New England Colleges Grappling with New Generation of Emotionally Troubled Students, according to Connection: The Journal of the New England Board of Higher Education
BOSTON— More students are arriving at college today with emotional
issues than five years ago, and there has been dramatic growth in the
severity of the problems, according to the Summer 2004 issue of Connection: The Journal of the New England Board of Higher Education.
“These students are creating a need for significant expansions in college counseling services,” according to a Connection feature by University of New England President Sandra Featherman.
Meanwhile, student pathologies from date rape to binge drinking to
suicide have cast doubt on the emotional development of the
college-educated workforce.
“Emotional intelligences—the way people interpret and respond to
social situations, how they handle criticism or failure, the way they
deal with emotions, their own and those of others—are critical
qualities in the postindustrial workplace,” writes Connection
Executive Editor John O. Harney. “What then to make of New England's
economic future when her college students respond to a Super Bowl or
NCAA victory by torching the nearest car, when a large number of male
students think the female word for ‘Yes’ is ‘No’ and when many students
sink into depression and too many commit suicide?
Connection is the journal of the nonprofit New England Board of Higher Education—and America’s only regional journal on higher education and the economy.
Among articles in the Summer 2004 Connection:
Emotional Rescue • University of New England President Sandra Featherman
explains how the new generation of troubled students present challenges
for colleges. “We have seen a tripling of visits to our counseling
offices in the last three years,” she writes. “Five years ago, we sent
two or three students a year to hospitals because of suicidal gestures
or ideations. By the middle of the second semester this year, we had
hospitalized at least eight young students.”
Campus Buzz • Brandon Busteed, founder and CEO of
Outside the Classroom, a Newton, Mass.-based provider of online alcohol
prevention programs, explains how alcohol impairs America’s judgment of
higher education. The higher education experience encourages
binge drinking, writes Busteed. “At the beginning of college, the
typical freshman class is comprised of 50 percent abstainers and 30
percent binge drinkers,” he writes. “Three months later, by the end of
their first semester, it looks drastically different, with 20 percent
abstaining and 60 percent binge drinking.”
Predators • University of Massachusetts Boston associate professor of psychology David Lisak documents
uncomfortable truths about campus rapists. “Date rapists are widely
assumed to be basically good guys who, because of a combination of too
much alcohol and too little clear communication, end up coercing sex
upon their partners,” writes Lisak. “This image is widely promulgated,
but it is flatly contradicted by research.” Lisak notes that “the first
indication that an institution is courageously moving to end sexual
violence is almost inevitably an increase in the official tally of that
violence … not the kind of publicity that most college administrators
strive to create.”
Education Mayor • Massachusetts higher education consultants James E. Samels and James Martin
describe Boston’s Mayor Thomas M. Menino’s approach to workforce
development. “Unlike his predecessors, Menino is not duking it out with
Boston’s academic institutions over their tax-exempt status. Rather,
the mayor sees these institutions as the primary magnets in a new
metropolitan economy.”
Taxing Times for Boston Colleges? • Connection
interviews Boston City Councilor-at-Large Stephen Murphy about his plan
to change the way Hub institutions pay for city services. “If you
look at Boston police and fire call logs, very often student-related
calls account for 30 to 40 percent of calls late at night … it’s
tremendously taxing. Are you going to have a typical Boston homeowner
in the middle of a riot at 2:15 a.m. at Faneuil Hall? Hopefully not. Do
you have fire calls regularly at your house? Hopefully not. But the
dorms do.”
Excerpts • United Technologies Corp. Senior VP of Science and Technology John F. Cassidy on progressive workforce education policy. Yale College Dean Richard H. Brodhead on developing habits of mind. Castleton State College Professor Jonathan Spiro on making a difference.
Books • Cynthia Goheen of Five Colleges Inc. reviews The Two-Body Problem: Dual-Career-Couple Hiring Practices in Higher Education. Jane Sjogren, vice president for academic affairs at Mindedge Inc., reviews Shakespeare, Einstein, and the Bottom Line: The Marketing of Higher Education.
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