The season most university and college professors dread is now upon us: grading season. As I begin to wade through my stacks of essays, I can expect to find some good essays, the occasional stand-out piece, and no shortage of middling to downright bad ones. This year might be particularly challenging.
More than in previous semesters, students have come to my office worried about how they will do, not just in my classes but in university generally. This isn’t true of all my students. I have some very good ones, of course. But the number who are struggling seems to be growing each year. More than one has said high school has underprepared them for first-year university.
To be fair, technology and social media share the blame. Smartphones are distracting, and their constant use means young people rarely read books or even magazines anymore. They have lost, if they ever had, the attention-focusing habits formed by sustained reading of complex material. Comprehending the books assigned in class can be a real challenge for them. I notice this when I ask students to read a passage out loud in class. I’m surprised when they stumble over commonplace words. Because they read so little, their vocabulary is stunted.
Are our high schools repairing this loss? I’m doubtful. Beginning in 2014, British Columbia shifted its entire curriculum to something called “21st Century” learning, which is code for a pedagogy that claims to teach “thinking skills” without having students learn much content. A student is somehow expected to learn to think critically about history without necessarily needing to know in much detail what happened in history.
In 2018, one high school teacher told me the new English curriculum in B.C. would make it possible for students to not have to write an essay or read a novel for up to two years. The provincial diploma exam in English was also replaced with a literacy test worth 0 percent of a student’s final grade. The test doesn’t examine their ability to understand a novel or poetry. When I looked through the literacy test materials, it seemed to me the readings selections were pitched at a Grade 9 level, not Grade 12.
A student in my office recently told me that his Grade 12 English teacher decided to abandon the unit on “Romeo and Juliette” because the students found it too difficult. The major assignment was a “compare and contrast” essay on a topic of their choice not necessarily related to anything they read in class. Thankfully, not all teachers lower their standards. But teachers who don’t may, ironically, be putting their students at a disadvantage.
Faced with this reality, professors can maintain the standards appropriate for university-level academic work, though doing so can come at the cost of students’ mental health—an increasing problem on campuses. High standards can also mean lower enrollments as students shop around for easy A’s. Professors murmur with colleagues whether assigning challenging readings will result in fewer “bums in seats” and attention from the university’s bean-counters. Is it better to give out a few soft A’s to save the program, or stay the course and go down with the ship?