Edition III
February 2015
Friends Seminary
Friends Responds to Recent Racial Tensions By MAX TEIRSTEIN ’17 On August 9, 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot dead by white police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri. On December 3rd, a grand jury failed to indict Officer Palenteo, another white NYPD police officer who used the illicit chokehold and killed Eric Garner, a 43-year-old father of six and grandfather of three. On November 22, a 12-year-old African-American boy named Tamir Rice was playing with a toy gun and shot dead on sight by Officer Timothy Loehmann. These three deaths, along with that of Trayvon Martin in 2012, have caused national unrest. There have been protests nationwide, and riots in Ferguson, where Michael Brown was killed. They have also resulted in a push for the end of modern racism that has taken many forms, including racial profiling, microaggression, and police brutality. Friends Seminary responded to these recent events by hosting a Meeting for Worship, providing several “Black Lives Matter” workshops during the recent Day of Concern, and organizing a group to join
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Derrick Gay, a leading educational and diversity consultant, opens the Day of Concern with a discussion of identity in the Meetinghouse.
Community Addresses Identity, Privilege and Power During Day of Concern By SAM ZIEVE-COHEN ’15 In the spring of 2014, Leitzel Schoen, Dean of Co-Curricular Programs, Jason Craige Harris, History Teacher and Director of the Academic Center, and Cynthia Chalker, Director of Diversity, gathered a group of students to discuss what they believed was a novel proposal: a day of discussion and learning for high school students and teachers. “When we first started talking about and conceiving this day, I, as a new person at Friends, didn’t even know that a day like this existed. In the spring we went to an Upper School faculty meeting and presented why we thought this day was important and asked them to give up a day of their classes for it. The faculty were quiet and then they said ‘yeah, sure, that sounds like
The NRA and The War Over Guns p.5
Day of Concern.” Schoen said, adding, “we didn’t even realize the day existed.” Years earlier the Day of Concern was an annual event run by the Senior class in which lecturers were invited to talk to about topics important to the community. While this tradition had ended long before Schoen, Harris, and Chalker began working at the school, they were bringing back something beloved by many former and current community members. After choosing a day in January to hold the event, the group canvassed the views of about 20 students and began a process of choosing topics and speakers. Adorning the wall of their planning space with ideas written on post-its, the student-faculty team spent months pooling
Inside Recycling: Is It Worth It? p.7
Can Resilience Be Taught? p.8
What is The Purpose of Art?
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their collective connections and resources. Schoen, Harris, and Chalker estimate that around 50 invitations were sent to organizations and speakers. The group settled on a list of twenty-three workshops, composed of current faculty and outside speakers. These speakers came from diverse backgrounds and included alumni and faculty. “It was important for us when we were thinking about who we could ask to find people who were experts and could talk about the issues in the third-person but also could offer personal perspective,” remarked Harris. “Having students hear from individuals who were not just educators, but also spend their daily lives
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