If the entering college class of
2013 had been more alert back in 1991 when most of them were born, they would
now be experiencing a severe case of déjà vu. The headlines that year railed
about government interventions, bailouts, bad loans, unemployment and greater
regulation of the finance industry. The Tonight Show changed
hosts for the first time in decades, and the nation asked “was Iraq worth a
war?”
Each August since 1998, Beloit
College has released the Beloit College Mindset List. It provides a look at the
cultural touchstones that shape the lives of students entering college. It is
the creation of Beloit’s Keefer Professor of the Humanities Tom McBride and
Emeritus Public Affairs Director Ron Nief. It is used around the world as
the school year begins, as a reminder of the rapidly changing frame of
reference for this new generation. It is widely reprinted and the Mindset List
website at http://www.beloit.edu/mindset/ receives more
than 300,000 hits annually.
As millions of students head off to
college this fall, most will continue to experience the economic anxiety that
marked their first two years of life just as it has marked their last two years
of high school. Fears of the middle class--including their parents--about
retirement and health care have been a part of their lives. Now however, they
can turn to technology and text a friend: "Momdad still worried bout
stocks. urs 2? PAW PCM".
Members of the class of 2013 won't
be surprised when they can charge a latté on their cell phone and curl up in
the corner to read a textbook on an electronic screen. The migration of once
independent media—radio, TV, videos and CDs—to the computer has never amazed
them. They have grown up in a politically correct universe in which
multi-culturalism has been a given. It is a world organized around
globalization, with McDonald's everywhere on the planet. Carter and Reagan are
as distant to them as Truman and Eisenhower were to their parents. Tattoos,
once thought "lower class," are, to them, quite chic. Everybody knows
the news before the evening news comes on.
Thus the class of 2013 heads off to
college as tolerant, global, and technologically hip…and with another new host
of The Tonight Show.
The
Beloit College Mindset List for the Class of 2013
Most students
entering college for the first time this fall were born in 1991.
- For these students, Martha Graham, Pan American
Airways, Michael Landon, Dr. Seuss, Miles Davis, The Dallas Times
Herald, Gene Roddenberry, and Freddie Mercury have always been
dead.
- Dan Rostenkowski, Jack Kevorkian, and Mike Tyson have
always been felons.
- The Green Giant has always been Shrek, not the big guy
picking vegetables.
- They have never used a card catalog to find a book.
- Margaret Thatcher has always been a former prime
minister.
- Salsa has always outsold ketchup.
- Earvin "Magic" Johnson has always been
HIV-positive.
- Tattoos have always been very chic and highly visible.
- They have been preparing for the arrival of HDTV all
their lives.
- Rap music has always been main stream.
- Chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream has always been a
flavor choice.
- Someone has always been building something taller than
the Willis (née Sears) Tower in Chicago.
- The KGB has never officially existed.
- Text has always been hyper.
- They never saw the “Scud Stud” (but there have always
been electromagnetic stud finders.)
- Babies have always had a Social Security Number.
- They have never had to “shake down” an oral
thermometer.
- Bungee jumping has always been socially acceptable.
- They have never understood the meaning of R.S.V.P.
- American students have always lived anxiously with
high-stakes educational testing.
- Except for the present incumbent, the President has
never inhaled.
- State abbreviations in addresses have never had
periods.
- The European Union has always existed.
- McDonald's has always been serving Happy Meals in
China.
- Condoms have always been advertised on television.
- Cable television systems have always offered telephone
service and vice versa.
- Christopher Columbus has always been getting a bad rap.
- The American health care system has always been in
critical condition.
- Bobby Cox has always managed the Atlanta Braves.
- Desperate smokers have always been able to turn to
Nicoderm skin patches.
- There has always been a Cartoon Network.
- The nation’s key economic indicator has always been the
Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
- Their folks could always reach for a Zoloft.
- They have always been able to read books on an
electronic screen.
- Women have always outnumbered men in college.
- We have always watched wars, coups, and police arrests
unfold on television in real time.
- Amateur radio operators have never needed to know Morse
code.
- Belarus, Moldova, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Armenia, Latvia,
Georgia, Lithuania, and Estonia have always been independent nations.
- It's always been official: President Zachary Taylor did
not die of arsenic poisoning.
- Madonna’s perspective on Sex has always been well
documented.
- Phil Jackson has always been coaching championship
basketball.
- Ozzy Osbourne has always been coming back.
- Kevin Costner has always been Dancing with Wolves,
especially on cable.
- There have always been flat screen televisions.
- They have always eaten Berry Berry Kix.
- Disney’s Fantasia has always been available on video, and
It’s a Wonderful Life has always been on Moscow television.
- Smokers have never been promoted as an economic force
that deserves respect.
- Elite American colleges have never been able to fix the
price of tuition.
- Nobody has been able to make a deposit in the Bank of
Credit and Commerce International (BCCI).
- Everyone has always known what the evening news was
before the Evening News came on.
- Britney Spears has always been heard on classic rock
stations.
- They have never been Saved by the Bell
- Someone has always been asking: “Was Iraq worth a war?”
- Most communities have always had a mega-church.
- Natalie Cole has always been singing with her father.
- The status of gays in the military has always been a
topic of political debate.
- Elizabeth Taylor has always reeked of White Diamonds.
- There has always been a Planet Hollywood.
- For one reason or another, California’s future has
always been in doubt.
- Agent Starling has always feared the Silence of the
Lambs.
- “Womyn” and “waitperson” have always been in the
dictionary.
- Members of Congress have always had to keep their
checkbooks balanced since the closing of the House Bank.
- There has always been a computer in the Oval Office.
- CDs have never been sold in cardboard packaging.
- Avon has always been “calling” in a catalog.
- NATO has always been looking for a role.
- Two Koreas have always been members of the UN.
- Official racial classifications in South Africa have
always been outlawed.
- The NBC Today Show has always been seen on weekends.
- Vice presidents of the United States have always had
real power.
- Conflict in Northern Ireland has always been slowly
winding down.
- Migration of once independent media like radio, TV,
videos and compact discs to the computer has never amazed them.
- Nobody has ever responded to “Help, I’ve fallen and I
can’t get up.”
- Congress could never give itself a mid-term raise.
- There has always been blue Jell-O.
5 comments:
Most of this seems normal to me now. I don't think of it as ever being any different and I would be lost if I were suddenly dropped back in time to when I was young. That realization was refreshed several days ago when my microwave oven stopped working.
HaHa to David Oliver's comment. I just had to buy a new microwave too! The world is ever-changing and evolving...wonder what it'll be like in another 10 years - that is if it's still here!
I've never heard of this list before, and find it very fascinating!
Some of the items on the list make me laugh. Some make me wince.
We are a society that has been moving forward fast, things are easier, but more complicated. Everything is high speed, when some things will always be better slow.. (food for example) The moral fabric of our daily life & surroundings has declined. (television commercials.. celebrities) Subtlety & modesty are rare in this flashy, sometimes trashy culture. My wish is for the young people of this era to use their empowerment to change the world for the better, but to remember that while times are rapidly changing, it's ok for some things to stay the same.. like old fashioned integrity & respect.
My short life, in our Universe terms, of 79 years, lots of things have come and gone from employment opportunities to the clothes pin. I will have to stop and think about it and write something up on this in my weekly newspaper column. Enjoyed this post -- it woke my brain up to things like an ash pan, ash shovel, coal bucket, and on and on.
Although I succumbed to exhaustion before reaching the end, it's quite a list.
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