Today's paper | eEdition | Subscribe
The Truth-O-Meter
Latest print edition
St. Petersburg Times
Special report
  • The surrogate
    It begins with a woman who yearns for a baby and another who is willing and able to give her one. You can imagine the motives of the prospective parents. But what about the woman willing to carry a baby, give birth and then walk away?
  • More special reports
Video report
  • Friday Night Rewind
    It doesn't matter which team you cheer for. We've got video previews of every high school football program in Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco and Hernando County.
  • More video reports
Multimedia report
Fill out this form to email this article to a friend
Your name Your email
Recipient email
You may enter up to 20 multiple email addresses, separated by commas.
Your message
Validation Code
Hear
validation
code
  Enter validation code

Plugged in. Tuned out.

By Ted Gup, Special to the Times
In print: Sunday, April 13, 2008


Social Bookmarking
Digg Facebook Stumbleupon
Reddit Del.icio.us Newsvine
ADVERTISEMENT
Robert Gates
Robert Gates

I teach a college seminar called "Secrecy: Forbidden Knowledge." I recently asked my class of 16 freshmen and sophomores, many of whom had graduated in the top 10 percent of their high school classes and had dazzling SAT scores, how many had heard the word "rendition."

Not one hand went up.

This is after four years of the word appearing on the front pages of the nation's newspapers, on network and cable news, and online. This is after years of highly publicized lawsuits, congressional inquiries, and international controversy and condemnation. This is after the release of a Hollywood film of that title, starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Meryl Streep and Reese Witherspoon.

I was dumbstruck. Finally one hand went up, and the student sheepishly asked if rendition had anything to do with a version of a movie or a play.

I nodded charitably, then attempted to define the word in its more public context. I described specific accounts of U.S. abductions of foreign citizens, of the likely treatment accorded such prisoners when placed in the hands of countries like Syria and Egypt, of the months and years of detention. I spoke of the lack of formal charges, of some prisoners' eventual release and how their subsequent lawsuits against the U.S. government were stymied in the name of national security and secrecy.

The students were visibly disturbed. They expressed astonishment, then revulsion. They asked how such practices could go on.

I told them to look around the room at one another's faces; they were seated next to the answer. I suggested that they were, in part, the reason that rendition, waterboarding, Guantanamo detention, warrantless searches and intercepts, and a host of other such practices have not been more roundly discredited. I admit it was harsh.

That instance was no aberration. In recent years I have administered a dumbed-down quiz on current events and history early in each semester to get a sense of what my students know and don't know. Initially I worried that its simplicity would insult them, but my fears were unfounded. The results have been, well, horrifying.

Nearly half of a recent class could not name a single country that bordered Israel. In an introductory journalism class, 11 of 18 students could not name what country Kabul was in, although we have been at war there for half a decade. Last fall only one in 21 students could name the U.S. secretary of defense. Given a list of four countries — China, Cuba, India and Japan — not one of those same 21 students could identify India and Japan as democracies.

Their grasp of history was little better. The question of when the Civil War was fought invited an array of responses — half a dozen were off by a decade or more. Some students thought that Islam was the principal religion of South America, that Roe vs. Wade was about slavery, that 50 justices sit on the U.S. Supreme Court, that the atom bomb was dropped on Hiroshima in 1975. You get the picture, and it isn't pretty.

As a journalist, professor and citizen, I find it profoundly discouraging to encounter such ignorance of critical issues. But it would be both unfair and inaccurate to hold those young people accountable for the moral and legal morass we now find ourselves in as a nation. They are earnest, readily educable and, when informed, impassioned.

I make it clear to my students that it is not only their right but their duty to arrive at their own conclusions. They are free to defend rendition, waterboarding, or any other aspect of America's post-9/11 armamentarium. But I challenge their right to tune out the world, and I question any system or society that can produce such students and call them educated. I am concerned for the nation when a cohort of students so talented and bright is oblivious to all such matters. If they are failing us, it is because we have failed them.

Still, it is hard to reconcile the students' lack of knowledge with the notion that they are a part of the celebrated information age, creatures of the Internet who arguably have at their disposal more information than all the preceding generations combined. Despite their BlackBerrys, cell phones and WiFi, they are, in their own way, as isolated as the remote tribes of New Guinea. They disprove the notion that technology fosters engagement, that connectivity and community are synonymous.

I despair to think that this is the generation brought up under the banner of "No Child Left Behind." What I see is the specter of an entire generation left behind and left out.

It is not easy to explain how we got into this sad state, or to separate symptoms from causes. Newspaper readership is in steep decline. My students simply do not read newspapers, online or otherwise, and many grew up in households that did not subscribe to a paper. Those who tune in to television "news" are subjected to a barrage of opinions from talking heads like CNN's demagogic Lou Dobbs and MSNBC's Chris Matthews and Fox's Bill O'Reilly and his dizzying "No Spin Zone."

In today's journalistic world, opinion trumps fact (the former being cheaper to produce), and rank partisanship and virulent culture wars make the middle ground uninhabitable. Small wonder, then, that my students shrink from it.

Then, too, there is the explosion of citizen journalism. An army of average Joes, equipped with cell phones, laptops and video cameras, has commandeered our news media. The mantra of "We want to hear from you!" is all the rage, from CNN to NPR; but, although invigorating and democratizing, it has failed to supplant the provision of essential facts, generating more heat than light.

Many of my students can report on the latest travails of celebrities or the sexual follies of politicos, and can be forgiven for thinking that such matters dominate the news — they do. Even those students whose home pages open on to news sites have tailored them to parochial interests — sports, entertainment, weather — that are a pale substitute for the scope and sweep of a good front page or the PBS NewsHour With Jim Lehrer (which many students seem ready to pickle in formaldehyde).

Civics is decidedly out of fashion in the high school classroom, a quaint throwback superseded by courses in technology. As teachers scramble to "teach to the test," civics is increasingly relegated to afterschool clubs and geeky graduation prizes. Somehow my students sailed through high school courses in government and social studies without acquiring the habit of keeping abreast of national and international events. What little they know of such matters they have absorbed through popular culture — song lyrics, parody and comedy. The Daily Show With Jon Stewart is as close as many dare get to actual news.

Yes, the post-9/11 world is a scary place, and plenty of diversions can absorb young people's attention and energies, as well as distract them from the anxieties of preparing for a career in an increasingly uncertain economy. But that respite comes at a cost.

As a journalist, I have spent my career promoting transparency and accountability. But my experiences in the classroom humble and chasten me. They remind me that challenges to secrecy and opacity are moot if society does not avail itself of information that is readily accessible. Indeed, our very failure to digest the accessible helps to create an environment in which secrecy can run rampant.

It is time to once again make current events an essential part of the curriculum. Families and schools must instill in students the habit of following what is happening in the world. A global economy will have little use for a country whose people are so self-absorbed that they know nothing of their own nation's present or past, much less the world's. There is a fundamental difference between shouldering the rights and responsibilities that come with citizenship — engagement, participation, debate — and merely inhabiting the land.

As a nation, we spend an inordinate amount of time fretting about illegal immigration and painfully little on what it means to be a citizen, beyond the legal status conferred by accident of birth or public processing. We are too busy building a wall around us to notice that we are shutting ourselves in. Intent on exporting democracy — spending blood and billions in pursuit of it abroad — we have shown a decided lack of interest in exercising or promoting democracy at home.

The noted American scholar Robert Maynard Hutchins said, decades ago: "The object of the educational system, taken as a whole, is not to produce hands for industry or to teach the young how to make a living. It is to produce responsible citizens."

He warned that "the death of a democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference and undernourishment." I fear he was right.

I tell the students in my secrecy class that they are required to attend. After all, we count on one another; without student participation, it just doesn't work. The same might be said of democracy. Attendance is mandatory.

Ted Gup, professor of journalism at Case Western Reserve University, is author of Nation of Secrets: The Threat to Democracy and the American Way of Life as well as The Book of Honor, in which he uncovered some of the CIA's more closely held secrets — the names and stories of 71 undercover operatives who were killed in the line of duty. This piece originally appeared as a commentary in the Chronicle of Higher Education.



[Last modified: Apr 17, 2008 11:45 AM]



Comments on this article
by Candi Apr 17, 2008 11:45 AM
Professor Gup has taken responsibility for his leadership role at the University, it's up to we the people to follow that example. Unfortunately, Fear and Greed has permeated the media and our Education System as well.
by kevinw Apr 16, 2008 6:01 PM
i think he is right not enough people know about current events going on and i think they should put more fact in the news instead of opinion
by Cody Apr 16, 2008 3:35 PM
I agree, I have seen our govt. get out of hand, and our country lose it's way. Apathy is destroying us much faster than terrorism or an other enemies from abroad.
by Jimmy Apr 15, 2008 9:01 PM
Thanks for summing up the state of education in America. I agree that many college-educated youth are seriously lacking an overall knowledge of the current world environment. The US faces challenges that few will have the real wisdom to unders
by Karen Apr 15, 2008 7:01 PM
My 21 yr. old daughter who was recently visiting Tampa forwarded this article to me to underscore her support for my decision to homeschool her 11 year old brother. CT's 6th grade curriculum is inferior to my 4th grade's of 42 years ago!
by Dragoness Apr 15, 2008 6:32 PM
I Agree with Bob below... The European would get the answers right.... As a matter of fact I have been contemplating sending my grandchilden to school there
by Bubba Apr 15, 2008 4:51 PM
Mr Gup, Once the papers stopped reporting the news and started commenting on it we stopped reading it. Less than half the population subscribe to a daily paper and the average age is north of AARP qualifying...
by darb Apr 15, 2008 2:57 PM
All part of the plan. Ignorant sheep are easily mislead.
by Theresa Apr 15, 2008 1:42 PM
The only thing scarier than the article (and reality) are some of the comments I read below. When are we going to stop labeling people and ideas and start thinking? Thank you Professor Gup. I'll be passing this one along.
by kitty Apr 15, 2008 1:38 PM
Calaban, I went to dictionary.com to look up misegenation, as I had never heard the word. The result was "No results found for "misegenation""
by kitty Apr 15, 2008 1:37 PM
Marilyn, since Mr. Gup was there and you weren't, I believe your statement "They knew your agenda and where you were going with this question and decided not to follow you into the "public context" makes you the pompous one.
by Julia Apr 15, 2008 9:07 AM
Check the correlation between FCAT and critical thinking and you'll find the answer.Do we even study history and government in public schools? An uneducated people can easily be led to accept the loss of rights which we are currently experiencin
by Sal Apr 15, 2008 8:34 AM
I don't trust public schools to teach my kids what they need to know. I teach them what they need to know. My 4 year old can show you China, Russia, India, Florida and Mexico on the map. He also knows Mitt Romney, McCain and Barack Obama.
by Jon Apr 15, 2008 8:29 AM
I have seen rants like this for 30 years. Explain how an increase the number of 17 year olds who can name the Secretary of Defense somehow makes the world a better place. Drink DEEPLY from the well knowledge or not at all.
by Calaban Apr 15, 2008 8:27 AM
Gup has a point but like most liberal professors he uses his students' ignorance to promote his own "American is a terrible place" agenda. Why pick "rendering" as his test word? Why not Obama's definition of misegenation
by sue Apr 15, 2008 8:26 AM
Very frightening, indeed.
by Louis Apr 14, 2008 8:46 PM
You will loose your country if youdo not heed George Washington's words conerning the affairs of Europe. Your petty concern for the protection of our borders is yet another indication to your readers that you crave the disolution through ignora
by Rickster Apr 14, 2008 5:10 PM
From what I have seen, most people don't learn about the 'real world' until they are immersed in it. Schools now teach FCAT not knowledge.
by chris Apr 14, 2008 1:33 PM
Why is teaching so hard? Maybe we are just dumber than we used to be. There are a lot of idiots procreating and most of the bright folks aren't. I have to blame teachers and parents for letting this happen.
by Thom P Apr 14, 2008 1:21 PM
Marilyn...Its a CLASS! If they now the agenda, play along. It is this same defiance that proves Ted's theory of indifferance. When will we stop making excuses for the kids and engage them in free thinking - outcome of consequences?
by Luis Apr 14, 2008 1:18 PM
Critical thinking in essential for progress, memorizing, that can be done by monkeys or machines.... unfortunately, the pop culture and the media have taken over reality meking young people sin=mple subjects that can be manipulated...
by Rob Apr 14, 2008 8:40 AM
This article is very similar to the series Bill Maxwell wrote last year. Personally, I believe those who promote No Child Left Behind have made it so we teach the test and discourage any kind of REAL thinking. The govt likes us to be sheep.
by Howard Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
I don?t trust the premise: ?? many of whom had graduated in the top 10 percent of their high school classes and had dazzling SAT scores?? I do believe they are as ignorant as stated. Journalism studies attract a similar student as ed-schools.
by Paul Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
The reason young students have this attitude is because the world teaches them not to give a flip about anybody but them \selves. It is in ads and TV and everyday it is pounded into their heads. Does the term "if it feels good do it" ring
by Peter Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
This article is a flash of the obvious. Why are we surprised by the results that are being harvested by a disfuctional educational system. Civics and US/World History are no longer required subjects and we are surprised that our citizens are ignorant
by Marilyn Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
What a pompous article. "Rendition" can mean several things. They knew your agenda and where you were going with this question and decided not to follow you into the "public context". I give them an "A" for "char
by Bob Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
An even greater shame in this is that if you ask the same questions to the same demographics of European student they will get the majority right! If you read nothing else on a weekly basis read The Economist.
by Bob Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
Interesting article, it would seem that our schools should be teaching children to think and just not pass the standard tests. Then expose them to history from many view points. But don't ignore current events.
by John Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
The simple fact is young Americans don't care. America is in for some really bad days. Personally I feel that we are entering the beginning of the end.
by Dan Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
Welcome to the self esteem generation- everybody is a winner, everybody gets a prize regardless of performance, everything and everybody is of equal value to society and analytical thought is rare. I hope these kids enjoy working for the Chines
by Marion Apr 14, 2008 8:39 AM
Excellent, although frightening, article. The young may not be responsible for our nation's problems, but they need to be cognizant of the causes to help find solutions to them We need to return to a balanced curriculum in our schools.
by Lin Apr 13, 2008 1:33 PM
You're right, a lack of interest in our nation & world is killing Democracy. I see it in news articles written by young reporters lacking the background, knowledge base & curiosity to know what questions they didn't ask.
by jackie o Apr 13, 2008 12:00 PM
I suggest that all concerned see the movie "Idiocracy". If there were a draft, students would be stimulated to be much more informed.
Subscribe to the Times
Click here for daily delivery
of the St. Petersburg Times.

Email Newsletters

ADVERTISEMENT

 
ADVERTISEMENT