This is the VOA Special English Education Report
"In loco parentis" is a Latin
term meaning "in the place of a parent." It describes when someone
else accepts responsibility to act in the interests of a child.
This idea developed long ago in British common law to
define the responsibility of teachers toward their students. For years, American
courts upheld in loco parentis in cases such as Gott versus Berea College in
nineteen thirteen.
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| Mostly parents attend a meeting for new students at Colgate University in 2005. Helicopter parents find it hard to let go. |
Gott
owned a restaurant off campus. Berea threatened to expel students who ate at
places not owned by the school. The Kentucky high court decided that in loco
parentis justified that rule. In
loco parentis meant that male and female college students usually had to live
in separate buildings. Women had to be back at their dorms by ten or eleven on
school nights.
But in the nineteen sixties, students
began to protest rules and restrictions like these. At the same time, courts
began to support students who were being punished for political and social dissent.
In nineteen sixty, Alabama State College
expelled six students who took part in a civil rights demonstration. They sued
the school and won. After that, it became harder and harder to defend in loco
parentis.
Students
were not considered adults until twenty-one. Then, in nineteen seventy-one, the
twenty-sixth amendment to the Constitution set the voting age at eighteen. So
in loco parentis no longer really applied.
Slowly, colleges began to treat students not as
children, but as adults. Students came to be seen as consumers of educational
services.
Gary
Dickstein, an assistant vice president at Wright State University in Dayton,
Ohio, says in loco parentis is not really gone. It just looks different. Today's
parents, he says, are often heavily involved in students' lives. They are known
as "helicopter parents." They always seem to hover over their children.
Gary
Dickstein says these parents are likely to question decisions, especially about safety issues and grades. They want to make sure
their financial investment is not being wasted.
As a result, "in loco parentis" has been replaced by what
some administrators call a "partnership" between the school and the family. In
fact, the orientation program for new students at Virginia Tech this summer
includes a meeting for parents called "Parents as Partners."
And that's the VOA Special English Education Report,
written by Nancy Steinbach. Our Foreign Student Series is online at
voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.