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Does college turn people into liberals?

Does college turn people into liberals?
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Does going to college make students into ?

Conservative activists have claimed that universities them into believing a liberal ideology. The line of reasoning goes like this: Liberal college professors tell students "what to think," and "what to think" is that conservatives and their positions are to be dismissed. A has even suggested universities consider political affiliation in connection with hiring practices in order to balance out the distribution of political representation on the faculty.

Conservatives on campus feel outnumbered, given that about . This imbalance supposedly , stifles and impairs . Missing in this debate, however, is large-scale empirical evidence on how going to college actually impacts students' attitudes.

Our findings

We are a group of academics interested in understanding how people of different religious, political and philosophical views interact. We are gathering data in a national study of college students called .

Although we have partnered with the Interfaith Youth Core, a Chicago-based national that partners with colleges and universities to promote interfaith cooperation, our work in this area the organization and serves as the for the current IDEALS project.

The IDEALS students when they entered college in 2015. Data on many topics, including tracking how students' attitudes toward liberals and conservatives changed, were then gathered from the same students during their second year of college.

We measured how students viewed each political group separately along four dimensions. Specifically, we asked respondents the extent to which they thought liberals and conservatives were ethical, made positive contributions to society, and were people the had something in common with. We also asked students if they had a positive toward each group. The same questions were asked at the beginning of each student's freshman and sophomore years.

These four attitudes are a great place to start gathering empirical support to test whether colleges are turning students against conservatives. If faculty were "telling students what to think" and students were internalizing these ideas, we'd expect to see evidence during the students' impressionable first year.

Does college turn people into liberals?

Gains across the spectrum

The ? In our nationally of over 7,000 undergraduates at more than who answered both the first-year and sophomore questionnaire, students did demonstrate an increase in appreciative attitudes toward liberals after a year of schooling.

Among all students, 48 percent viewed liberals more favorably in their second year of college than when they arrived on campus. However, among the same students, 50 percent also viewed conservatives more favorably. In other words, college attendance is associated, on average, with gains in appreciating political viewpoints across the spectrum, not just favoring liberals.

The data show 31 percent of students did develop more negative attitudes toward conservatives. However, just about the same amount, 30 percent, developed more toward liberals.

Moreover, the data show us that the most growth in appreciation happened among people who were initially least appreciative of either liberals or conservatives. In simple terms, first-year students who begin college really disliking liberals or conservatives have their attitudes soften in college.

Turning to institutional type, students who attend a private college had a higher initial appreciative rating of liberals than their counterparts at public universities. However, overall views changed at both private and public colleges in the same way. Appreciative attitudes toward conservatives increased between the first and second year of college at both private and public to approximately the same degree.

Also, students trend toward appreciating liberal ideologies – both when they first come to college and after their first year. So, while students still favor liberal ideologies over conservative ones, this gap does not widen over the first year.

Exposure matters

Why?

We don't know the answer. However, our best guess is this finding might ultimately have little to do with faculty directly and instead relate to the climate that campuses strive to create for the expression of diverse viewpoints, political and otherwise. While students may come to college never having met someone on the political "other side," it is hard to avoid doing so in college. One central aim of higher education is to encourage contact, debate, discussion and exposure to persuasion from different kinds of people.

After a year of college, in other words, it might be more challenging for students to brand all or conservatives as wrongheaded when they are studying, eating and learning alongside them. These experiences might even help students appreciate others as people with diverse histories and shared interests in working toward common goals.

One takeaway is clear: It appears as though the first year of is doing what it should, exposing students to experiences that teach them how to think rather than what to think.

Provided by The Conversation

This article was originally published on . Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Does college turn people into liberals? (2018, February 2) retrieved 4 May 2025 from /news/2018-02-college-people-liberals.html
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