Forget the College Academic Rank Index, let's create the Snowflake Index

College Confidential has provided ample information about college academic rankings. But as a parent, what I find missing is a “Snowflake Index”. Snowflakes, as defined here, are students that strive to minimize hurt feelings for themselves or others, because they might melt under the discomfort.

Since snow is measured in inches, the college with the most snowflakes gets a high score (100.0), going down to 0.0 for the college with the fewest snowflakes. Here is an initial set of colleges (in alphabetical order) competing for having the most snowflakes. Which one of these (or others you submit) should win the coveted score of 100.0?

  • Brown: A proposed debate on sexual student alarmed some students that one of the speakers would offend rape survivors.
  • Haverford: Students protested a planned commencement speech by Robert Birgeneau, a former UC-Berkeley chancellor, because UC police used batons to break up an Occupy protest.
  • Missouri: Racism is a real problem at some schools, and addressing this issue is very important. But Missouri became a contender in the Snowflake Index when protesters in a tent city were unwilling to be photographed or interviewed. Instead, a faculty member wanted "some muscle" to prevent a student photographer from doing his job.
  • Smith: Student protests caused Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, to withdraw from a commencement speech, over concerns that the IMF's policies have not helped poor countries as much as hoped.
  • Tufts: The Sexual Misconduct Policy contains a trigger warning that reading the policy may be disturbing to some students.
  • Wellesely: Hundreds of students complained when a sculpture appeared showing a man sleepwalking in his underwear.
  • Yale: The Bulldogs are in the running for get the top spot for A) The Dean feeling the need to lecture its students on appropriate Halloween costumes, and B) When one of its professors responds by saying that these students are adults that can decide for themselves, over 700 people (mostly students) gang up on her.

PS: Does this post require a “trigger warning”?

The UC system has no equal. There is a list of things you cannot ask because they are considered “microagressive”. “Where are you from?” is considered potentially offensive.

I thought you were exaggerating. Looking into this, it is worse than I could possibly have imagined.

An 8/3/15 Washington Post article states that all of the following can be considered microaggressions at the University of California:

  • “Affirmative action is racist.”
  • To a person of color: “Are you sure you were being followed in the store? I can’t believe it.”
  • “I believe the most qualified person should get the job.”
  • “Of course he’ll get tenure, even though he hasn’t published much — he’s Black!”
  • “Men and women have equal opportunities for achievement.”
  • “Everyone can succeed in this society, if they work hard enough.”

As a FYI on the Wellesley one, there were 2 different complaint streams - the statue was triggering to those who had suffered sexual assault, and that it was simply ugly / not befitting the aesthetic beauty of the campus. Do note that the W administration listened, but maintained that the artistic merit warranted the statue staying til the end of its run (it was intended to be a temporary exhibition all along), and it did indeed remain on campus.

The coda is that a drunk, troubled W student vandalized the statue as well as other W facilities, and had to wind up paying for the repair (as it was the property of the artist, not the school). She had to drop out to go back to work to pay this quite large repair bill. She tried to get other W students to help her with GoFundMe or something similar, but they pretty much said no dice.

Why do you think that students utilizing their free speech to engage in protest is detrimental to an educational institution? Why do you think that giving people with PTSD a heads-up about content that could trigger them is a bad thing?

Are you talking to me specifically? I never said anything about free speech was bad. Note I didn’t offer any opinions one way or the other; I simply clarified in this instance the administration did not accommodate (some) students’ wishes to have it removed. You don’t actually know my opinion on it.

@lalalemma The issue at hand is how certain students think free speech is fine so long as it complies with the rules of Politically Correct Facism.

Snowflakes, cupcskes, not sure which term is correct.

lalaemma,

Let’s look at your two issues separately. Note that I am using the word “you” as shorthand to represent a student protesting or being affected by a trigger warning, not you specifically.

“Why do you think that students utilizing their free speech to engage in protest is detrimental to an educational institution”?

College students have the right to free speech, and the ability to protest. But with these rights come responsibilities:

  1. Free speech means not only do you have the freedom to say what you want, but that others do too, even if you don't want to hear what they say.
  2. You have the right to protest, but also the responsibility to protest peacefully and with minimal disruption. There might be students who disagree with you that are actually be interested in an education that they are paying for. If they lose several days of education as a result due to protests shutting down a campus, who is going to pay for it?

Haverford students not only protested the UC-Berkeley professor, but they came up with a list of 9 demands he would have to satisfy before being allowed to speak there. These included a public apology, compensation for students subjected to police force, and writing a letter to Haveford students about what he learned from the situation.

How extraordinarily immature! Most parents don’t tolerate this behavior when kids were in junior high, let alone high school or college.

When Yale student Jerelyn Luther “disagreed” with Yale professor Nicholas Christakas, and he tried to respond she first yelled “Be Quiet!” and then “Why the f* did you accept the position”. You can see the video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9IEFD_JVYd0. Jerelyn should be expelled, but I don’t know if Yale administration has the backbone to do so.

“Why do you think that giving people with PTSD a heads-up about content that could trigger them is a bad thing?”

The world at large doesn’t come with trigger warnings. An important part of college is to prepare students for the real world, where rational people do believe that it is acceptable to ask where someone is from, and that the most meritorious people should get promoted.

Moreover, as any therapist will tell you, when indeed you ARE in a safe environment (you aren’t being attacked, molested, shot at) but something unrelated triggers you - that’s precisely how you get through it - by discerning reality and separating it from the trauma. That the guy on the bus with the mustache who reminds you of molesting Uncle Charlie really isn’t molesting Uncle Charlie, who is 1000 miles away, and you’re just on a crosstown bus with a stranger with a mustache, that’s all. I don’t say it’s easy but nothing worthwhile is. Btw I’ve had PTSD regarding a traumatic event in my life.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but what it sounds like you’re all saying is that the point of college is to teach kids to toughen up and prepare them for the “real world.” I happen to disagree; I think college is much more about education and self-exploration than either of those things. We simply have a difference of opinion which I think is causing us to see these things differently.

@hebegebe I think you’re confusing trigger warnings and microaggressions (I get that they might both look like the same liberal nonsense or something to you, but I would be more convinced by your argument if you knew the difference!) Trigger warnings exist as a way to help people suffering from PTSD or another trauma-related mental illness by warning them of content that could potentially be triggering for them. For example, if someone has PTSD because they were raped, it makes sense to warn them if they are about to view content that describes or depicts rape in detail. Trigger warnings aren’t an act of censorship, they are just a heads-up for people who have had traumatic experiences. They don’t harm anyone, and if they don’t pertain to you, they really don’t affect you at all. Yes, maybe they don’t exist in every sphere of the “real world,” but I think that’s of little importance - there are lots of things about college life and the college admissions process that you will never experience in the “real world.” Trigger warnings are a beneficial thing in general, but I think it makes particular sense to expect an institution you’re paying ~$200,000 to to look out for your mental health.

In terms of microaggressions, I think in general there’s a lot of misunderstanding about them that causes them to be labeled as “PC nonsense” and whatnot. Regardless of your views on them, I would really recommend watching this video, which was aired on the PBS Newshour, in which Columbia professor Derald Wing Sue explains what microaggressions are and why he thinks they’re important: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/how-unintentional-but-insidious-bias-can-be-the-most-harmful/ (he specifically talks about “where are you from” at 1:07, if you’re curious)

@Pizzagirl, I am truly sorry you suffered from PTSD due to a traumatic event. But the way you experience PTSD and trauma isn’t necessarily the same way that other people experience it. You might feel like trigger warnings are overkill for you personally, but that can’t speak for everyone who has experienced trauma.

@TurnerT it’s clear that you aren’t a fan of political correctness, but it seems a little extreme and kind of ridiculous to compare it to fascism. It’s possible to have a meaningful debate about this subject, but not by throwing out unrelated words for the purpose of their strong historical connotations.

I hope that nothing in this post is taken as an attack. I am only trying to further understand your viewpoint and hope that you can further understand mine.

If there’s one thing more annoying than political correctness, it’s the collection of people continuously complaining about it.

As a student at Yale, the amount of misinformation about what has been going on lately frustrates me, so I feel compelled to respond.

The Dean did not at any point “lecture students on appropriate Halloween costumes”. There was one email, sent out by the International Affairs Committee (in consultation with various student cultural groups) that requested that people were mindful when selecting costumes.

Furthermore, at no point did over 700 people “gang up” on the professor in question. There was indeed a rally, but anyone who attended would tell you that it was about fostering a sense of community and support. I think it’s important to recognize that the protests, rallies etc. at Yale aren’t just about the email. Sure, the email might have sparked the discussion, but what students are fighting against is the broader problem of not feeling safe and listened to on campus.

The video that @hebegebe linked is only a very small snapshot that doesn’t accurately capture what happened. Yes, the student in question (who was filmed without her permission, I might add) spoke inappropriately to the master/professor, but it was only after he ignored and interrupted repeated attempts to speak politely. Just as there is a video of a student yelling at the master/professor, there are also videos of the master yelling at his students.

If you still want to vote Yale as the school with the highest Snowflake Index, go ahead. Just at least do it without misrepresenting what is actually happening.

@OrchidBloom,

Thank you for the clarification. My nephew was a Yale graduate about 5 years ago, and I still remember all the festive hats at his graduation. I got no pleasure in creating this list and adding Yale to it, or any college for that matter. .

You are there now and I will take your word for it that what I heard about about the 700 students are incorrect. But regarding the video, while it may not show the behavior of the professor/master earlier, it clearly showed the actions of the student. I would say she should be disciplined, but that may be the least of her worries now. Her name will be on the Internet for years, and her employment prospects just plummeted. If the master/professor acted similarly, he should be disciplined as well.

Since you are at Yale now, can you please explain what people found so objectionable about Erika Christakis email, posted below:

@lalalemma,

I am not offended, and I appreciate your detailed response.

A large percentage of high school students in this country do not go to college, or if they do go, they are expected to pay for it themselves. In other words, they are expected to be self sufficient soon after graduating from high school. There are many downsides to this, but one very clear advantage is that the expectation of self-sufficiency forces preparation for the real world.

Kids that enter college paid for by their parents are already more coddled than the world at large. IMO, the last thing these kids need is an environment that treats them as unable to behave properly, and unable to react to unpleasant stimuli properly, when their less fortunate peers are able to do so on their own. Regarding trigger warnings, these kids went through high school without trigger warnings, and the world that follows college doesn’t have it either, so (again IMO) providing it in college hurts them rather than helps them.

I saw your suggested video in its, but I don’t buy it. When people ask Dr. Sue where he is from and are surprised it is Portland Oregon, it is not because of how he looks, but how he sounds. His accent indicates he has spent many of his formative years overseas.

By the way, I am an immigrant with skin considerably darker than either person in the video and grew up in a deeply conservative state, so I received no benefit from #WhitePrivilege. When people ask me where I am from, I mention the state where I grew up. Since my accent fits the state, most people just assume I was born there. If they ask me if I was born there, I say no and mention the country where I was born. I don’t find either question to be micro-aggressive.

If there were continuous micro-aggressions directed against me when I was growing up, I was either blissfully unaware of it, or it just didn’t exist. I can count on one hand the times I was blatantly discriminated against throughout the 45+ years of my life.

Both of my kids will be attending college in the next few years. When I write out those checks for $60K+ for each child each year (I will be full pay unless the kids get merit scholarships), the last thing I want is for most of their fellow students to think and act like Jerelyn Luther, who was clearly never taught how to behave in a civilized society. I made both of my kids watch that video, and they were shocked by her behavior.

I think the discussion of “why” can be made on numerous other threads. Please don’t derail @hebegebe 's original intent to form a handy list. My contribution is Amherst. Brief description is that “ALL lives matter” is somehow racist.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2015/11/13/amherst-student-group-demands-zero-tolerance-policy-for-racial-insensitivity-and-hate-speech/

“All Lives Matter” wasn’t created in a vacuum. It was created in response to “Black Lives Matter”. As such, the intent was to take the focus away from what black people were saying about their experiences with police and the rash of police shootings of black people. It was a way of discrediting the black experience and saying it happens to everyone so what’s the big deal.

If it had been created as some kind of general humanitarian movement, then it wouldn’t be taken as racist.

I don’t think it’s fair to assume that people using the phrase ‘all lives matter’ are discrediting or taking the focus off if anyone or that they would think racism, violence, etc., are no big deal. On the contrary, it’s all a big deal. If more people truly would embrace ‘all lives matter,’ that would be a good thing IMO.

Well that hashtag didn’t exist before the “Black Lives Matter” movement was created and used to share stories about racism. It was a directly in response to that movement.

Yes. However, in my opinion it is not always racist. I accept some people are racist and perhaps they do use it to minimize the experience of black people. However, I don’t think everyone who uses it is doing that. Many of us have never been racist, have probably erred in some way due to lack of understanding, but are open to learning and growing. In the end, the best case scenario, in my opinion, is if everyone embraces ‘all lives matter’, means it, and shows it by their actions.

Obviously the term “all lives matter” is about as non-objectionable as a phrase can possibly be.

It’s only in context that it is problematic.