Wednesday, August 18, 2010

What Will Future Generations of Readers Relate To?

© Marta Stephens 2010 all rights reserved

I’ve worked at a state university for 31 years and, as you might imagine, I’ve watched thousands of students parade through campus, including our own, in that time. Since this is moving-in week here at BSU, I was reminded to look up the Beloit College Mindset list and check out this year’s freshmen outlook on things. If you’re not familiar with the BCM list, it’s been released each August since 1998, by Beloit College and provides a look at the cultural touchstones that shape the lives of students entering college each fall. The list is the creation of Beloit’s Keefer Professor of the Humanities Tom McBride and former Public Affairs Director Ron Nief and was originally created as a reminder to faculty to be aware of dated references, and quickly became a catalog of the rapidly changing worldview of each new generation. You’ll find more information about this at http://www.beloit.edu/mindset.


Aside from being a poignant reminder that I’m getting older by the minute, I find this annual list to be a good thing to keep in mind as the next book gets churned out for future generations of readers.  What will this group of 17-year olds relate to down the road?

Here goes:

The Beloit College Mindset List for the Class of 2014

Most students entering college for the first time this fall—the Class of 2014—were born in 1992. For these students, Benny Hill, Sam Kinison, Sam Walton, Burt Parks and Tony Perkins have always been dead.

1. Few in the class know how to write in cursive.

2. Email is just too slow, and they seldom if ever use snail mail.

3. “Go West, Young College Grad” has always implied “and don’t stop until you get to Asia…and learn Chinese along the way.”

4. Al Gore has always been animated.

5. Los Angelinos have always been trying to get along.

6. Buffy has always been meeting her obligations to hunt down Lothos and the other blood-suckers at Hemery High.

7. “Caramel macchiato” and “venti half-caf vanilla latte” have always been street corner lingo.

8. With increasing numbers of ramps, Braille signs, and handicapped parking spaces, the world has always been trying harder to accommodate people with disabilities.

9. Had it remained operational, the villainous computer HAL could be their college classmate this fall, but they have a better chance of running into Miley Cyrus’s folks on Parents’ Weekend.

10. A quarter of the class has at least one immigrant parent, and the immigration debate is not a big priority…unless it involves “real” aliens from another planet.

11. John McEnroe has never played professional tennis.

12. Clint Eastwood is better known as a sensitive director than as Dirty Harry.

13. Parents and teachers feared that Beavis and Butt-head might be the voice of a lost generation.

14. Doctor Kevorkian has never been licensed to practice medicine.

15. Colorful lapel ribbons have always been worn to indicate support for a cause.

16. Korean cars have always been a staple on American highways.

17. Trading Chocolate the Moose for Patti the Platypus helped build their Beanie Baby collection.

18. Fergie is a pop singer, not a princess.

19. They never twisted the coiled handset wire aimlessly around their wrists while chatting on the phone.

20. DNA fingerprinting and maps of the human genome have always existed.

21. Woody Allen, whose heart has wanted what it wanted, has always been with Soon-Yi Previn.

22. Cross-burning has always been deemed protected speech.

23. Leasing has always allowed the folks to upgrade their tastes in cars.

24. “Cop Killer” by rapper Ice-T has never been available on a recording.

25. Leno and Letterman have always been trading insults on opposing networks.

26. Unless they found one in their grandparents’ closet, they have never seen a carousel of Kodachrome slides.

27. Computers have never lacked a CD-ROM disk drive.

28. They’ve never recognized that pointing to their wrists was a request for the time of day.

29. Reggie Jackson has always been enshrined in Cooperstown.

30. “Viewer Discretion” has always been an available warning on TV shows.

31. The first computer they probably touched was an Apple II; it is now in a museum.

32. Czechoslovakia has never existed.

33. Second-hand smoke has always been an official carcinogen.

34. “Assisted Living” has always been replacing nursing homes, while Hospice has always been an alternative to hospitals.

35. Once they got through security, going to the airport has always resembled going to the mall.

36. Adhesive strips have always been available in varying skin tones.

37. Whatever their parents may have thought about the year they were born, Queen Elizabeth declared it an “Annus Horribilis.”

38. Bud Selig has always been the Commissioner of Major League Baseball.

39. Pizza jockeys from Domino’s have never killed themselves to get your pizza there in under 30 minutes.

40. There have always been HIV positive athletes in the Olympics.

41. American companies have always done business in Vietnam.

42. Potato has always ended in an “e” in New Jersey per vice presidential edict.

43. Russians and Americans have always been living together in space.

44. The dominance of television news by the three networks passed while they were still in their cribs.

45. They have always had a chance to do community service with local and federal programs to earn money for college.

46. Nirvana is on the classic oldies station.

47. Children have always been trying to divorce their parents.

48. Someone has always gotten married in space.

49. While they were babbling in strollers, there was already a female Poet Laureate of the United States.

50. Toothpaste tubes have always stood up on their caps.

51. Food has always been irradiated.

52. There have always been women priests in the Anglican Church.

53. J.R. Ewing has always been dead and gone. Hasn’t he?

54. The historic bridge at Mostar in Bosnia has always been a copy.

55. Rock bands have always played at presidential inaugural parties.

56. They may have assumed that parents’ complaints about Black Monday had to do with punk rockers from L.A., not Wall Street.

57. A purple dinosaur has always supplanted Barney Google and Barney Fife.

58. Beethoven has always been a dog.

59. By the time their folks might have noticed Coca Cola’s new Tab Clear, it was gone.

60. Walmart has never sold handguns over the counter in the lower 48.

61. Presidential appointees have always been required to be more precise about paying their nannies’ withholding tax, or else.

62. Having hundreds of cable channels but nothing to watch has always been routine.

63. Their parents’ favorite TV sitcoms have always been showing up as movies.

64. The U.S, Canada, and Mexico have always agreed to trade freely.

65. They first met Michelangelo when he was just a computer virus.

66. Galileo is forgiven and welcome back into the Roman Catholic Church.

67. Ruth Bader Ginsburg has always sat on the Supreme Court.

68. They have never worried about a Russian missile strike on the U.S.

69. The Post Office has always been going broke.

70. The artist formerly known as Snoop Doggy Dogg has always been rapping.

71. The nation has never approved of the job Congress is doing.

72. One way or another, “It’s the economy, stupid” and always has been.

73. Silicone-gel breast implants have always been regulated.

74. They’ve always been able to blast off with the Sci-Fi Channel.

75. Honda has always been a major competitor on Memorial Day at Indianapolis.

… and a few others I believe were from last year’s class:

1. They are too young to remember the space shuttle blowing up.

2. Their lifetime has always included AIDS.

3. The CD was introduced two years before they were born.

4. They have always had an answering machine.

5. They have always had cable.

6. Popcorn has always been microwaved.

7. They never took a swim and thought about Jaws.

8. They don't know who Mork was or where he was from.

9. They never heard, "Where's the Beef?", "I'd walk a mile for a Camel ," or "deplane, Boss, de plane."

10. They don't have a clue how to use a typewriter.

5 comments:

Cassandra Frear said...

Boy, I feel so incredibly dated. I can remember 1992 like it was yesterday.

What I've realized is that kids have no sense of the horror and threat of the Communist Soviet Block.

Marta Stephens said...

I know. I read one from a year or two ago that listed all the movie stars that I grew up loving, but who that year's freshmen had always known as "passed away." Ugh.

Terry W. Ervin II said...

I try to remember these things when the target audience of my writing is younger. Actually calling someone on a cell?

I also remind my students that the really cool movies they're seeing today will one day be part of filler late night programming, if TV is still around.

s.w. vaughn said...

Nirvana is on the classic rock station?!?! *weeps*

Aaron Paul Lazar said...

Wow. Never were without cable. Holy cow. I remember when we had one b&w tv in the living room. We watched Lassie, Ed Sullivan, Father Knows Best, Andy Griffith... nice wholesome shows. And now look what's "normal" on tv. Sad.