I don't mind political discussions. I said I went to NDSU, majored in Finance, and didn't experience the things people worry about. I'm very conservative. Probably moreso than my Gen X parents are. They also went to NDSU.
My law school in NYC was a different story. That had some elements of indoctrination in the speakers who were brought in, etc. But even there, I got some good grades in classes taught by leftists, and got average grades in classes taught by moderate or conservative types.
I didn't say there was not a problem on many college campuses. I said I did not have that experience at North Dakota State.
College of Business Alumnus
I think a bigger source of the information a student receives on topics like this come from other students. Many people do come from fairly homogenous backgrounds. College may be the first time they get to know people different from them. Once they meet people with different viewpoints and experiences, they see things differently.
My kids went to a very diverse high school in many ways (financial, ethnic, racially, religious, poltically, nationality, LGTBQ, etc.). When they went to college, they had many friends who came from rural or wealthy suburban areas (two examples of areas that often have less diversity). Their friends had very different views on things and struggled to get along with all the new people they met until they got to know them. Your views start to change when you get to meet the real people behind the stereotypes and understand them better. And that can go both ways.
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Not at all what was said. What was said is that the overall public good is not served in any meaningful way if a large portion of the conservative electorate continues to paint college campuses as a place where conservative young people are not welcomed. There is a place on college campuses for conservative voices and we should be encouraging them to attend so that the student body has a more well rounded discussion from both sides of the political aisle. But sure, continue to paint college education as something that only serves the purpose of indoctrinating youth into the liberal movement.
THAT is one of the best parts of going to college. My son and I talked about this last night after he got back from college. He'd had a very liberal religion class he took. I think that was a good thing for him as he understood others see things differently, and it is still okay to hold onto your core beliefs. Folks don't need to agree on everything; sadly, the fringes of society don't seem to understand that.