Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Laura C's avatar

One of the powerful things I come away from this excellent piece with is that actually these protests are a sign of resilience -- they're college students doing a very classic college student thing despite all of the wailing about how these kids are different and weaker. And they're doing it over something that is a common thread in so many of the biggest and most famous student protest movements of recent decades: the idea that some people's humanity matters less than others.

FWIW as Columbia students take over a building, I'm remembering a time when I was a kid and my father took me with him to deliver pizza to students who had taken over a building at UMass, where he taught. I don't remember what that protest was about, but it stands out that he 1) was able to approach the building with pizza and send it in and 2) felt safe bringing his kid because there was no thought that police in riot gear were about to storm the place.

Expand full comment
Lisa B's avatar

Thank you thank you thank you! I'd love to read a companion piece on how corporate-style university leadership and relentless focus on assessment and outcomes is augmenting these problems. I work in public higher education and the shift to metrics Metrics METRICS--often from those who are quite removed from the classroom--has also played into the despair students are experiencing. They can't just come to an event and connect and enjoy it. They have to perform that they learned something with an assessment and exit survey. They know that they are data, not just to apps but also to their schools.

Expand full comment
150 more comments...

No posts