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NASHVILLE, Tenn. (GBHEM/FYI) –
College students having trouble making the transition to
adulthood increasingly rely on frequent cell phone calls and
e-mails to their parents, a United Methodist campus ministers
group says. So campus ministers are asking local churches to
develop ministries that help parents and college freshmen adjust
to this transition.
“I’ve had faculty members tell me
they’ll be discussing a grade with a student, and the student
will take out their cell phone and call their mother, then hand
the cell phone to the professor,” said the Rev. Bill Campbell,
co-chair of the United Methodist Campus Ministers Association (UMCMA)
and a campus minister at Middle Tennessee State University in
Murfreesboro.
“Campus ministers have seen a real
change in the last few years of students not being ready to take
on adult responsibilities when they get to college and parents
struggling with how to deal with this, not knowing how much to
help,” Campbell said.
The Rev. Luther Felder, assistant
general secretary in the General Board of Higher Education and
Ministry’s Campus Ministry Section, agrees that churches can
help parents and college students.
"This is a very important rite of
passage that offers local congregations a unique opportunity to
reach out to parents and young adults who are struggling with
this issue. Can you imagine a ceremony that takes place just
before school starts, followed by care groups that help parents
to talk about the grief they experience? This could reiterate
what institutions are trying to do with students," said Felder.
GBHEM sponsors the campus ministers’ group. UMCMA is an
affiliate organization of GBHEM, working closely with the
Division of Higher Education on campus ministry issues.
The trend has been noted
nationally by university officials who call parents who cannot
let students handle their own problems “helicopter parents” for
their tendency to hover over their college-age offspring. Some
parents try to intervene in problems with roommates, scheduling,
dorm rooms, grade disputes, and other problems.
“As campus ministers, we try to
treat the students as adults and have to assume that when they
make a commitment, they will act as an adult,” Campbell said.
Unfortunately, parents do not always support that treatment,
Campbell said.
“I had a parent call to inform me
that his daughter would not be going on a mission trip she had
signed up for and wanted her deposit back. I told him she needed
to talk to me, but I couldn’t refund the deposit,” Campbell
said.
The group is urging local churches
to help in several ways. First, they would like to see churches
develop special Sunday School classes on parenting college
students and ongoing ministries for parents, especially parents
of first-year students. The coordinating committee of UMCMA made
these recommendations during a meeting in Nashville July 25-29.
Annual conferences are encouraged
to develop workshops on parenting of college students for
parents and clergy. United Methodist campus ministers and
chaplains offer themselves as consultants to annual conferences
to develop a conference college-age parenting strategy.
UMCMA members also appeal to the
general church boards and the United Methodist Publishing House
to develop books and other resources for Christian parenting of
college students and young adults.
An online poll of more than 400
college students conducted by Experience, Inc., a leading
provider of career services to students and alumni, revealed the
vast majority of students report their parents are moderately
involved, while 25 percent of them responded that their parents
were “overly involved to the point that their involvement was
either annoying or embarrassing.” The data was gathered from
students and parents who visited the site and filled out the
survey, so it does not represent a random scientific sample.
Still, 38 percent of students said
their parents had either physically attended meetings with
academic advisers or called an adviser, and 31 percent said
their parents had called professors to complain about a grade.
“Over-involved parenting hampers
students’ transition into adulthood, their spiritual development
and career preparation,” Campbell said. “As campus ministers, we
have always sought to lead college students into a healthy adult
spiritual development, but our opportunity to assist parents in
healthy parenting roles is very limited.” That is why the
association is asking churches to step in.
The UMCMA Coordinating Committee
recommends books for parents of college students, including: The
Launching Years: Strategies for Parenting From Senior Year to
College Life by Laura S. Kastner and Jennifer Wyatt (Three
Rivers Press); When Your Kid Goes to College: A Survival Guide
by Carol Barkin(Harper Paperbacks); and Letting Go: A Parent’s
Guide to Understanding the College Years by Karen L. Coburn and
Madge L. Treegrer(HarperCollins).
Recommended readings for pastors,
campus ministers and conference leaders, College of the
Overwhelmed: The Campus Mental Health Crisis and What to do
About it by Richard Kadison and Theresa Foy DiGeronino (Jossey-Bass);
and Generation Me: Why Today’s Young Americans Are More
Confident, Assertive, Entitled – And More Miserable Than Ever
Before by Jean M. Twenge, Ph.D.(Free Press). |