Chronicle of Higher Education

>From the issue dated April 14, 2006

AN ACADEMIC IN AMERICA

The 7 Deadly Sins of Students

Undergraduates increasingly seem to choose
self-indulgence and 
self-esteem over self-denial and self-questioning

By THOMAS H. BENTON

I've been teaching for about 10 years now, and, of
course, I was a 
student for 20 years before that. So I have some
experience observing my 
students' sins, and perhaps even more experience
committing them.

The sins that I see in the everyday life of the
typical college student 
are not great ones. Most of the time, they don't seem
like "sins" at 
all, even if one accepts the religious significance of
the term. But they 
spring from thoughts and behaviors that, over time,
become habits.

Enabled by institutions, students repeatedly take the
path of least 
resistance, imagining they are making creative
compromises with duty that 
express their unique talents. So they choose
self-indulgence instead of 
self-denial, and self-esteem instead of
self-questioning. They do not 
understand that those choices will eventually cause
more unhappiness 
than the more difficult paths they chose not to walk.

The traditional model of the "Seven Deadly Sins"
provides a helpful 
means of categorizing — and perhaps simplifying — the
complicated and 
cumulative experience I am trying to describe:

Sloth: Students often postpone required readings and
assigned 
preparations, making it hard for them to understand
their classes the next day. 
Gradually, lectures and discussions that were once
interesting start to 
seem boring and irrelevant, and the temptation to skip
classes becomes 
greater and greater, especially when the classes are
in the morning. 
Sometimes students arrive late with — in my opinion —
insufficient shame, 
closing the door behind them with a bang. Slothful
students regard 
themselves as full of potential, and so they make a
bargain: "I will be 
lazy now, but I will work hard later." Like St.
Augustine, students say to 
themselves, "Let me be chaste, but not yet." More on
lust later.

Greed: Students often pursue degrees not for the sake
of learning 
itself but with the aim of getting a better-paying
job, so they can buy a 
bigger house and fancier cars than those owned by
their parents and their 
neighbors. That often leads to greed for grades that
they have not 
earned. Some students cheat on exams or plagiarize
their papers; others, 
sometimes the most diligent, harass professors into
giving them grades 
unjustified by their performance. The goal of such
cheaters and 
grade-grubbers is not the reality of achievement but
the appearance of it. They 
will then apply to graduate programs or entry-level
jobs that they do 
not really desire and for which they are not really
qualified. They want 
to be lawyers, but they are bored by law courses. They
want to be 
doctors, but they do not care about healing people.
They want to go into 
business, not to provide useful products and services,
but to get rich by 
any means necessary. And so they come to believe that
no one has 
integrity and that there is no basis — other than the
marketplace — by which 
value can be judged.

Anger: Seemingly more often than in the past,
professors encounter 
students who are angered by challenging assignments,
which they label — 
with bureaucratic self-assurance — "unfair" or even
"discriminatory." When 
students do not succeed, they sometimes conclude that
their professors 
are "out to get them" because of some vague prejudice.
Students feel 
entitled to deference by professors who "work for them
and should act 
like it." They do not come to office hours for
clarification about an A-; 
instead, they argue that they are paying a lot of
money and, therefore, 
deserve a high grade, and, if you don't give it to
them, they will 
"complain to management," as if they were sending back
food in a 
restaurant. One hears rumors of cars and homes
vandalized by angry students. But 
perhaps the easiest places to find uncensored student
rage are the 
anonymous, libelous evaluations of faculty members
found online at Web 
sites such as RateMyProfessors.com. Often those
evaluations say less about 
the quality of a teacher than they do about the
wounded pride of 
coddled students. More on that topic soon.

Lust: I have seen students come to classes barefoot,
with bare midriffs 
and shoulders, in boxer shorts, bathing suits, and
other kinds of 
clothes that, even by fairly casual standards, are
more appropriate for 
streetwalking than higher learning. When did
liberation from uniforms 
transform itselfinto the social demand that one
prepare to be ogled in the 
classroom? It is hardly a surprise that on
RateMyProfessors.com, 
students are asked to rate their professors' "hotness"
— in other words, the 
teachers' worthiness to be sexually fantasized about
by bored students. 
Even in high-school classes, as an observer of novice
teachers, I have 
overheard lewd remarks about female teachers from
denizens of the back 
row who fear no rebuke because none is forthcoming
from the current 
culture.

Gluttony: It hardly needs saying that most colleges
struggle to control 
alcohol consumption by students and the embarrassing
incidents and 
tragedies that result from it. But there are other
manifestations of 
gluttony these days. For example, when did it become
acceptable for students 
to eat and drink in class as if they were sitting in a
cafeteria? 
Nowadays, I occasionally encounter a student who
thinks it's OK to consume a 
large, messy, and odorous meal in class. I once saw a
student eat an 
entire rotisserie chicken, a tub of mashed potatoes
with gravy, several 
biscuits, and an enormous soft drink during the first
10 minutes of a 
lecture. I felt like a jester in the court of Henry
VIII. It seems hard 
these days to find a student in class whose mouth is
not stuffed with 
food. Such students will often say that they have no
other time to eat, 
but previous generations — who were no less busy —
managed to consume 
small snacks between classes. That is why colleges
have vending machines.

Envy: I think competition is a good thing in
education; up to a point, 
it encourages students to work harder and excel. But
the envious 
student, perhaps daunted by some temporary setback,
comes to believe that 
education is "a rigged game." Envy is the voice of
resignation that 
cringes at the success of one's peers: "Listen to her,
trying to impress the 
teacher, like she's so brilliant. I hate her." Envy is
the feeling that 
no one "earns" anything because there are no objective
criteria of 
accomplishment; and, as a result, success and failure
seem to be based on 
political and personal preferences. But envy is not
limited to 
differences in effort and ability. Even more pervasive
is a sense of unjustified 
economic inequality, but, it seems to me, the
fashionable students in 
their convertibles who jeer the commuters at the bus
stop commit a 
greater sin than those who envy their money.

Pride: I once asked a group of 20 students how many
thought they were 
"better than their parents"? All of them raised their
hands. I didn't 
ask, but I assume they all believed they were better
than their teachers 
too. They would rise higher, be more successful, and
transcend the 
limitations of their elders. We read this belief in
our students' 
expressions: "What you know is not worth learning.
They're just your opinions 
anyway. I am young. I have infinite potential. You are
old. And you're 
just a college professor. But I will be rich and
famous someday." They 
have rarely been given a realistic assessment of their
abilities and 
prospects. Out of this pride — nurtured by the
purveyors of unearned 
self-esteem, personal grievance, dumbed-down courses,
and inflated grades 
(often in the guise of liberality) — the opportunity
to earn an education 
is squandered by prideful students who can make a
potential heaven seem 
like hell.

The concept of the "Seven Deadly Sins" comes out of
the Christian 
tradition, but it also has value as an ethical guide
or at least as a means 
of avoiding unhappiness. Increasingly, as a professor
who teaches 
undergraduates, I believe that one of the paramount
purposes of a 
liberal-arts education is to help young people acquire
the wisdom to escape those 
sins, especially the last one from which the others
often spring.

A liberal-arts education, as I see it, is not about
acquiring wealth 
and opportunities to further indulge one's desires.
Nor is it about 
cultivating in students an insular, idolatrous view of
their nation, ethnic 
group, gender, or religion. It is also not about
celebrating the 
so-called "great tradition" of authors, philosophers,
and artists.

It is about the recognition, ultimately, of how little
one really 
knows, or can know. A liberal-arts education, most of
all, fights unmerited 
pride by asking students to recognize the smallness of
their ambitions 
in the context of human history, and more. Whether it
is grounded in 
faith or not, a liberal-arts education should help
students to combat the 
Seven Deadly Sins with the "Seven Contrary Virtues" of
diligence, 
generosity, patience, chastity, moderation,
contentment, and, most important 
of all, humility.

Of course, moral perfection seldom arrives at
graduation, even in the 
best of cases. I teach the courses, and yet I must
present myself, at 
last, as the "Chief of Sinners." The behaviors I
observe in students 
often reflect the deeper drives — the resentments and
weaknesses — of their 
teachers. Perhaps the impulse to identify the sins of
others reflects a 
corruption more serious than any I have described
here. And that is 
why, next month, I will sermonize on the "Seven Deadly
Sins of 
Professors."

Thomas H. Benton is the pseudonym of a soon-to-be
associate professor 
of English at a Midwestern liberal-artscollege. He
welcomes reader mail 
directed to his attention at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

http://chronicle.com
Section: Chronicle Careers
Volume 52, Issue 32, Page C1 



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