Daily Archives: April 25, 2016

Just Because it is a Right…

To the Editor:

Re “The Republican Gun Free Zone” (The New York Times, Opinion, March 31, 2016):

Gun control is assuredly a contentious issue in the United States. Gail Collins points out the hypocrisy of the GOP leadership—whose members advocate for the abolition of gun-free zones but haven’t fought the Secret Service’s decision to ban guns at the Republican National Convention. The Bill of Rights may give Americans the right to keep and bear arms, but that does not mean civilians need to exercise that right at all times. Alarmingly, many disagree with that sentiment. This is evidenced by the change.org petition to allow firearms at the RNC that received thousands of signatures from many who were unaware of its satirical nature.

Meanwhile the GOP forges ahead with flawed policies that expose the hypocrisy of its position: in Texas, people licensed to carry a firearm may bring loaded and concealed weapons onto the premises of all state colleges and universities. Essentially, GOP leaders push for lax gun regulations where they are not personally at risk, such as on college campuses, but when the Secret Service tells them they can’t bring firearms to their own convention they don’t fight back. Why isn’t this an intolerable infringement upon a fundamental right? What happened to the legendary GOP firepower on this issue they claim to care about so passionately? While the GOP leadership sorts out its hypocritical relationship with firearms, the public ought to realize that just as there is no need for firearms at a political convention, there is no room for guns on college campuses.

-Samantha Marrus, Independent

New York, NY | Wellesley, MA

Bless Me, Professor, for I Have Studied Abroad

Re “Study Abroad’s Seven Deadly Sins” (The New York Times, Opinion, April 10, 2016):

Peter Coclanis’s article points out what he calls the “Seven Deadly Sins” of study abroad.  These “sins,” he says, allow “immature” students to treat foreign countries as their playground.  He ignores the fact that many of these “sins” are committed in the U.S.  He also premises his argument on the notion that most, if not many, students are easily led into temptation (and ruin).

Mr. Coclanis argues that readily available “suds” make American students abroad more inclined to spend their time drinking than studying.  But students abroad who show up to their 9 a.m. classes hungover are probably doing the same thing back home.  Mr. Coclanis disregards the many study abroad students who are less apt to partake in party cultures, or are simply more capable of balancing their social and academic lives.

He derides “slide courses”—classes taught in English that are not up to par with American university standards—as a study abroad phenomenon, again ignoring that they exist in the U.S. as well.  Of course, just as not all students abroad indulge in “suds,” not all classes abroad can be pegged as “slide courses.”  At the same time, if the classroom experience is the be-all and end-all of study abroad, then students might as well “stay at State U,” where Mr. Coclanis implies classes are superior.  Education abroad, on the other hand, might take place in more unconventional settings, such as at a cooking workshop, or in a discussion with one’s host family.

From his perch in academia, Mr. Coclanis has pinpointed a handful of actions he finds objectionable and attributed them to the study abroad experiences of immature students.  What he demonstrates, however, is the seventh deadly sin of armchair criticism:  stereotyping.

statue game
Photo by Megan Locatis