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 Good in the Bad Boy

Tuesday, 12 May 2009 21:27 by Eli Savit
Hall of Fame basketball coach Chuck Daly died from pancreatic cancer last Saturday.  As a native Michigander, I remembered Daly as the coach of the  "Bad Boy" Detroit Pistons teams that won back-to-back NBA championships right before Michael Jordan decided to become unstoppable.  On Saturday, the day Daly died, I was doing a ton of absolutely mindless work, so I had ESPN on in the background all day as analysts, coaches, and players paid tribute to the departed icon.

As part of its Daly coverage, ESPN repeatedly aired an interview with Isiah Thomas, the Hall of Fame point guard and the leader of those Pistons teams.  I was struck by how sincere, gracious, and articulate Thomas sounded--a far cry from his image of late.  I can't think of a former basketball player who has had a more tumultuous post-NBA career than Thomas.  He's been found liable for sexual harrassment, bizarrely overdosed on sleeping pills, and has been blamed for torpedoing the Toronto Raptors, the Continental Basketball Association, the Indiana Pacers and the New York Knicks.  Most recently, after being hired as the head coch of Florida International University, he immediately started a controversy by rescinding scholarship offers to several high school seniors.

It's been hard for me to watch Isiah's fall from grace.  As a rabid, basketball-obsessed elementary school student, I absolutely idolized the man.  I had every book ever written about him.  I read his autobiography dozens of times, and I can still recount the details of his rags-to-riches stories about growing up in the worst neighborhoods on the South Side of Chicago.  At recess every day, I would play basketball and pretend I was Isiah Thomas.  I dressed up as Isiah Thomas for Halloween for three years in a row.  When we made puppets in art class, I made an Isiah Thomas puppet.  I literally cried when he was snubbed from the Dream Team.  For me, Isiah could do no wrong, so watching the Isiah Thomas circus these past few years has been particularly painful.  It's been like finding out there's no Santa Claus.  Or, more precisely, it's been like finding out that the guy who dressed up as Santa suit at the mall is a drunk temp worker--and then learning that drunk temp worker also abuses prescription drugs, engages in weird sexual harrassment conspiracies with Stephon Marbury, and thinks it's a good idea to spend all his hard-earned money (from the Santa gig) signing a fat Vin Baker to a huge contract.

But let me make this clear: while Isiah was playing with the Pistons--despite some of his on-the-court antics--he was the best role model a kid could have. For three straight years, when I was in 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade, I went to his basketball camp in Detroit.  Most NBA players lend their name to a camp, show up one day to give a talk, and pocket their ten grand in camp fees.  Isiah's camp was different.  First off, half the kids there were kids from Detroit who were on scholarship, so it was one of the only camps where suburban kids like me actually played against kids from Detroit who couldn't afford to shell out $400 (in '92 dollars!) for a week of basketball camp.  Second, Isiah spend every minute of every day working his own camp, wandering around the camp, watching random kids' games, and giving friendly encouragement and coaching to his players.  To this day, I don't think I've ever felt the sheer euphoria that I felt when, as a fourth grade camper, my idol Isiah Thomas actually sat down and watched my camp team play a game of basketball.  I think I was too nervous to even attempt a shot, but that's beside the point.

And when Isiah talked, boy, did we listen.  Every camp session, he gave a lecture in which he devoted at least five minutes to describing  friends' lives that were ruined by drug abuse.  Say what you want about anti-drug messaging, but whenever Isiah talked, I steeled my elementary school mind never to use drugs--and I really never did.  Even my parents--academic classical musicians who were profoundly suspicious of "the basket ball"--showed up to Isiah's lectures every year, and loved his focus on hard work and putting school first.  And these pep talks really meant something to me.  Throughout my childhood, whenever I had a setback, I'd tell myself "Isiah worked through it.  So can I."  This all sounds incredibly cheesy, but that's how kids' brains are often wired.

Hearing Isiah speak so eloquently about Chuck Daly last Saturday brought back a rush of memories about the central role Isiah played in my childhood.  I'm not defending Isiah Thomas or to pretending that he is some kind of a saint--it's  now common knowledge that he is a deeply flawed man.  But he is a deeply flawed man who made a positive difference in my own life, and, I'm sure, in the lives of countless other kids as well.  And when it comes down to it, I'd say that making a positive impact on kids' lives is far more important than, say, hurting Larry Brown's feelings, or ineffectively utilizing Reggie Miller.  You never know what's going to stick with a kid, or how the words, deeds, or experiences you impart to them can end up shaping who they are as human beings.  

That's why a poster of Isiah Thomas still hangs over my old bed in my parents' home.  That's why I will always remember him fondly.  And that's why I know that anybody--no matter what other issues or flaws they may have--can make a world of a difference by sharing the positive traits and gifts they do have with kids. 

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Memories of Madness

Thursday, 19 March 2009 10:42 by Eli Savit

Editor's Note: Be forewarned: this rather lengthy piece has more than a touch of memoir to it.  If you are looking for a quick way to help The Generation Project, PLEASE vote for us on Rugby.com here.  If you are looking for in-depth sports analysis, you're obviously in the wrong place.

Happy Tournament Tip-Off Day.  For sports fans, it really doesn't get any better than this.  From noon today through Sunday night, we'll be treated to 48 first and second round NCAA tournament games, and all the action, upsets and buzzer-beaters those games inevitably entail.  By the end of the weekend, brackets will be busted, one or two Cinderella teams will likely be ascendant, and the number of contenders for the Division I men's basketball championship will be whittled down from 64 to 16.

For as far back as I can remember, the start of the tournament has been my Christmas morning.  I grew up as a rabid sports fan in the sports-crazed university town of Ann Arbor, Michigan, and my elementary school years coincided with the arrival at the University of Michigan of five fabulous basketball-playing freshmen.  Even after the Fab Five left town, and Michigan's basketball program seemingly fell off the face of the Earth, I still loved watching the tournament.  I was a basketball player myself, the tournament was an opportunity to watch the game played at its highest amateur level, by players not much older than myself. The passion with which college basketball players compete in March is unparallelled, and the games are a joy to watch for any fan of athletics.

As I look back on March Madnesses past, though, I can only remember a few specific games, a few specific runs through the tournament, a few specific Cinderella stories.  (George Mason immediately comes to mind).  My strongest memories from March are gathering with a group of close friends, a bunch of unhealthy food, and settling in to watch game after game after game on the opening weekend.  For much of my scholastic career, these friends--and thus, my tournament-watching companions--were my teammates on whatever school basketball team I was playing on at the moment: middle school, high school, college. 

Those of you who participated in competitive athletics know what I'm talking about: for months on end, you spend hours a day with your teammates.  You are with them in practice, at games, on the team bus, in film sessions, in the weight room.  On longer trips or tournaments, you might stay in hotels with them, four to a room, playing cards, shooting the breeze, goofing off past bed check and on until four in the morning.  And all this time together is the compulsory stuff, the stuff that's a necessary condition to being on the team.   But at the end of the day--past the end of practice--you often don't leave your teammates.  Maybe you'll stay in the gym afterwards, shooting H-O-R-S-E or making trick shots.  Maybe you'll head over to your point guard's house, raid his parents' well-stocked fridge for Gatorades, and watch TV in the basement.  Maybe you'll just sit around on a bench outside school, talking about basketball, school, girls, whatever. More...

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Ivan Guzman: Earmark Hypocrisy, Cramer on The Daily Show, and My Search For Young Republican Moderates

Sunday, 15 March 2009 08:13 by Ivan Guzman

Editor's Note: By giving donors complete creative control over gifts geared towards high-need K-12 students, The Generation Project hopes to facilitate personal connection between donors and the kids they are helping.  As part of that effort, we are letting some of the students that we hope to affect to use this blog to write about their lives, their schools, and anything else they find interesting. Our hope is that, by posting kids' own words, we can give you, the donor, some insight into the interests and passions of the students you would be affecting with your gifts. To highlight the kids' own words, their posts are uncensored and unedited and represent the views of the kids and adolescents that authored them, NOT The Generation Project. 

This post was written by Ivan Guzman, a 15-year-old from the Bronx.  Read more about Ivan here:

I never thought I would write about the economy, and I'm not going to, exactly. I am going to write about some things that came about due to the economy. Like hypocritical Republicans like Lindsey Graham (I'll explain why he's hypocritical later, it's called a tease people) and Jim Cramer's appearance on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. I'm also going to write about a McCain that I actually look forward to seeing more of (it's obviously not John because America doesn't want to see more of him, my proof is the 2008 election).

First, the hypocritical Republicans. Republicans' opposition to the stimulus was all about spending. They were not happy with the amount of earmarks in the bill. Yet when the bill passed and they lost, they decided to add in some earmarks of their own. One of those Republicans who did not surprise me was Lindsey Graham from South Carolina. I'm sure Graham would tell anyone his political career has been dedicated to outlawing earmarks yet he was one of the first to add to the many earmarks in the bill. After the first couple of days no one but MSNBC pointed this out (but then again MSNBC points out everything Republicans do wrong). That was until Senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri pointed this out in a speech on the Senate floor. President Obama followed this up by scolding Republican hypocrisy also. Big ups to Senator McCaskill and Prez Obama!

Second, I was watching the Rachel Maddow Show (an EXCELLENT show) when Rachel mentioned she would have John McCain's daughter Meghan would be on the show. I thought 3 things:
1. WOW!! A Republican
2. What possible reason could she have for being on a liberal network?
3.She's probably lost.
It turns out she wasn't lost. In fact, she was there because she kind of takes exception to the message that Ann Coulter delivers in her books and other things. I was as shocked as you are (that last sentence will only work if you're shocked.....or if anyone is reading this). The hits keep coming though. Ms. McCain is a moderate Republican, she's actually willing to listen to liberals! As a liberal who's willing to listen I found that to be a breath of fresh air. Funny thing about young Republicans, I've never come across one. I'm almost convinced they don't exist other than Meghan McCain. I would like to hear more from her and not people who are just going to put their foot in their mouth whenever they go off-message (you hear that, MICHAEL STEELE?)

My thoughts on Jon Stewart and Jim Cramer and my Ann Coulter nickname contest, after the jump. More...

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Money To Pay For Stuff Is Good, And Other Statements Attributable to Captain Obvious

Thursday, 26 February 2009 11:52 by Eli Savit

The New York Times has a story out today about the amazing fundraising efforts of parents and community members in several Long Island school districts.  After cuts to the districts' budgets threatened schools' extracurricular activities and sports teams, the Long Island communities rallied in support of their schools and raised upwards of $1 million dollars to save the threatened programs from the chopping block.

But in these gloomy economic times, such success stories are tempered with a heavy dose of pessimism.  The Times piece is replete with takes on the sustainability of private donations to schools, with quotes from school officials warning that "given the difficulty and magnitude [of the fundraising campaigns], they can only be substantiated for one year and are unrealistic as a recurring source of revenue."  So, the story concludes, fundraisers and foundations cannot replace government cash in private schools. 

On the obviousness scale, the notion that "public schools rely on public money" ranks somewhere between "if you eat fewer calories, you will lose weight" and "living with grizzly bears is a bad idea."  And, although The Generation Project seeks to expand community involvement in public schools, nobody here thinks that private donations can be systematically relied upon to make up for massive budgetary shortfalls.  But let's not minimize the positive impact these Long Island parents had. It's inspiring to see community members rally behind schools and children to protect the types of experiences that change kids' lives year after year. 

Of course, the fundraisers in Long Island were...well, Long Island parents.  Parents from socioeconomically depressed neighborhoods--which are facing severe budgetary shorfalls themselves--might not have the time or resources to raise $1 million at the drop of a hat.  But if providing a quality edcation for all Americans is a national priority, the plight of students in schools facing severe budgetary shortfalls affects us all.  That's why The Generation Project wants to connect donors with schools and kids that need their money the most.  No, private money is not going to make all the difference.  Still, it can make a huge difference, and it can do so even if it doesn't go to the school in your own backyard. 

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