QUOTE(owainsutton @ Jun 10 2012, 11:48 PM)

QUOTE(RoseRodent @ Jun 10 2012, 11:42 PM)

This is seen outside education too. Whenever there is a focus on a young person with an atypical story - leaving care, coming out of prison, disabled, young carer, ill - they seem to be telling us that because they are in their twenties they "should be" out drinking and having a laugh.
I'm unaware of this general trend - could you link to some articles?
It's more of a television thing than a print media thing so I can't link to anything, sadly. If I could remember what the shows were there may be some still available for digital download, but most are one-off documentaries which are not kept by the likes of iPlayer because they are current affairs based. It's very influential for people to keep hearing this said to them, that the point of being young is to be wasted and not care about anything. Obviously it's not a reflection of how everyone is, but what worries me is that it's a reflection of the continuing media message. If more and more people are told that this is how to be young they will feel that this is the correct way to be young. There's a certain slice of the population which is chosen by production companies because they make the "best TV" but that TV is then watched by people who are influenced by it.
Everything is a generalisation (there we go again, because obviously not everything is a generalisation by definition!) but the worrying trend is when the minority are over-represented in media and the majority under-represented and people get a skewed view of life - Dan Gardner's "Risk" speaks about this in great detail, and the way in which people who do not wish to be influenced by things still are.
QUOTE(serendipity @ Jun 11 2012, 07:57 AM)

QUOTE(RoseRodent @ Jun 10 2012, 11:42 PM)

This is a definite reflection of wider societal attitudes. There is no idea that when you go to study a course there will be some element of hard, academic graft involved. It's very fashionable to do your essay the night before, to aim for a scrape pass, to blow your student loan in one night. It's a competition to put in the least effort and spend the most money on drink and foreign travel. With this kind of attitude to higher education it's no wonder that the money is all gone.
I'm sure some students and the wider community think like that, but many (most?) do not. The young people I know at university are generally working hard and have no illusions about the effort needed or the realities they will face after university. And while a lot of drinking might go on, isn't that true for wider society, including so-called professionals. There are also students who drink moderately, or don't drink at all, and who are trying to learn to manage money properly.
I can only speak for my own university experiences, but they were real experiences because I was there, they were not media moderated. Now some people may well be lying about doing no work in order to fit in and they actually worked really hard, but there were many, many people in that computer room on the morning of deadline day trying to cobble something together. Perhaps that sort of experience is less common at the likes of Oxford than it is in other universities, but it annoyed me how much of it I had to put up with, especially on group work projects where other members of the group showed up week after week having done nothing, proclaimed it would all be fine somehow and did I see such and such a band last night. *sigh*