“Surfing’s Up and Grades Are Down”1B1
(report from the Washington Post National Weekly Edition)
by Rene Sanchez
(RCS p. 240)
- A new campus support group called “Caught in the Web” is being formed at the
University of Maryland to counsel students spending too much time on computers.
- At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, students unable to break their addiction to
playing computer games on campus terminals have new help. At their request, the university will deny them access whenever they try to sign on.
- Faculty studying the freshman dropout rate at Alfred University in New York have just
found out that nearly half of the students who quit last semester had been logging marathon, late-night time on the Internet.
- Nationwide, as colleges charge into the digital age with high-tech libraries, wired
dormitories, and computerized coursework, faculty and campus counselors are discovering a troubling side effect: A growing number of students are letting computers overwhelm their lives.
- It is hardly a crisis on any campus – yet. Some college officials say it is merely a fad, and
not nearly as harmful as other bad habits students often fall prey to on campuses – such as binge drinking of alcohol. But concern over the issue is spreading.
- Some universities now are imposing limits on the time students spend each day, or each
week, on campus computers. Other colleges are debating whether to monitor the time students spend on computer games and chat rooms, then program a warning to appear on their screens when it gets excessive.
- Some college counselors are creating workshops on the subject and planning to include
them in freshman orientation programs. Others already are urging students not to plunge into on-line relationships with strangers.
- “More and more students are losing themselves in this,” says Judith Klavans, the director
of Columbia University’s Center for Research on Information Access. “It’s very accessible on campuses, and students have time on their hands. We’re seeing some of them really drift off into this world at the expense of practically everything else.”
- Campus officials say that communicating on the Internet or roaming the huge universe of
information on the World Wide Web holds an especially powerful lure for many college students because it takes them into a vast new realm of learning and research, usually at no cost. But for students having trouble establishing social ties at huge universities, or who are on their own, unsupervised, and facing adult pressures for the first time, it also poses an array of new risks.
- At the University of California’s Berkeley campus, counselors say they are dealing with a
small but increasing number of cases linked to excessive computer use. Some students, they say, are putting too much emphasis on electronic relationships, are neglecting course work, and, in a few instances, are even being swindled out of money by e-mail strangers they have come to trust.
- “There can be a real sense of isolation on a large campus, and for young students or new
students, this seems like a safe, easy way to form relationships,” says Jeff Prince, the associate director of counseling at UC Berkeley. “But some go overboard. It becomes their only way to connect to the world. One of the things we’re really working on now is helping students balance how many social needs they try to have fulfilled by computers.”
- Linda Tipton, a counselor at the University of Maryland, which limits students to 40
hours a week on campus terminals, says she began noticing some problems arise last year in individual and group therapy sessions.
- Some of them, she said, spoke of spending more than six hours a day on-line and
considered a computerized forum the only setting in which they could express themselves or relate well to others. A few students told her of dropping or flunking courses partly because they were so preoccupied with the Internet. Others confessed to trying to get multiple computer accounts with the university to circumvent its 40-hour-a-week rule.
- “Obviously this is a wonderful tool, and for many students it’s perfectly fine,” says
Tipton, who is trying to form a campus support group and develop a workshop on Internet addiction. “But for others it’s becoming a tremendous escape from the pressures of college life. Students can become whomever they want, and many other things in their lives, like classes, start to suffer.”
- Nathaniel Cordova, a graduate student at Maryland, says his problems are not that severe
– but he is nevertheless heeding Tipton’s advice and trying to cut back on the time he spends on computers. And he says he routinely talks to other students on campus also trying to break habits like his.
- “I don’t think I’m an addict,” Cordova says, “But I admit, sometimes I’ll be in my office
at eight o’clock at night, and then the next thing I know it’s three A.M., and I realize I forgot to eat. It’s so easy to get drawn in, and not just in research, but talking to people. You tell yourself, ‘Okay, just one more link-up.’ But you keep going.”
- Other college officials, however, say the concern seems exaggerated.
- Some say they see few signs of trouble, and others say student interest in computer games
or the Web is often intense at first, then fades. One of the venerable rights of college, they contend, is for students to find distractions from their academic burdens. They say this one is much safer than many others causing campus problems.
- “There will always be something like this on college campuses,” says Richard Wiggins,
who manages information systems and teaches computer courses at Michigan State University. “In my day, in the 1970s, it was pinball. We played that all the time to get rid of stress. Usually things like this are not that harmful.”
- “For some people, it’s just a great new way to waste time,” says Jeff Bouher, a senior at
George Washington University who spends several hours a day on the Internet. “And college students have always been quite dedicated to wasting time.”
- At M.I.T., Patrick McCormick, an undergraduate who helps administer computer game
systems for the university, says he sees both sides of the trend. A few students in his residence hall dropped classes or saw their grades sink, after they lapsed into intensive computer use. “But others stay up all night with this stuff and still get 4.0s,’ he says. “It’s very easy to get sucked in, but it isn’t always bad.”
- Still, McCormick notes one problem he spots consistently: Classmates who trust virtually
everyone they meet, or everything they read on-line. “Some people think if it’s on a computer screen, it must be true, and they get burned,” he says. “You hear them talking about flying their dream lover up, and of course, they never show.”
- This spring, Alfred University in upstate New York decided to examine what the students
who dropped out last semester had in common. What prompted the inquiry was that twice as many students as usual – 75, mostly freshmen – did not return for classes there this spring.
- Every student at Alfred received a campus computer account, which is free. So Connie
Beckman, the director of Alfred’s computer center, decided to check the account records of all the students who had dropped out. She found that half of them had been logging as much as six hours a day on computer games or the Web, usually late at night. “It was the only thing that correlated among so many of them,” Beckman says.
- University officials say they doubt that this is the only, or even the primary, reason many
of these students quit. But the discovery has led to several new policies.
- Next fall, for the first time, freshmen at Alfred will be told about the dangers of heavy
computer use as soon as they arrive on campus. Residence halls, all of which have computer rooms, will each have a full-time professional counselor to keep a close-eye on late-night computer addicts. Other campuses are studying similar moves.
- “We’ve dealt with alcohol and drugs; we’ve dealt with TV and video games. Now this
looks like the latest pitfall for college students,” Beckman says. “They’re doing this all night instead of doing their homework, or eating, or sleeping. When they’re up until five A.M. playing around on the Web, they’re not going to make their eight A.M. classes.”
“Why They Excel”1B2
(excerpted from an article written for Parade magazine)
by Fox Butterfield
(RCS p. 246)
1. Kim-Chi Trinh was just 9 in Vietnam when her father used his savings to buy a passage for her on a fishing boat. It was a costly and risky sacrifice for the family, placing Kim-Chi on the small boat, among strangers, in hopes she would eventually reach the United States, where she would get a good education and enjoy a better life. Before the boat reached safety in Malaysia, the supply of food and water ran out.
2. Still alone, Kim-Chi made it to the United States, coping with a succession of three foster families. But when she graduated from San Diego's Patrick Henry High School in 1988, she had a straight-A average and scholarship offers from Stanford and Cornell Universities.
3. "I have to do well- it's not even a question," said the diminutive 19-year-old, now a sophomore at Cornell. "I owe it to my parents in Vietnam."
4. Kim-Chi is part of a tidal wave of bright, highly motivated Asian Americans who are suddenly surging into our best colleges. Although Asian Americans make up only 2.4 percent of the nation’s population, they constitute 17.1 percent of the undergraduates at Harvard, 18 percent at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and 27.3 percent at the University of California at Berkeley.
5. Why are the Asian-Americans doing so well? Are they grinds°, as some stereotypes suggest? Do they have higher IQs? Or are they actually teaching the rest of us a lesson about values we have long treasured but may have misplaced--such as hard work, the family, and education?
6. Not all Asians are doing equally well. Poorly educated Cambodian and Hmong refugee youngsters need special help. And Asian-Americansresent being labeled a "model minority," feeling that it is just another form of prejudice by white Americans, an ironic reversal of the discriminatory laws that excluded most Asian immigration to America until 1965.
7.Fortunately, the young Asians' achievements have led to a series of intriguing studies. Perhaps the most disturbing [results] have come in a series of studies by a University of Michigan psychologist, Harold W. Stevenson, who has compared more than 7,000 students in kindergarten, first grade, third grade, and fifth grade in Chicago and Minneapolis with their counterparts in Beijing; Sendai, Japan; and Taipei, Taiwan. On a battery of math tests, the Americans did worst at all grade levels.
8. Stevenson found no differences in IQ. But if the differences in performance are showing up in kindergarten, it suggests something is happening in the family, even before the children get to school.
9. It is here that the various studies converge: Asian parents are able to install more motivation in their children. "My bottom line is, Asian kids work hard," said Professor Dornbusch, [Professor of Sociology at Stanford].
10. The real question, then, is how do Asian parents imbue° their offspring with this kind of motivation? Stevenson's study suggested a critical answer. When the Asian parents were asked why they think their children do well, they most often said "hard work." By contrast, American parents said "talent."
11. " From what I can see," said Stevenson, "we've lost our belief in the Horatio Alger myth that anyone can get ahead in life through pluck° and hard work. Instead, Americans now believe that some kids have it and some don't, so we begin dividing up classes into fast learners and slow learners, where the Chinese and Japanese believe all children can learn from the same curriculum."
12. The Asians’ belief in hard work also springs from their common heritage of Confucianism, the philosophy of the 5th-century B.C Chinese sage who taught that man can be perfected though practice. “Confucius is not just some character of the past-he is an everyday reality to these people,” said William Liu, a sociologist who directs the Pacific Asian-American Mental Health Research Center at the University of Illinois in Chicago.
13. Confucianism provides another important ingredient in the Asians’ success, “In the Confucian ethic,” Liu continued, “there is a centripetal° family, an orientation that makes people work for honor of the family, not just for themselves.” Liu came to the United States from China in 1948. “You can never repay your parents, and there is a strong sense of guilt,” he said. “It is a strong force, like the Protestant ethic° in the west.”
14. Liu has found this in his own family. When his son and two daughters were young, he told them to become doctors or lawyers-jobs with the best guaranteed income, he felt. Sure enough, his daughters have gone onto law, and his son is a medical student at UCLA, though he really wanted to be an investment banker. Liu asked his son why he picked medicine. The reply: “Ever since I was a little kid, I always heard you tell your friends their kids were a success if they got into med school. So I felt guilty. I didn’t have a choice.”
15. Underlying this bond between Asian parents and their children is yet another factor I noticed during 15 years of living in China, Japan, Taiwan, and Vietnam. It is simply that Asian parents establish a closer physical tie to their infants than do most parents in the United States. When I let my baby son and daughter crawl on the floor, for example, my Chinese friends were horrified and rushed to pick them up. We think this constant attention is overindulgence and old-fashioned, but for Asians, who still live through the lives of their children, it is highly effective.
16. Can we learn anything from the Asians? “I’m not naive enough to think everything in Asia can be transplanted,” said Harold Stevenson, the University of Michigan psychologist. But he offered three recommendations.
17. “To start with,” he said, “we need to set higher standards for our kids. We wouldn’t expect them to become professional athletes without practicing hard.”
18. Second, American parents need to become more committed to their children’s education, he declared. “Being understanding when a child doesn’t do well isn’t enough.” Stevenson found that Asian parents spend many more hours really helping their children with homework or writing to their teachers.
19. And, third, schools could be reorganized to become more effective without added cost, said Stevenson. Nearly 90 percent of Chinese youngsters said they actually enjoy school, and 60 percent can’t wait for school vacations to end. These are vastly higher figures for such attitudes than are found in the United States. One reason may be that students in China and Japan typically have a recess after each class, helping them to relax and to increase their attention spans.
20. “I don’t think Asians are any smarter,” said Don Lee, a Korean-American at Berkeley. “There are brilliant Americans in my chemistry class. But the Asian students work harder. I see a lot of wasted potential among the Americans.”
Roaches1B3
Carolyn Udell
(RCS p. 268-270)
1. Roaches crawling all over the walls, all over the floor, pouring into the bedroom door, where can I run? I jump on top of the bed. They follow me up. Oh, my God, they're starting to fly all around me.... "Oh, it was just a dream." Vile and repugnant are two of the best words used to describe the most despicable creature on earth, the roach. The Bible portrays the devil as a serpent in the Garden of Eden. However, I am sure that God meant the roach to play the part. My feelings for these creatures are of spasmodic disgust, but especially fear.
2. I am not sure when this fear started, somewhere back in my early childhood. As far back as I can remember, I have never had a desire to touch a roach. The first thing I think of when a person says the word roach is its abhorrent looks. Their prehistoric appearance makes me cringe. The dark brown color reminds me of something dirty and gives me a feeling of disgust, which is exactly what a roach is - disgusting, with long, skinny, black feelers protruding from its head, always moving and twitching in an erratic way, no matter if it is squatting still or scurrying away beneath your feet, this is certainly an immediate cause of my fear.
3. Maybe the fear stems from the fact that they will eat anything, including the dead body of another animal, humans not excluded. This fact makes them seem disease-ridden. Every disease ever known to man or imagined by man can be caught from a roach, or so it seems.