Harvard v. The Generation Project: A Comparison

Monday, 12 October 2009 14:46 by Eli Savit

Apparently Harvard University--even with its $26 billion endowment--has fallen on some tough times.  Last week, the New York Times ran a story that noted some of the tough decisions Harvard has made lately, including reduced availability of hot breakfasts and no more cookies at faculty meetings. Today comes word that Harvard has opened up bidding on naming rights.  With prices starting in the low five figures, Harvard is offering you the opportunity to name venerable parts of the institution after yourself!

So, if you've always dreamed of the Harvard Law School reading room bearing your name, and if you've got $10,000,000 laying around to pay for it, now's the time to go for it.  But if you're a little hard-up right now, check this out: The Generation Project offers naming rights on ALL your gifts to kids in low-income areas--regardless of the price.  

Don't believe us?  Check out the screenshots below from our gift creation application, replete with fake gifts from two people who have been in the news lately.  (My fellow Michigan football fans will recognize the shoelace reference, the rest of you can educate yourselves here).

 SAMPLE GIFT #1:

 I mean, he's got $1.4 million to give to charity, right?
 
SAMPLE GIFT #2: 
 

 

So, yeah. Why not login to our community section and design your own gift today?  It may not be as prestigious at a gift to Harvard, but it can be cheaper, will still bear your name, and will go directly to kids who really need it.  And, who knows?  Maybe your gift will end up making the difference in a kid's life, setting her on the path to Harvard.  

(Or Princeton, I guess, if cookie consumption by faculty is a factor in her college decision).  

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Distract Kids With Art!

Monday, 15 June 2009 19:14 by Eli Savit

Despite the negative headline, I was actually pleasently surprised by today's report in the New York Times that American eighth graders display only "mediocre" art skills.  Although some of the study's findings were quite discouraging for arts-lovers--for example, only 16% of eighth graders had gone to art museums with their class--the report also noted that about half of eighth graders could identify Renaissance painting, and a little over half could identify a half-note.  This was touted as a "mediocre" achievement, but it actually seemed pretty good to me.  Not to knock any of my former eighth grade students from the Bronx--who were brilliant kids doing their best to navigate a broken education system--but I would have been shocked if even five percent could have identified either a Renaissance painting or a half-note.  Frankly, in urban schools, that kind of stuff is very rarely taught, as the focus has largely shifted to reading and math.  The study did not break out student achievement along socioeconomic lines, so I have no idea how well urban students are doing in the arts.  Still, on the balance, students' achievements in the study far exceeded what I would have predicted. 

What disturbed me more than the findings reported in the article was some Times readers' online comments.  Several readers argued that, given the worrisome state of American achievement in subjects like math, science and literacy, we should be making even further cuts to arts education to focus more attention on these "core" subjects.  One reader even went so far as to say that we should not "further distract [students] with this stuff." And such sentiments are hardly the work of isolated trolls on the Times website. In fact, as I reported in my recent article in the Michigan Law Review, a slim majority of Americans think it is a "good thing" if increased emphasis on reading and mathematics results in a de-emphasis of other scholastic subjects.

Now, to my mind, there are countless benefits to arts education in schools, starting with the fact that for millenia, humans have expressed themselves visual art, drama, and music, and I think it is the height of hubris to ignore all that because we want kids to perform better on math tests.  But let's assume, for the sake of argument, that the entire function of schools is to get kids to a certain level of proficiency in math, reading, and maybe science.  Even if we reduce schools to this simple metric, it still strikes me as extremely implausible that the best way to achieve those goals is to spend countless hours drilling home the basics of math, reading, and science with no focus whatsoever on the arts, history, or on physical education.  One of the biggest issues in struggling schools is getting kids engaged with the curriculum and with the scholastic experience in general.  And if you're a student who is struggling in math or reading, and the entirety of your scholastic experience is devoted to the subjects that are already giving you the most trouble, chances are you'll lose interest really fast.  Maybe you'll simply sit there, bored out of your mind, and coast to a high school diploma with a C- average.  Or maybe, like so many kids have done over the past decade, you'll simply drop out entirely, thinking that school just isn't for you.

On the other hand, if you're a 14-year-old kid and, for a few hours of the day, you're learning about something that a) interests you, and b) you're kind of good at, you'll be more likely to be engaged in school in general.  The point here is not that arts education is some magical placebo, it's just that when you present kids with broader, richer curriculum, they are more likely to find something in school that interests them.  It's a rare person who is able to maintain the motivation to consistently work hard and stay engaged at something that they struggle with naturally.  If you stink at the guitar, you're probably going to find another musical intrument.  If bowling's not your thing, maybe you can be President of the United States instead.  And that's all well and good when it comes to hobbies, but it is incredibly dangerous to narrow the scholastic experience down to reading and math test factories, because then we run the risk there are going to be a ton of kids out there that simply think "I am no good at school." 

So, with apologies to that Times poster, we should be "further distracting" students with art, music, theatre, history and sports.  Beyond the benefits that society can glean from a well-rounded, educated populace, we all stand to gain when young people are given every opportunity to engage their unique passions and skills inside the schoolhouse gates. 

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The Supreme Court: NYC Public School Graduates Need Not Apply

Tuesday, 26 May 2009 23:08 by Eli Savit
Barring some unforseen political development, the next Supreme Court Justice of the United States will be, as she puts it, "a kid from the South Bronx."  No matter what you might think about Sonia Sotomayor or her judicial philosophies, her rise from the Bronx projects to Princeton and Yale Law and her new digs at One First Street is an incredibly inspiring story.  And, by the way, if you ever doubt what kind of difference you can actually make by giving a low-income school something like a set of your favorite childhood books, just remember that part of Sotomayor's inspiration to practice law came from her childhood love of Nancy Drew books.

But amidst all the hoopla surrounding Sotomayor's back-story and biography, the President himself--probably inadvertantly--managed to highlight the continuing tragedy of American public education.  In describing Sotomayor's inspirational life story, President Obama noted that "her mother worked six days a week as a nurse to provide for Sonia and her brother...bought the only set of encycopedias in the neighborhood, [and] sent her children to a Catholic school called Cardinal Spellman, out of the belief that with a good education here in America all things are possible."

Now, Catholic schools have done phenomenal work for kids like Sotomayor for many, many years.  And nothing I'm about to say should be construed as being in any way derogatory towards parochial education, or parents' rights to send their kids to religious schools, if they choose to do so.  But let's take a step back here.  Why are we celebrating the fact that Sotomayor's mother felt that she had to send her kids to a Catholic school for them to get a "good education" and live the American Dream? How can Obama present that story--based on the premise that if Sotomayor's mother had sent her kids to public school, Sonia might not have made it--as a feel-good, up-by-the-bootstraps American tale?  As heroic a figure as Sotomayor's mother was, she is far from the only parent in the South Bronx that has a "belief that with a good education...all things are possible."  Some of those other parents aren't lucky enough to work as a nurse.  Some of them can't get the hours to work six days a week.  And many simply put their trust in city public schools, believing the government's promise that they will deliver an adequate education.  

I'm not saying that Sotomayor's story is anything less than inspiring, nor am I suggesting that Obama's remarks are representative of his education policy.   But it's tragic that the President of the United States can paint the decision to send an inner-city child to a Catholic school as heroic and obviously right and our collective response is to nod our heads, think "well, of course Catholic schools are better than those crappy New York City schools" and then move on to thinking about the future of Roe v. Wade. Statements like Obama's are troubling because, in the face of one success story, they push further into the background the hundreds of thousands of brilliant students whose educational experience forecloses college, let alone Princeton and Yale.  Even more disturbing, such remarks suggest a deep societal acceptance of the fact that public education in many urban schools is woefully inadequate.  

Of course, Obama may have just had some bad speechwriting today.  Taken at face value, though, Obama's remarks represent a creeping acceptance of the abysmal state of American education.  The casual "Catholic schools=good, public schools=bad" premise that Obama tossed around today suggests that the omnipresent crises in urban education are now simply another part of America's shared cultural backdrop--one that the President can feel comfortable referencing in passing.   While today's nomination is historic on many levels, the nomination says very little about us as a country if we collectively accept the notion that somewhere out there in the Bronx, there is a little Hispanic girl that is just as talented as Sonia Sotomayor whose future opportunities will be severely constricted if she cannot afford to attend Cardinal Spellman High.  

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