From the category archives:

private school

The Myth Of School Choice?

by Hans Hageman

Rice High School

Extinction?
I was originally going to write about the extinction (or at least the growing cultural irrelevance) of the male of our species. I’m postponing this to write about a related topic – the threatened closing of Rice High School. For those of you not from New York, familiar with Harlem, or who think that choice in education begins and ends with charter schools, Rice High School is all-boys, independent parochial school established in central Harlem in 1938.

It seems that even in New York, the only people familiar with the school are aficionados of high school basketball.

School Choice? Really?
Many of the financial Masters of the Universe have flocked to charter schools as the salvation of public education. I’m not here to opine on motivations for many involved in the romance – such as the desire to bust unions, enhance egos, assuage guilt over wealth created without a corresponding value to the larger society, or a combination of paternalism and desire for control. What I am concerned about is that an important landmark in my community may disappear due to neglect.

The Near Future – It’s May Be All They Have
It would be great if the next few weeks brought an outpouring of financial and logistical support for the school. I am concerned that a few things might first get in the way. I have a sneaking suspicion that many of the same people who made money during a period where others in this country lost their homes and livelihoods are also troubled by institutions that proudly proclaim the teaching of morals and character as a part of their mission statements. After all, isn’t that hard to measure? Wouldn’t the product also be threatening to our modern Robber Barons? What would Ayn Rand say? I’ve run into a few who get it (you know who you are) and I hope they read this. But for the others…

Rice High School has a 100% college acceptance rate for the past four years. I don’t know how many ended up at four-year institutions or how these young men did in their freshman year (as a measure of their preparation). I do know that they are working with a population (Black and Latino males of high school age) that many of the shining stars of the charter world have carefully avoided. They’ve done it with a mainly poor and working class population, with much less funding than charter schools receive and they’ve done it for six decades before charter legislation even existed in New York.

Gettin’ ‘Er Done
Yes, I know it’s not the flavor of the month, I know it may not be replicable or scalable but if you’re out there, have some money, believe that Black and Latino male teenagers are people too, and believe that the teaching of morality has a place in education, then please take action to save places like Rice High School and St. Anthony’s in Jersey City.

Hey, if an Episcopalian with a Methodist minister for a father, who has a wife who majored in Jewish studies, who attends a Lutheran church and who has provided a home for Muslims and atheists can figure it out, then it may not be hopeless.

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Great Schools or Just Retooled Factories?

by Hans Hageman

It’s also worth checking out his 2006 TED talk.

Albert Einstein said: “We can’t solve problems at the same level of consciousness at which we created them.” Yet this is exactly what we do in our efforts at educational reform. There continue to be dueling reports about whether charter schools work any better for underprivileged kids than the regular school system. From what I can tell, this is only a discussion about the best form of palliative care.

I go back and forth on why we do what we do with our children and their education. Is it a desire for social and economic control by our oligarchs? Is it greed? Is it a lack of imagination? A combination, or something else entirely?

This affects us all and I’d love to hear your thoughts.

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Knights of Honor

by Hans Hageman

modern knight

The denigration of females? Tasteless language wrapped up in bad grammar? Just some more misogynist rap? Not exactly. This was part of a “game” played by teen boys at the elite, all-male Landon private school in Maryland. They played a game mimicking a fantasy sports draft that involved the ranking of local girls in terms of sexual desirability. The goal was to have sex parties with points given for sexual conquests. Landon’s group of “young gentlemen” have had a problematic recent history that can be glimpsed in the story link above.

These were no knights of honor. These boys were raised in a school culture that begins in 3rd grade. Who are their fathers? What did their non-participating classmates have to say? Their intent was to prey on local girls. I read one news story that took the view that “boys will be boys” and that they were just a little immature and foolish to publish this stuff in an age of omnipresent Internet scrutiny.

It seems to me that this was more likely a story of familial narcissism and entitlement. It was a perversion of the daring, competitiveness, and energy that are a part of healthy male energy. How does this happen? Sports performance coaches talk about “sensitive periods” in athletic development for young people. This has to do with the pace of development of a young person’s particular motor abilities (e.g. balance, endurance, speed, strength).

These sensitive periods are also present in the emotional development of adolescent males. Fathers and other responsible adult males are supposed to help induct these young men into the masculine fraternity. In my perfect world, young men would be a combination of William Wallace (you know, Braveheart) and Gandhi. If boys this age aren’t guided through the minefield of puberty, they will end up locked into a cage of greed, materialism, selfishness, sexism, and aggression. Money and status often provide more of an impetus towards these things than an inoculation against them.

My wife and I have our own set of instructions and parenting process for our daughters should they come across young piglets from whatever race or class. That may be the topic of another post.

I was watching “City of Joy” with my 9 year-old son the day after I read about these Landon boys. This a movie about a victimized Dalit community in India and an American doctor (played by Patrick Swayze) trying to find himself. I explained to my son his role and path to becoming a modern day knight. I explained that it would require mental, spiritual, and physical skills and toughness. I told him that I expect him to ALWAYS be the first to stand up to bullies. Some may find my view of man as protector and knight as sexist in its own way but I do not apologize for this. I have also made it clear to my girls that they should rely on themselves for their personal safety.

Bottom line, there are shepherds, sheepdogs, and wolves. Maybe boys will be boys but we shouldn’t ignore the bad fruit that will be harvested if we don’t pay more attention.

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Chicago Hope Academy

by Hans Hageman

Providing under-served children with real school choice is something I am passionate about.  I was fortunate to have a visit last week from a guy named Bob Muzikowski.  He is the founder and head of Chicago Hope Academy.  This Christian-based school has done amazing work in its brief existence.  They are clear in their mission and character education flows naturally through the curriculum.  Their athletic teams are successful and represent what team sports are supposed to develop.

This is a life mission for Muzikowski and he has put his bucket down in a difficult part of the United States. I wish more people did the hard work and looked for the elements that make for a complete education and I wish there were more “workers” like Bob Muzikowski because “the harvest is plenty.”

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