Oh well, why not? The cemeteries are nice this time of year, too.
Maybe this is all really about disappointment. I spoke to a young woman who had clearly bathed more recently than most. I asked her why she was at OccupySF. She told me she’d done all the right things. Studied hard. Graduated college. (She was an art major.) And now she can’t get a job. It didn’t matter. It’s all messed up. She was lied to.Well, with that scattershot list of observations as a jumping off point, I might add a couple.
Of course she was. She’s a member of the Trophy Generation. Win or lose, you get a trophy. We embraced mediocrity to an entire generation of kids during good times who are now finding themselves mediocre in bad times. There still is that American dream: Go to college, get a job, buy a Prius. But like it or not, studying art or humanities or gender studies won’t get you there. Marissa Mayer at Google complains she can’t find enough computer-science majors. Civil engineers are getting hired sight unseen.
Educating the whole child was bad advice. So was follow your passion. California spends months teaching ninth-graders how to build a waste-treatment plant with only a day or two on natural selection. I think Occupy Wall Streeters are as much disappointed with the route they all took as they are with “fat cat” bankers.
MOYERS: What does it say to you that our society has such a negative image of scientists?Later she bites down on the brutally hard nut at the center of the issue…
SINGER: It says that science was not an integral part of most people's upbringing and education. As they were growing up, they didn't come to understand that science was one of the grand human activities. It uses the same kind of talent and creativity as painting pictures and making sculptures. It's not really very different, except that you do it from a base of technical knowledge.
MOYERS: Given the negative image of scientists, why did you as a young woman decide to become one?
SINGER: I’ll give you the answer that, in fact, many, many scientists give when asked this question. I had one marvelous chemistry teacher in high school. She was an exciting teacher, interested in me because I was interested in what she taught, and very demanding.
SINGER: It would be difficult to give a good scientific education without being demanding. There's a certain amount of hard work, but the pay-off is marvelous, because when you do the hard work and come to understand something about the way the world works, then the satisfaction is so enormous that it makes you willing to do more demanding work. But if the hard, intellectual work to understand is not demanded of you, then you can't have the pleasure of it either.
“Let me tell you a story that goes back to the days when my now grown up children went to junior high school. Each of them in turn came into a biology class that was taught by a superb teacher. Within two weeks of the beginning of the school year, on each of those four occasions, I began to get calls from parents of other children in the class asking whether I would join a delegation to the principal, to complain about the amount of work that this biology teacher gave. The parents thought she gave too much homework. They also didn't think biology was that important. They were shocked to learn that I wouldn’t join the delegation. Now these parents were highly educated and had great expectations for their children, although none of those expectations included science. They just didn't feel that it was worth the effort that was being demanded of their children.”Indeed.
MOYERS: This happened not just with one child of yours?
SINGER: It happened each time, four times in a row. The parents didn't see the opportunities in being a scientist…. I think their response also indicated that they thought there was a free lunch out there, which there isn't. It was a very depressing experience.”
“My father was very sure about certain matters pertaining to the universe. To him all good things-trout as well as eternal salvation-come by grace and grace comes by art and art does not come easy.”
― Norman Maclean, A River Runs Through It and Other Stories