“The Average College Student Today”

Scriptorium Philosophia Substack (March 25, 2025)

Writing under the playful pseudonym Hilarius Bookbinder, Substack author of Scriptorium Philosophia declares his concern for the continued decline of academic performance among undergraduates.

Hilarius identifies himself as a 30-year veteran faculty and full professor at a regional public university. With typical students and ordinary faculty, Hilarius provides a charitable but deeply disturbing picture of today’s college co-eds, including chronic absenteeism, inattentiveness (read distractedness), and a poor academic work ethic.

In the end, Hilarius blames the phones (and related technology) that have overrun these students’ conscious lives, as well as the institutional unwillingness to alter the status quo.

[Read the original article here.]

Note: since the original article came out last month, Hilarius has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, restacked 1100 times, and read by more than 300k people, generating quite a stir of comments. Just last week, Hilarius provided some follow up comments here, as well.

Further Reading

From across the pond, Joe Nutt pushes back on the role tech firms play in setting the rules for education...

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Anne-Christine Hoff provides a legal analysis of Texas’s Bluebonnet curriculum initiative in The American Thinker (December 15, 2024)....

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The University of Tulsa announces a new major in humane letters (December 5, 2024)....

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Robert L. Jackson

For 25 years, Dr. Jackson has promoted liberal education through teaching, scholarship, and administrative activities. He began as a professor of English and education, then worked as chief academic officer at Great Hearts, where he founded the GH Institute. He has received teaching awards from Florida State University and The King’s College, and was the 2021 recipient of the Salvatori Prize for American Citizenship. Currently, Dr. Jackson serves as senior fellow for both Flagler College and the Chesterton Schools Network. He is also associate editor for Principia journal. Rob enjoys convivial conversations, his latest literary discovery, and cruising around town on the cycle.