If this site HAD a “No Shit!” section, this would be in it.
Study: College students more narcissistic (AP)
NEW YORK - Today’s college students are more narcissistic and self-centered than their predecessors, according to a comprehensive new study by five psychologists who worry that the trend could be harmful to personal relationships and American society.
“We need to stop endlessly repeating ‘You’re special’ and having children repeat that back,” said the study’s lead author, Professor Jean Twenge of San Diego State University. “Kids are self-centered enough already.”
Twenge and her colleagues, in findings to be presented at a workshop Tuesday in San Diego on the generation gap, examined the responses of 16,475 college students nationwide who completed an evaluation called the Narcissistic Personality Inventory between 1982 and 2006.
The standardized inventory, known as the NPI, asks for responses to such statements as “If I ruled the world, it would be a better place,” “I think I am a special person” and “I can live my life any way I want to.”
The researchers describe their study as the largest ever of its type and say students’ NPI scores have risen steadily since the current test was introduced in 1982. By 2006, they said, two-thirds of the students had above-average scores, 30 percent more than in 1982.
Narcissism can have benefits, said study co-author W. Keith Campbell of the University of Georgia, suggesting it could be useful in meeting new people “or auditioning on ‘American Idol.’”
“Unfortunately, narcissism can also have very negative consequences for society, including the breakdown of close relationships with others,” he said.
The study asserts that narcissists “are more likely to have romantic relationships that are short-lived, lack emotional warmth, and to exhibit game-playing, dishonesty, and over-controlling and violent behaviors.”
Twenge, the author of “Generation Me: Why Today’s Young Americans Are More Confident, Assertive, Entitled — and More Miserable Than Ever Before,” said narcissists tend to lack empathy, react aggressively to criticism and favor self-promotion over helping others.
The researchers traced the phenomenon back to what they called the “self-esteem movement” that emerged in the 1980s, asserting that the effort to build self-confidence had gone too far.
As an example, Twenge cited a song commonly sung to the tune of “Frere Jacques” in preschool: “I am special, I am special. Look at me.”
Some analysts have commended today’s young people for increased commitment to volunteer work. But Twenge viewed even this phenomenon skeptically, noting that many high schools require community service and many youths feel pressure to list such endeavors on college applications.
Campbell said the narcissism upsurge seemed so pronounced that he was unsure if there were obvious remedies.
“Permissiveness seems to be a component,” he said. “A potential antidote would be more authoritative parenting. Less indulgence might be called for.”
The new report follows a study released by UCLA last month which found that nearly three-quarters of the freshmen it surveyed thought it was important to be “very well-off financially.” That compared with 62.5 percent who said the same in 1980 and 42 percent in 1966.
Yet students, while acknowledging some legitimacy to such findings, don’t necessarily accept negative generalizations about their generation.
Hanady Kader, a University of Washington senior, said she worked unpaid last summer helping resettle refugees and considers many of her peers to be civic-minded. But she is dismayed by the competitiveness of some students who seem prematurely focused on career status.
“We’re encouraged a lot to be individuals and go out there and do what you want, and nobody should stand in your way,” Kader said. “I can see goals and ambitions getting in the way of other things like relationships.”
Kari Dalane, a University of Vermont sophomore, says most of her contemporaries are politically active and not overly self-centered.
“People are worried about themselves — but in the sense of where are they’re going to find a place in the world,” she said. “People want to look their best, have a good time, but it doesn’t mean they’re not concerned about the rest of the world.”
Besides, some of the responses on the narcissism test might not be worrisome, Dalane said. “It would be more depressing if people answered, ‘No, I’m not special.’”

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February 27th, 2007 at 2:21 pm
Every generation says that the generation before them is self-centered and selfish. Baby boomers just aren’t in touch with what we think is important today, which is the center of what’s really going on now, anyway, instead of their stupid worldview, anyway. What my generation is doing is what is important for the future, not THEIRS.
February 28th, 2007 at 11:31 am
Nice job. If irony was your goal, two marks!
March 18th, 2007 at 7:52 am
First, I would need to see more than “two-thirds of the students had above-average scores” before I would jump on this band wagon. Where is the comprehensive statistical analysis required to make an informed decision? “See the world as I see it” is the implicit thesis of many academics and reporters. Is it possible to be more narcissistic?
Second, do “goals and ambitions” get “in the way of other things like relationships” or do one’s choice of balance among goals effect the quality of life? Personally I would hope that healthy relationships would be one of many goals we each have.
Third, is not functional independence necessary for healthy interdependence? I recently heard it said that all healthy individuals must go through the “terrible 2s.” Perhaps the problem is that some are now going through the terrible 20s, due in part to the decisions of the older generation. Is the rising generation to blame if they become what they have been trained to be? How much of this problem stems from earlier experts telling us that young people needed higher self esteem?
Finally, how is it that a college sophomore was unable or unwilling to support a thesis with more than an emotional rant? Again, is the rising generation to blame if they become what they have been trained to be?
Perhaps the more pressing questions are “How accurate is my view of the world and my place in it?” and “Am I making choices or excuses?”
March 21st, 2007 at 8:14 am
> How accurate is my view of the world and my place in it?
A Buddhist!
March 25th, 2007 at 9:39 pm
Yes, many of my beliefs are most beautifully expressed by Buddhist and Taoist writings; however, this college prof is a Latter Day Saint (Mormon). . . born of a Catholic dad & a Southern Baptist mom, raised by a Lutheran grandmother . . . fyi I was an avowed agnostic for 5 years after my first cover to cover read of the Bible but the teaching of the Book of Mormon convinced me otherwise.