When a group accepts a newcomer, learning imperatives follow.

The newcomer cannot appear at the beginning of this learning period like those who have been there for a longer time.

He couldn't meet their expectations of each other, and that's why he has the special expectations of his own role, that of the newcomer.

Its contours, which can be studied in children, in new colleagues, but also in new citizens and the nouveau riche alike, have often been described sociologically: in part, the newcomer is educated to formalism and over-adaptation by impressing on him all sorts of rules that he should follow more fully group recognition will no longer arrive at all;

sometimes one reacts to one's missteps and gaps in knowledge with special forbearance and tolerance.

The newcomer is not only factually ignorant,

he should also appear as an ignorant.

He should, for example, ask questions – and thereby recognize the superior authority of the elders.

The freshmen at American elite universities are also newcomers, in two senses.

All are new on campus and the same on it.

But the exclusive educated stratum represented by this type of university includes some of the students from home, while the others have reached it as newcomers, namely as climbers from uneducated classes or socially disadvantaged groups.

Both create problems, but since the problems with the unfamiliar student role are much easier to address than the problems with the equally unfamiliar shift status, this second group of problems is also preferably treated in the language of the first.

A sociologically uninformed view of the problem

The university management, in particular, imagines that the nouveau riche in terms of education suffer above all from not being able to find their way around the world of lectures and seminars right away.

The solution to the problem is therefore seen in compensatory role training for those who were the first in their families to make it into this type of facility.

Before the semester even begins, they are invited to a series of remedial courses lasting several days, which address the social and cognitive hurdles of the new situation and, if possible, eliminate them.

The American educationalist Rachel Gable has now presented a commissioned research on this topic.

Interviews with groups of rising graduates from Harvard and Georgetown were intended to determine where they themselves see the difficulties in their situation and what kind of remedy would serve them.

Since the author identifies with the support courses and their goals, her suggestions amount to perfecting the measures that are already being practiced.

An example: Those students who prefer to work during the remedial courses in order to earn money should be compensated for their loss of earnings and those who see the obstacle primarily in the travel costs should be compensated for them.

The hurdles in front of the hurdle removal program should also be removed.

This is an honorable goal

Better read Tom Wolfe than this investigation

The limitations and consequent problems of what can be achieved in this way, which sociologists can easily discern, are more apparent in the disseminated interview material and in the early reviews of the study.

A clear limit is that official support courses can only deal with officially recognized difficulties.

But do the climbers really suffer primarily from their ignorance of what office hours are, what they can be used for and what the correct form of address for professors is?

Are the insecurities of social climbers not more noticeable in social interactions?

In what is perhaps the best story on this subject, Tom Wolfe's “I am Charlotte Simmons”, the favorite topics of the remedial courses play no part.

The subsequent problem of the courses is that they can only meet needs if they are exclusively addressed to the disadvantaged.

The self-confident among those addressed in this way see a stigmatization in this.

The recognition of the dubious rank of tutor is understandably unwelcome to them. Apparently, modern equality policy lacks an equivalent to the old doctrine of sin.

This had the significant advantage of assuming that in a world ensnared in original sin, hardly anyone is blameless.

Likewise, one cannot accuse anyone who goes to confession of obviously needing it.