I always find these lists fascinating. Several blogs pointed out that the latest Beloit College Mindset list is out โ highlighting things that have always or never been the case during the lifetime of this yearโs incoming freshmen.
Thisย made me think ofย the scene I was told about from the show Wizards of Waverly Place, where Alex knows that โTom Sawyerโ is a song by Rush but doesnโt know it is a book. And it also made me think about this chart Jen McCreight shared about what young people today know about evolution.
Thereโs a cultural gulf between anyone who is a professor today and incoming students, although it is bigger for some than for others. And however corny some of these lists are, there never fails to be something on them that really surprises me.
But one thing Iโve been emphasizing a lot in recent weeks as Iโve been involved in workshops and summits on teaching and technology is this: todayโs students may be โdigital nativesโ but they donโt know how to use the technology they take for granted to find reliable information. And so even if a professor happens to be a โdigital immigrant,โ we have skills to teach to students. They may use technology to search for information that was once science fiction for us. But sifting through the results to discern what is credible is something that computers cannot do yet, andย few students today know that computers donโt rate search results by reliability. And so thereโs still something for us to teach them!











