before getting curbed by teachers and the administration (in school), parents, police, etc.
We moved away from that for a reason.
Nothing new. 30 years ago the man/boy who tried to rape me, and who did rape several other girls, among other criminal acts, had parents exactly like that. Little wonder he and his older brother are serving lengthy prison terms in a State Pen.Elheru Aran wrote:It's not just school, though. I see examples often enough of parents who literally just let their kids fend for themselves every day. Most aren't that bad, but when it comes to disciplining kids, there's a ongoing issue, I think, of parents simply not caring enough to tell their kids to stop being little fuckheads. Yet if some adult gets on to those kids, their parents get all up in that adult's face about leaving their kids alone...
How many teenage girls do you think have the mental gumption to insist on a condom when their boyfriends don't want to wear one, or when the kids use going bareback as an expression of Tru Luv 4eva?I don't know how high the teen pregnancy rate is either, but every day when I used to work at Taco Bell (less than a year ago), I'd see mothers who couldn't have been much past 16 or 17 with their babies. How do you think those kids are going to turn out? Do you think those girls really thought about at least packing a condom or two in their purses before going out with the guy that fathered their kid?
When I was that age it was still common for girls not to be told about menstruation - this lead to all sorts of "hilarity" in girls' bathrooms from time to time. In my day, the shower room scene from Carrie played out more than once (well, minus the telekinesis).Do you think *their* parents were concerned enough to advise their kids to use protection, knowing well that if they fucked and they got pregnant, odds are the girl's never going to go through college if she keeps the baby?
As school funding in the US is tied to property values that is quite true in the US.Note that I think there's a certain class divide in this regard. Kids that come from a more well-off background tend to go to better schools and have a slightly better upbringing *on average*. I don't know how true that is, though, so...
That's 2700 years ago. And they still complain about the same thing today. Yet if we look at progress, the world has progressed a great deal indeed.Hesiod, 700BC wrote:I see no hope for the future of our people if they are dependent on frivolous youth of today, for certainly all youth are reckless beyond words... When I was young, we were taught to be discreet and respectful of elders, but the present youth are exceedingly disrespectful and impatient of restraint.
I attended university about 20 years ago and now, pushing 40 I find myself back in college. I now find myself surrounded by a bunch of slackers who leave assignments till right before the due date, hardly study at all, and waste time like nobodies business. Pretty much exactly how it was 20 years ago, the only difference this time is I'm not slacking off as much having learned some hard lessons the first time around.Falarica wrote:This is also my experience, but enough of them get it into their heads about now that they need that they need to do some work so they don't fail the year that it isn't ~30%. There will always be some that drop out, but is this number any different from 20 years ago. I doubt it. That being said going to university was a massive culture shock for me as I'm not such a party animal, but that's part of the point in going (aside from getting your degree etc) so that you meet that type of person.Eternal_Freedom wrote:Clearly you have never seen the students at my university. Aged 18-25 or so and about 30% of them are never going to amount to anything. They freely admit that and plan to have as many parties as possible before their student loan runs out.
To address the OP. I cannot give a completely unbiased opinion as I am part of the demographic you describe. But I wonder if the reaction of our parents of 'youth culture' of today (whatever that means) is all that different from their parents to 'youth culture' of their time (miniskirts or rock music or 'hippy culture' or whatever).
Main difference? Twenty or thirty years ago, a lot of those kids wouldn't be going to college, because there was more cultural awareness that sending unmotivated people of average or lower aptitude into higher education was a waste of time.Falarica wrote:This is also my experience, but enough of them get it into their heads about now that they need that they need to do some work so they don't fail the year that it isn't ~30%. There will always be some that drop out, but is this number any different from 20 years ago. I doubt it. That being said going to university was a massive culture shock for me as I'm not such a party animal, but that's part of the point in going (aside from getting your degree etc) so that you meet that type of person.Eternal_Freedom wrote:Clearly you have never seen the students at my university. Aged 18-25 or so and about 30% of them are never going to amount to anything. They freely admit that and plan to have as many parties as possible before their student loan runs out.
You mean when we get older we quit saying "Damn Youngsters Get Off My Lawn"?I suspect that our generation (the now ~20ish people) will grow out of that.
Around here that is cheery; the gloomy people tend to just assume it's all going to go irreparably to crap.Eternal_Freedom wrote:Thank for that cheery prognosis Simon.
You missed what I was talking about- I'm referring to the (claim that our generation has an) entitlement complex. Most people have an entitlement complex when times are good and any really serious social problems can be deferred through various temporary measures. It takes time for people to get away from that when the party ends and the hangover sets in.someone_else wrote:You mean when we get older we quit saying "Damn Youngsters Get Off My Lawn"?I suspect that our generation (the now ~20ish people) will grow out of that.
Since we have proofs that since the beginning of written history this crap was afloat, I don't think it is something we can "grow out".
I think that's a good portion of it, but there is a physiologic component to it. Adolescences just don't think the way adults do. They physically don't have the same thought patterns as adults, and thus think totally different than adults. Hence, while adults can remember what they did and so forth as a kid, they no longer think that way, and only see their actions and the actions of kids today. Their own tom foolery they remember they rationalize, while today's youths indiscretions they don't and no longer think the way a kid does and can't relate. So they then assign a negative aspect to today's youth they don't assign to their own memories.Broomstick wrote:I think the origin of some of this is that when you get older you realize just how fucking stupid some of the shit you did when you were younger actually was - and there's an impulse to let the kids of today know it's fucking stupid, even though there is no way they're going to listen to you, because they just aren't adults yet.
Let's see, applications for what?ArmorPierce wrote:My current job (which I'm leaving thankfully) I make outbound calls over issues that come up with account applications. I thank my lucky stars whenever I am going to make an outbound call to someone in their 20s or younger. I never have any problems talking with them and never have them blowing up over the phone. I cannot say the same for the older crowd, like 40 and over, whom I dread making the outbound calls to. The sense of entitlement from the older crowd is painful.
Just sayin.