IU Home Pages - Logo   September 19, 2003  
 
Home Events FYI Headliners Health Liberal arts Outreach Technology Research Contact +
Conversations Viewpoint Fast facts Web mastery @ Work Photographer's corner Friday flashback
FYI
There’s no such thing as a blank slate (or a clean one)
Beloit’s Mindset List defines the traditionally aged Class of 2007 and its generational points of reference
For the sixth year, Beloit College has distributed to its faculty and staff a “Mindset List,” a compendium of information about the cultural, social and technological “mindset” of the traditionally aged Class of 2007.

“These entering students were born into a world that had developed a screening test for AIDS and where managed health care was gaining its first foothold,” said Tom McBride, a Beloit humanities professor. “The Middle East had replaced the U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe as our greatest challenge to security. It is a generation which believes in technological innovations and solutions, and where digital devices, pin numbers and calling cards are an integral part of their lives. Despite the fears associated with AIDS and divorce, we should remember that this is a generation that has grown up in a largely successful, prosperous society.”

But here’s some reference points to amuse and instruct: Ricky Nelson, Richard Burton, Laura Ashley, Orson Welles, Karen Ann Quinlin, Benigno Aquino and the U.S. Football League have “always been dead” to these students. They know how to pop a Popple and trade a Pog. Paul Newman has always made salad dressing, and Bert and Ernie from Sesame Street are old enough to be their fathers. Garrison Keeler has always been live on NPR, and Lawrence Welk has always been dead on PBS. They have never been able to find the “return” key, and “test tube babies” are now having babies of their own.
The Mindset List, McBride said, is a reminder of a world that makes education a tougher yet more fascinating job than ever. In saying hello to a new crop of students, which faculty and staff labor mightily to understand, those who work in education, much like Mr. Chips, are also saying “good-bye to themselves.”

“There is something of wicked and addictive interest in that. I myself am part of that very generation. There is, for me, a bittersweet pleasure in knowing that cherry Cokes didn’t always come in cans, and there are millions of first-year students who will never know how delicious it was when it didn’t.”

In April of 1985, the year most members of the Class of 2007 were born, Joseph Lelyveld complained in the New York Times that “conversations with some young people around the country about the war in Vietnam will find their impressions of it to be remarkably dim.” High school juniors and seniors could not identify Ho Chi Minh, Robert McNamara or the Chicago Seven. “Each generation brings a clean slate into the world,” waxed The New Yorker that year. ”But the world itself is not a clean slate, and what happened before needs to be learned and remembered.”

http://www.beloit.edu/%7Epubaff/releases/2003/03mindsetlist.html