Padawanbater2
Well-Known Member
One Physiology teachers take on his students stress levels...
http://np.reddit.com/r/news/comment...ave_hit_a_record_high_of_12/cl37t4z?context=3
I'm 49 and I consider myself incredibly lucky to have grown up in the era when college was easily affordable and jobs were abundant. I remember stressing so much in 1984 when I had to take out a loan for a grand total of $1600 (the equivalent of $3600 today). That's all I needed to get through 4 yrs at a top rated liberal arts college! (the rest I could pay from summer jobs plus help from my awesome parents). The same college today costs 48,000 per YEAR. I don't understand how anybody can pay these rates! I look at my students and my research assistant now and what they're facing, and I just want to cry for them.
Not that I didn't work like hell too; I did. I was never rolling in cash, never could afford to buy a house till last year, so I guess I'm not the stereotypical boomer that way. Throughout my life I have worked very, very hard. But back then you could work hard and it would pay off for you; now you work just as hard and it doesn't. Also I had the freedom to choose a lower-paying career deliberately, a career that I found fascinating. I could only do that because I had no debt.
I don't understand boomers who don't realize how lucky they were and how much it has changed. I had to school my dad on this the other day (81 yrs old; he just doesn't understand why his grandkids aren't headed for college and aren't easily getting jobs). Maybe because I'm still teaching I have greater exposure to the reality of it. When you have a student crying in your office who is working 3 jobs and taking 21 credits and still is going into crushing debt anyway and is going out of her mind from the stress, it really hits home. God I was lucky.
One of the things that really blew my mind was when I was teaching a class on human physiology and asked all the students to keep 4 logs during the whole semester: a sleep log, a diet log, and exercise log and a stress log. (the first 3 just covered 1 week each; the 4th, the stress log, covered 10 weeks). Blew. My. Mind. Students who on the surface looked totally fine were turning in these reports with these ghastly lists of all the physical symptoms of stress they had, all the jobs they were working, how much homework they had, the appalling number of exams and papers they're prepping for constantly, how little sleep they were getting, crappy diets, no time for exercise, etc., serious financial worries, serious career worries, moving a lot, changing jobs, lots of instability - every damn thing that increases stress in humans, they had it. When the entire class had been about what a debilitating effect all those things have on your life-long health and well-being. The thing that made it so powerful is that that they weren't trying to complain; they were just completing the required assignment, ticking off things on the stress-scale that I'd given them. (There's standard "stress scales" you can use to tally up #stressful events per week, including details like, did you get to set this schedule yourself, are you the one in control on not, was this predictable or not) Some of these students were right up there with published studies on prisoners and cancer patients in terms of overall life stress.
After I got those back I went on a tiny campaign to do what I could, which was just, lessen the burden from my own class. For example I devised a gentler shorter type of final exam (btw it included the optional essay question "Are final exams bad for your health?" - every single student in the class chose that question and wrote pages and pages about it!) The year after that I eliminated finals entirely from my classes and simplified some of the other assignments. Took a little flak from admin (we're actually required to give a final so I devised this weird little mock "final quiz" thing instead). But I just didn't see the goddam point in driving my students into the ground.
This is not what life is for. Life is not supposed to be like this.
http://np.reddit.com/r/news/comment...ave_hit_a_record_high_of_12/cl37t4z?context=3