As a former professor, I’ve noticed that over the last 10-15 years, more college students have trouble with solving problems through interpersonal networking. I was having a surprising number of students coming to me to ask what to do if their car wasn’t working and they couldn’t drive to class, or if it had snowed and their car was snowed in and they didn’t have a shovel, or if they had missed class and needed to get notes or assignments. I was frequently having to ask, “Who do you know who. . . “ Only to have them look at me blankly and ask me again what they should do and then whether I could do that for them. There were also a lot of people emailing me to ask me questions about things that were literally on the school website or in my online course materials. People would also blame me for not personally telling them information I had stated in class several times and provided I writing in multiple places. But when I would tell them that they needed to use the provided materials better, they would complain to my administrators that I’d made them feel bad about themselves or that I was refusing to help them enough. I ended up retiring early because constant issues like this made my job unsustainable.