Thursday, March 25, 2010

Influential books game

NYT columnist Ross Douthat outlines this exercise pretty well. I enjoyed writing this but am now tired, so I'll leave you with his explanation:

More than a week ago, Tyler Cowen kicked off an irresistible blogospheric listing exercise: In this case, the theme is “10 books which have influenced your view of the world.” You can find Matthew Yglesias’s list here, Will Wilkinson’s list here, and many more at this link. My own follows below. Note that these are not my 10 favorite books, nor the 10 best books I’ve ever read, but the books that quickly came to mind — I was following Cowen’s “go with your gut” admonition — as having shaped my writing or pushed me in one intellectual direction or another over the years. As an experiment, I’ve also tried listing them in rough chronological order, starting with the books that influenced me as a child and working my way upward (or downward, perhaps) toward adulthood. And like many people, I’ve cheated and gone over 10 — in my case, by doubling up on a few that share an author or a theme.


1. The Giving Tree, by Shel Silverstein
I recently picked this childhood favorite up again, reading it to a class of first graders at an independent school in Washington, D.C. as part of a job interview. I led a short discussion about the book and its themes after reading it aloud, and that reminded me why I loved the book so much growing up. I was initially drawn to it because my older cousin really liked it, but after reading through it on my own (probably one of the first books I ever read, in fact), I was struck immensely by the simplicity and beauty of the parable and its themes. It's a story of self-sacrifice, altruism, and a powerful relationship that was out of balance; The Giving Tree was my first exposure to these ideas, many of which stuck with me through the years.

2. The Client, by John Grisham
The Grisham series of legal thrillers served as my introduction into "adult" literature. I remember picking this one up during a summer where I was too adult to be content at my grandmother's house, but not yet old enough to stay home alone. I became immersed in Grisham's suspenseful prose, and this book, along with other well-known novels like The Pelican Brief and A Time to Kill, helped enhance my nascent love of reading.

3. The Diary of Anne Frank and Anne Frank: The Biography, by Melissa Muller
I read the biography first, which led me into the diary itself, and the story told pairwise in such a way was immensely powerful. The story is I think universally known, but it was important to me because I picked the biography up just a few years after my father died--I think it was in 7th grade, or not quite 5 years later. Without realizing it, I had been shortchanged of half my identity in a way, cut off from the part of myself that is Jewish by my father's passing. These readings started me on a path of self-discovery which eventually brought me to Israel. Though I'm far from converting formally to Judaism, the Anne Frank story inspired me to learn more and embrace that part of my background, even though it wasn't always easy.

4. Animal Farm and 1984, by George Orwell
This was another book read during a lazy summer at my grandmother's house in Long Island, also suggested by a cousin, if memory serves. After reading through once and missing many of the subtleties (remember, this was many years ago), I started again at the beginning. This time, the metaphors and allegories jumped off the pages, and the seeds of a political malcontent had been planted. When I read 1984 during freshman year, I remember being fascinated by the dystopic view Orwell so vividly outlines. I also caught so many parallels from Animal Farm that my understanding was really improved.

5. Catch-22, by Joseph Heller
This was also read during my 9th grade year, and it was the first great war novel I ever encountered. In addition to opening this genre up to me and training me to hate war from an early age, I learned an early lesson about existentialism and nihilism. Yossarian's prime goal was to "stay alive or die trying," which in a war zone might be a pretty fair life goal. This view emphasized the questionable value of staying alive, a crazy idea which led me to explore ideas like structural violence and warm peace later in life.

6. Lies and the Lying Liars who Tell Them, by (now Senator) Al Franken
When a comedy writer for Saturday Night Live came out with a political book...well, I don't remember why I saw the need to read this, but I'm so glad I did. It actually served as my introduction to blogosphere, netroots politics, because so much of Franken's political writing belongs on a blog, with links and source material. He actually composed a carefully reasoned, well-researched dismissal of Faux News, and his argument helped sway me farther to the left of U.S. politics.

7. A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, by Dave Eggers
I don't remember when I first picked this book up, I just remember it as the only book I've ever read 4 times, cover to cover. Changed my life so much.

8. Racism Without Racists, by Eduardo Bonilla-Silva
One or two academic books have to appear on this list. This one actually was assigned in probably my least favorite class at Tufts, but it was so educative that I won't hold the class against the book, which I enjoyed even at the time. Bonilla-Silva opened a world of blind, unspoken prejudice to me which I wasn't aware of, and through the course and this text in particular, I learned about structural inequality and the racism (and accompanying privilege) that exists beyond consciousness.

9. Stranger in a Strange Land, by Robert Heinlein
Take one part dystopia in the style of Orwell or Huxley, mix well with social commentary unparalleled in anything I've read, and finish with the style of Douglas Adams and you've got Heinlein in a nutshell. It was the discussion of the human experience that caught my interest, and I took one quote out in particular which I still remember:
"I've found out why people laugh," the Martian immigrant explained. "They laugh because it hurts...because it's the only thing that'll make it stop hurting." He follows this thread on the next page: "I had thought--I had been told--that a 'funny' thing is a thing of goodness. It isn't. Not ever is it funny to the person it happens to...The goodness is in the laughing. I grok [understand] it as a bravery...and a sharing...against pain and sorrow and defeat."


10. Death at an Early Age and Shame of the Nation, by Jonathan Kozol
This is why I want to work in education. Kozol's dramatic writings, first as a new teacher in Boston Public Schools and later as an experienced critic, opened my eyes beyond the inequality I saw growing up. He convinced me that education reform really is the civil rights struggle of my generation.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

"Whatever It Takes"

I just finished "Whatever It Takes" by Paul Tough, an account of all the amazing things Geoffrey Canada and the Harlem Children's Zone have been doing to essentially save the children of Harlem from the cycle of poverty. It was really a fascinating read, kudos to Tough for an easy-to-read, well-researched account of one of the most innovative programs around the country.

The unique aspect of HCZ is not any particular program or strategy; it's the whole organization. The book describes it as the "conveyor belt model." Essentially, Canada starts with parents before they even have children with a program called Baby College. From there, HCZ has a program for kids and parents called the 3 year-old journey, and after that kids go straight into the pre-k program called Harlem Gems, and from there kids are expected to progress into the Harlem Promise Academy charter school, which is also operated by HCZ.

The most fitting metaphor for this approach to poverty reduction is one Canada uses about gravity and orbits. Day-to-day life in Harlem, he says, is the gravity that tries to pull kids down to Earth, but the solid start and consistent programming from HCZ is pushing kids up, up into orbit so that no amount of gravity can bring them down. It is still to be seen how much is needed in order for kids to get up and stay in orbit; HCZ has kids who make it through different parts of the conveyor belt, due to any number of reasons. What is the tipping point for them? Can they make it if at age 13, for example, they move to the Bronx and have to find a new high school without all the supports from HCZ?

I'm a huge fan of what Canada is doing in Harlem, for the most part. He is exactly right that inequality in school and the much-discussed "achievement gap" begins way before school does. Disparities in pre-k programs have been addressed federally by things like Headstart, but studies have shown the positive impact of Headstart starts to diminish as early as 2nd or 3rd grade. Constant, sustained effort is so important if we want to have an impact on poverty.

Nothing is perfect, of course, and the ability of Canada and HCZ to make a real impact in the Harlem community--an impact beyond the direct scope of its programs--the focus of its schools must change. In Tough's account, Canada and the HCZ Board discuss testing and test scores ad nauseaum. The way they measure success is simply by the numbers, and that has huge impacts on students. At one point the board encourages Canada to bring in KIPP to restructure the Promise Academy middle school, and although they end up going in a different direction, many of KIPP's main tenets find their way into the school. Especially the exclusive focus on testing.

A lot of things cant be measured by standardized tests. The NCLB-mandated tests that Canada and wealthy donors like Stan Druckenmiller use to evaluate the school's progress rarely even measure the things they are designed to measure. At one point Tough reports one teacher acknowledging this, explaining that the reason certain students don't do as well is that they don't know the tricks to test-taking that were certainly taught in my school and are taught in most middle and upper class schools. But what's the educational benefit of learning process of elimination and avoiding "red herring" trick answers? Is this cognitively significant? (NO!)

Likewise, by focusing so much time on test prep, other subjects lose out. Do inner city kids not deserve enrichment like music, art and history? Learning isn't only about tests, it isn't only about math and reading. School has to be about more than that, or kids will (and empirically do) simply shut down. Even if scores go up and the reputation of the school improves--so what? Is quality of education truly linked to reputation? When Tough relayed the heavy emphasis on testing and Canada and Druckenmiller's obsession over scores, I couldn't help but think that they were more interested in their reputations and the reputation of HCZ than they were about helping kids learn and grow into successful, productive adults.

Terri Grey was the founding principal of Promise Academy middle school, but she was quickly discarded after she refused to compromise her belief in comprehensive schooling in order to appease Dept. of Ed bigwigs or her bosses. She has since moved onto a more progressive school environment, discussed at length in a recent Ed Week piece. She has continued to focus on learning and not testing, which, to me, seems like the obvious thing to do.

Geoffrey Canada is really a hero for youth growing up in poverty, especially in Harlem. During his campaign for President, Barack Obama talked of a proposed federal effort to expand HCZ's key components to 20 cities around the country, and as a proud supporter of both Obama and Canada, I applauded this plan (and I still hope it happens). However, if the KIPP ethos of test first and test often continues to pervade these schools, kids will suffer. It's too bad that test scores are the only data most people look at when measuring student achievement, because learning is about so much more, and it's about a lot that simply cannot be measured.

The long-term focus of HCZ has a lot to say about other efforts to reduce poverty and raise student achievement around the country (and the world). I see an unspoken commentary on Teach For America, in fact. Canada and his organization recognize that two years in a child's life is the blink of an eye; it isn't long enough to make an impact, and it is nowhere near enough time to launch those kids into "orbit" and out of the cycle of poverty. TFA is a two-year resume builder. It isn't a substantive effort to address the achievement gap, it cant be unless it's dedicated to not only spending many years in classrooms, but to training teachers for more than a few weeks as well. (I apologize for the constant TFA-bashing, I just cant help it. I feel like the organization is brainwashing college kids and even policy makers, and it irks me to no end.)