I'm so old, I remember when Stanford was a respected institution

Professor Ruth Starkman micro-aggresses students who can't afford a waterfront vacay

Professor Ruth Starkman micro-aggresses students who can't afford a waterfront vacay

Stanford professor scolds students for bragging that a homework assignment was easy, or even for showing "ambition": such behavior is a "micro-aggression".

Writing for the Huffington Post, [Ruth] Starkman argued that referring to your homework as “easy” could hurt other students’ feelings, since not all students may have found the assignment easy to complete.
“Had you been listening, you might have heard others describe your comment as a ‘microaggression,’ a term coined in 1970 by Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Chester M. Pierce,” Starkman wrote.
Explaining why you found the homework easy could be a microaggression too, because “even if it’s not a lie,” it could also be “a form of bragging.”
“Not everyone went to your high school, had your fortunate circumstances, or such a dazzling delivery room arrival, and even if they did, they might still be suffering because of the genuine challenges of the assignments,” Starkman wrote.
Starkman wrote that because students live in “a world of unevenly distributed knowledge,” they must be careful not to speak carelessly around other students, especially students who are from minority backgrounds.
“People around you, especially people of color and first-gens are moving faster and working harder than most students,” Starkman noted. “Don’t suck down all the air in the room [by talking about how easy an assignment is], make space for others.”
Starkman concludes by telling students that to be virtuous, they have to stop themselves from being ambitious and help other students.
“As Confucius tells it, refraining from ambition alone is not enough to make one virtuous. One has to simultaneously embrace challenges and practice benevolence.”

"[A} world of unevenly distributed knowledge"? Are you friggin' kidding me, prof? If there's one, most significant effect of the Internet age, it's the distributed knowledge of everything anyone's ever discovered, invented, or written about since the beginning of the world, and it's all available to anyone with access to a public library.

Self-righteous, privileged white female.