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Study finds most college students hide beliefs to have good grades, social life

时间:2025-09-18 07:27:34 来源:仿生皮肤智能交互 作者:焦点 阅读:766次
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Nearly 90% of respondents to a study on two college campuses said they'd pretended to be more progressive than they really were to increase their odds of social or academic success.

Researchers Forest Romm and Kevin Waldman published an opinion piece for The Hill, "Performative virtue-signaling has become a threat to higher ed" about how students have had to adapt to the left-wing climate of campuses to the point they effectively camouflage against the liberal herd. Their study, done between 2023 and 2025, conducted 1,452 confidential interviews with undergraduates at Northwestern University and the University of Michigan.

A resounding 88% of respondents replied "yes" to the question "Have you ever pretended to hold more progressive views than you truly endorse to succeed socially or academically?"

"These students were not cynical, but adaptive," the researchers said. "In a campus environment where grades, leadership, and peer belonging often hinge on fluency in performative morality, young adults quickly learn to rehearse what is safe."

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Young man raises hand in class

Many young students are concerned that sharing their actual beliefs will have repercussions for their grades or social standing on campus. (Drazen Zigic/iStock/Getty)

The researchers argued that many young adults are having to compartmentalize their personalities with one public-facing persona that adheres to public orthodoxy and the truer hidden self that questions these dogmas in private to reduce social risk. This aversion to social risk tends to orbit around a key set of issues.

"Seventy-eight percent of students told us they self-censor on their beliefs surrounding gender identity; 72 percent on politics; 68 percent on family values. More than 80 percent said they had submitted classwork that misrepresented their views in order to align with professors," the researchers said. "For many, this has become second nature — an instinct for academic and professional self-preservation."

They also found only 7% of respondents embraced the idea of "gender as a broad spectrum," with the vast majority (87%) supporting a binary model.

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Northwestern University

Northwestern University campus in Evanston.  (Chris Walker/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

They also purportedly found that "77 percent said they disagreed with the idea that gender identity should override biological sex in such domains as sports, healthcare, or public data — but would never voice that disagreement aloud."

Such dissonance between public persona and private belief extends well beyond academia, however, as these same young people grow wary of expressing themselves even in their personal lives.

"Seventy-three percent of students reported mistrust in conversations about these values with close friends. Nearly half said they routinely conceal beliefs in intimate relationships for fear of ideological fallout," the researchers said. "This is not simply peer pressure — it is identity regulation at scale, and it is being institutionalized."

University of Michigan campus building

University of Michigan graduates leave the central passageway at the William W. Cook Law Quadrangle May 20, 2025. (Detroit Free Press)

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The researchers faulted "the faculty, administrators, and institutional leaders who built a system that rewards moral theater while punishing inquiry."

Fox News Digital reached out to Northwestern University and the University of Michigan for comment.

(责任编辑:综合)

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