February 26, 2008

Reverend Professor Gomes Delights and Inspires Students

Yesterday we were treated to an assembly presentation and hour-long follow-up discussion with Reverend Professor Peter J. Gomes, Chaplain at Harvard's Memorial Church and Plummer Professor of Christian Morals at Harvard University. Below is the review of senior Annie Strauman, who served as Reverend Gomes's student ambassador for the visit.

Rev. Peter J. Gomes addressed the student body this past Monday. Speaking extemporaneously, he spoke about the superficial nature of assembly speakers, the wimpy reactions of North Carolinians to snow when Boston has “real weather”, and explained his unusual perspective on advising undergraduates at Harvard. But more importantly, Rev. Gomes discussed his view on “independent” schools. He discussed how they allow the leisure to think great thoughts. He stressed that such school should teach students to become careful followers, rather than mediocre leaders. He ended with three parting wishes for the student body (“like a fairy god-mother”, he said). He hoped that each student would find his vocation – whatever each other us felt called to do, our great joy that addressed the world's great need. He hoped that we would discover abundant happiness. And he hoped that we would always possess a sense of humor, because a sense of humor is a way to transcend all the evils of the world.

The candid nature of Rev. Gomes speech was impressive. It distinguished him from anyone I have ever heard. He earned my respect, and from the reactions of my classmates, the respect of my fellow students when he began by acknowledging the pink elephant – the superficial relationship of assembly speaker and audience.





Reverend Gomes chats with Annie after his conversations in Kenan Auditorium.



Personally, I could not agree more with his argument that schools should teach students how to be good followers. If a college admits ten thousand great leaders, nothing will get done. In a world of followers, people will rise into leadership – they always do – and the critically thinking followers will decide who is best to follow. Just as democracy discovered that it is the people who give governments power, so Rev. Gomes argued that this country needs to learn that good followers make great leaders.

His parting wishes also resonated with me. His wish for each of us to find our calling that serves the worlds great need was a message that we have heard a thousand times in a thousand different ways. But Rev. Gomes made us listen to it, instead of just hearing it. His calling to be a preacher has served the world’s great need for a loud voice to tell it as it is. This was clear by the end of his speech, which demonstrated his speaking ability. Through his talents, he was able to prove his point that fulfilling your vocation is more than just doing your job.

I believe his most important lesson came with his final wish – for each of us to have a sense of humor. I am always proud of the effort that Durham Academy makes to promote all facets of each student who attends. Not every attempt is as successful as we would like, but I am always proud to see that my school keeps trying – in sincerity – to mold critical thinkers and people who will act upon their morals. But I think that this school and many within it – including myself – have forgotten to have a sense of humor. Unless we can laugh at our own irony, foolishness, and mistakes, we can not move forward or learn. Or enjoy what success we do achieve. His final hope for us was his most important lesson to DA.

Rev. Gomes will be preaching at Duke Chapel on March 16th, 2008. To watch him in recent interview (about 20 minutes) with Charlie Rose, click here.

February 25, 2008

State Chess Champs!


Congratulations to DA's Chess team, which last weekend won its first K-12 North Carolina State Championship (in a huge upset over heavily-favored East Chapel Hill High School). The victorious team includes Elliot Cartee, Tre Hunt, Robert Jackson, Connor Labean, Salil Saxena, Carl Ward, and Fred Ward.

February 22, 2008

D-bate, DA, and DNS

Assistant debate coach (and Duke student) Ally Bell took four students to Harvard last weekend for one of the year's most competitive national debate tournaments. Coach Jeff Welty writes, "Sophomores Josh Zoffer and Robert Kindman were undefeated in preliminary competition, were 6th speakers, were the second seeds overall, and advanced all the way to the semifinal round before losing on a split decision. A fantastic accomplishment, made even sweeter by the fact that they are now fully qualified for the year-end Tournament of Champions. Editorial comment: Harvard is a HUGE tournament and their performance is astonishing for sophomores."

Josh, Robert, and their teammates awash in awards at the recent Cary Academy tournament.
----

The following article, written by our own Anthony Clay, appeared in the February issue of ENews from Durham Nativity School. It outlines the remarkable collaborations that have grown up between DA and DNS in just this school year. I've attached the entire issue of the newsletter, including a conversation with DNS founder and DA parent of alumni Joe Moylan and several other pespectives on a very special school.


DA and DNS . . . Partner Up!

During each of the past two summers, faculty and staff from every division of Durham Academy have come together for a remarkable personal and collective journey through the highways and byways of the American South. Across some two thousand miles - Atlanta, Birmingham, Montgomery, Selma, Tuskegee, and Memphis - we explored questions of race and religion, identity, history and memory, service, and social justice. We learned, we laughed, we cried. We also came back resolved to remain connected with one another and to carry our tour experiences into our own community.

To that end, we decided to partner with an organization in Durham where we might be of service. When Barbara Potter, a veteran of the inaugural civil rights tour and devoted volunteer at Durham Nativity School, shared with us her powerful interactions with the young men at DNS, we'd found a place to contribute our time and energy. Last November, Ingrid Medlock and her staff welcomed us warmly to breakfast for our first visit to the school. In December, many of us sat in the audience for the DNS afternoon performance in DA's Kenan Auditorium - expertly emceed by DNS graduate and DA student Marco R. Many of us recently spent two Friday afternoons in the DNS kitchen with eight DNS students cooking. During our first cooking collaboration, we made a Super Bowl themed meal, headlined by healthy turkey chili. On our second visit, it was Italian: spaghetti, meatballs, sauce, salad, and pudding. One student took such a shine to balsamic vinegar, he got to take the bottle home (along with meal leftovers!) We'll be back for a 3rd time to provide lunch (by popular demand, spaghetti again) for the entire school.

The students and staff at DNS have made quite an impression on us, just as Barbara Potter predicted last fall. Says Willetha Colvin, who works in DA's development office, "There is a palpable sense of dedication from the staff at DNS. It's hard not to catch wind of the energy." In the words of Patsy Harlow, a DA Lower School teacher, "I particularly enjoy how enthusiastic, appreciative, eager to learn, and well mannered the boys are!" Adds Lower School teacher Elizabeth Culpepper, "I loved visiting the school and cooking with the boys, and was struck by their self-confidence and their comfort level when talking to adults. They truly love school, and DNS in particular, and seem dedicated to pursuing their education to its highest and farthest limits."

Clearly, great things are happening at DNS, and it's our honor and joy to collaborate in even modest ways with the amazing people in this special school!





Senior Elsa Ohman, a frequent Spanish tutor at DNS.

February 17, 2008

Great Debate, Peter Gomes, Science Olympians, and Brad's "Commitment to Community"

DA Debate update from its recent tournament at Cary Academy: In JV public forum, Tre Hunt and Ted Arapoglou were undefeated and took 4th place -- they haven't lost a round since November! David Fowler and Tristan Swedish went 3-1 in the same division, and earned honorable mention. Meanwhile, in varsity public forum, Josh Zoffer and Robert Kindman took 3rd place, losing only once in a close decision. In varsity Lincoln-Douglas debate, Josh Erb was named "top speaker" and took 3rd place overall. Ben Hattem took 2nd place in dramatic interpretation, showing that DA can excel in the interpretive events as well.

----

Next Monday (February 25) we'll enjoy an extended visit from Reverend Professor Peter Gomes. Reverend Professor Gomes is the Chaplain at Harvard's Memorial Church, widely regarded as one of America's greatest preachers. His visit (assembly + C and E period discussions in the Commons + lunchtime Q&A - all of them open to all students and teachers) fits perfectly into our efforts with character education. To read the News & Notes article about Reverend Gomes's visit, click here. To see him in a recent interview with Charlie Rose, click here.

----

Science Olympians go for gold. DA's S.O. varsity team recently finished 4th of 18 teams at regionals and will advance to the State competition (April 4th and 5th).

JV
o Luca Harrell (1st place Sounds of Music)--ask him about his guitar!
o Mike Ronco (1st place Sounds of Music)
o Jon Powers
o Steve Benson
o Kala Viswanathan
o JW Hwang
o Peter Davoust
o Eddie Liu (1st place Remote Sensing)
o Andrew Annex (1st place Remote Sensing, 2nd place Rocks and Minerals)
o Collin Burks
o Soph Tsang (2nd place: Food Science, Oceanography and Rocks and MInerals)
o Charlotte Dunn (2nd place Oceanography)

Varsity
o Noah Steege (1st place Electric Car)
o Ben Cox (1st place Electric Car, 6th Experimental Design)
o Nick Cariello
o Carmen Augustine
o Wei Leong (3rd place Forensics)
o Gargi Bansal (3rd place Forensics)
o Sean Sketch (2nd place Chem Lab, 5th Food Science, 6th Experimental Design)
o Caroline Bodager (1st in Remote Sensing)
o Jim Mallernee (7th place Astronomy, 3rd Fermi Questions, 3rd Physics Lab)
o Caitlin Burk (2nd place Chem Lab, 3rd Fermi Questions)
o Johnathan Martin (2nd place Ornithopter, 3rd Rocks and Minerals)
o Alexis Noel (4th in Junkyard Challenge)
o Victoria Vaughn (6th place Exp. Design, 4th in Junkyard Challenge)
o Raj Sundar (6th place Health Science)
o Salil Saxena (5th place Food Science, 6th place Health Science)
o Tyler Carroll (5th place Bottle Rocket, 7th Astronomy, 3rd Physics Lab)
o Lise Williams (1st place Remote Sensing, 3rd Rocks and Minerals)
o John Lindsey (5th place Bottle Rocket)

----

Bradley Joseph Waffa, DA class of '04, is the January 2008 winner of the Pearigen Award for Commitment to Community at Sewanee, The University of the South. A biology major, Brad hopes to become a veterinarian who specializes in parasitological and zoonotic disease; but his immediate post-graduate plans include completing a research project on box turtles that he began last semester on the Mountain. Brad has co-authored and co-presented with Sewanee faculty on a variety of biological studies, including an article in a 2005 edition of Southeastern Biology. Outside of the classroom, Brad has contributed to the community in the following ways: AP & Proctor in Cannon Hall, 3 year Residential Computing Consultant (RCC), Order of the Gownsmen, Sewanee Men Against Rape, Student Alumni Leadership Council (SALC), Sewanee Health Professions Society, College Libertarians of the University of the South, Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Sewanee Cycling Team, Sewanee Equestrian Team, and SOP trip-leader. Brad is also a licensed Emergency Medical Technician. Eric Hartman, dean of students, said the following about Brad’s leadership, “I discovered that Brad was more than an accomplished student leader when immediately following a tedious racial incident that culminated in a mandatory residence hall meeting, he began to challenge the group’s silence. It became clear that his peers seek his insight and advice in mediating complicated situations. Moreover, his leadership has transformed the facility and the experience from an environment entrenched with abusive tendencies to one of good humor and mature citizenship.” Congratulations Brad!

Hockey stars, Amigos, The Ann Atwater Project, and a Durham Crusader

Smart stickers! Seniors Caitlin Crawford, Catherine Donatucci, Rachel Hodges, Julie McCracken, and Leslie Ogden, The ZAG/NFHCA High School National Academic Squad program recognizes outstanding high school senior field hockey team members who achieved a cumulative GPA of 3.5 through the first quarter of the 2007-08 school year.

----

FAD (Literacy Tutors) and Student U. aren't the only tutoring programs in the Upper School. Natalie Gallo, Worth Newman, Liliana and Margarita have revived our Latino outreach in the Amigos de Forest View y Hope Valley Club. The group meets for a few hours on Saturdays to assist Spanish-speaking students with reading, math, and computer skills. To see the impressive flyer Worth designed to expand the number of students served, click here.

----

A new community partnership with an old friend - The Duke/DA Ann Atwater Project is officially off the ground. Duke students in the program of Education (under the direction of Student U. Board Member Dr. Jan Riggsbee) and 7 DA students will be coordinating fundraising, workdays and other events in cooperation with the City of Durham to help re-open The Ann Atwater Community Center. DA Team Leader Calvin Brett and Bela Kussin met recently with Duke students to brainstorm, set goals and schedule some activities. A few examples:

o Feb 9: Both groups will have lunch at Ann's house and do a site visit.
o Feb 18: fundraiser at DA: Breakfast and goodies during the day. Duke students will assist on our campus.
o February and March - Duke Latino and African American Groups,Fraternities and Sororities will assist with fundraising projects
o April 11: DA Used Book Fair -Special Hour for purchasing of books for the center's library by the Team (Duke has already raised $400). The DA Parents Association will donate a portion of books that are left over after the sale to the center.

The DA Team Members (Calvin, Lenae Frazier, Max Jones, Gavin Walker and Kara Stith) aim to make this an "an all school initiative" for students and faculty.

----

Cavs Club leader Leslie Ogden sent the following note and link to the inspiring story of a true Durham crusader (written by another): "I came across this article in the Herald Sun about Alphonso, one of the men who joined us in the class gift presentation for Housing for New Hope. Thought you might enjoy it."

February 9, 2008

The best of times, the worst of times

I typically write with pride in this space, spreading good news about the leaders, servants, and learners who make our community such a strong one. Tonight I have to do the opposite, for I am feeling disappointed and ashamed of my own failure to enforce more hospitable behavior by our basketball fans this evening. When several of our students went across the bleachers to stand behind the few but raucous students from North Raleigh Christian Academy, I immediately asked them to move back. They quickly consented. When our entire student section migrated to the NRCA side about 20 minutes later, I should have sent them all back. Instead I walked over with Captain Lee, monitored our students. and felt ashamed that we had so inhospitably displaced the parents of our opponents.

I regret my lack of courage, good sense, or both - first because we can do better as hosts, and second because I ought to do better as someone who trumpets so often the virtues of respect and kindness. After the game, I fielded a series of complaints from NRCA parents and grandparents. Because they were right, I could only apologize for myself and on behalf of our school.

Luckily, I and the NRCA parents were able to separate the bad behavior in the stands from an extraordinary game on the court. The Cavs played some of their best basketball of the year. Surging to an early lead, fending off a late run by NRCA, hitting three-pointers and high-pressure free throws with calm focus, and even dunking to seal the victory - this was a tremendous Senior Night with some heroic performances. The girls varsity was equally impressive, letting their powerful senior class lead them to victory.

As our Spirit Week unfolded behind Student Council's able leadership, it was clear how much we all appreciate the fun of healthy competition. As students swarmed the court after the boys' overtime win, it was impossible not to feel pride and joy for DA. However, even after a night with two victories, two touching tributes to senior parents, a great dance team performance, and a crowd full of CavDome crazies, I couldn't help but wish that our fans (and I as an administrator) had performed as excellently as our players.

I will email the Athletic Director and Upper School Director at NRCA this evening, apologizing for our collective lack of hospitality. Based on the understanding comments of their parents after the game, I trust they'll accept that apology and that we'll have many more opportunities to show our best sportsmanship on and off the court.

February 1, 2008

Spirit Week, FAD, and Student U.

Mollie Pathman, seconds before her game-winning goal in the Spirit Week Quad Soccer tournament.

----Student Council aims to conquer the February blues with laughter and competition Feb 4-9 during Upper School Spirit Week

Tuesday - dress-like-a-kindergartener
o egg toss (tutorial) and obstacle course (lunch)

Wednesday
- class color day
o Bond tournament (tutorial) and Tug O'War (lunch)

Thursday - twin day
o ping pong (tutorial)and dodge ball (lunch)

Friday: DA Spirit day (wear green and white)
o quad soccer (tutorial) and 3 on 3 basketball (lunch)

Basketball in the the CAV DOME from 3:45 until 9:00, when the Cavs Club will celebrate its annual S'mores Night.

Saturday: Science Olympiad regionals + Valentine's Day Dance

----

More than a FAD - a happy update from Mrs. McCarthy about the new senior elective Teaching Literary Skills and Outreach Tutoring:

If you happened to walk through the doors at Forestview Elementary School at 12:50, you might notice a gaggle of third graders giggling, turning cartwheels and literally jumping up and down. A dozen Latino children eagerly await the arrival of their Durham Academy Augustine tutors, 12 seniors enrolled in the Augustine Literacy elective, offered for the first time by the Upper School in 2007-2008. The seniors spent the first six weeks of school learning about why some children struggle with reading, writing and spelling, then how to assess and remediate those problems using the research-based Orton-Gillingham approach and Wilson Reading System materials. They were each then assigned to an Augustine child at Forestview (defined as being below grade level in reading and qualifying for free or reduced lunch). One-on-one tutoring, using multisensory, systematic, phonics-based lesson plans, takes place in the Forestview media center during a combined E / lunch period on days 2,3,6, and 7. The other days are spent in the classroom at DA -- planning lessons, discussing the needs of specific children, learning more about the curriculum.

This FAD (Forestview / Augustine / Durham Academy pilot project) has been an unqualified success. As one senior wrote in a mid-year evaluation, “The entire experience has been wonderful; one I wrote about for numerous college essays and that has inspired me to want to continue teaching and tutoring. The first few weeks when we learned how to teach someone to read was awesome and gave me tools I will use for life. The experience of working with my student has been irreplaceable and life-changing.”

The instructors for the course, Augustine Project Executive Director, Debbie McCarthy and her assistant, Tracey Powell, are very impressed with the DA tutors. In their words, “These twelve seniors are incredibly capable, committed, and compassionate young people. Their students are making solid progress in literacy skills while building relationships that are a joy to behold.”

----

Some similarly uplifting updates from Student U.:

o Our 49 sixth-graders from last summer's program have, since early September, been tutored weekly and been gathering monthly with 49 high-school and college-age tutors for whole-group mentoring events. After an on-campusing tutoring session tomorrow, for example, the group will march with DA in the Durham MLK Parade.

o Over 110 fifth graders have applied for the 50 available positions in Student U. Summer 2008. The lucky 50 will be joined by 32 teachers (including a dozen returners): approximately 10 each from NCCU, Duke, UNC-CH, and 2 from DA.

o With strategic and logistical support from the DA development office, Dan Kimberg has raised nearly all of the $186,000 operating budget for the 08-09 school year. This includes new commitments from Duke, UNC-CH, and DA, and gifts from foundations and individual donors all over Durham.

At last week's 2nd annual Benefit Breakfast for Student U., I introduced our new Advisory Board members and talked a bit about why Student U. matters to the "new DA." Excerpts follow:

• Priscilla Ching is an architect who serves on the Board of Trustees here at Durham Academy. Her enthusiasm for Student U. flows directly from her motherly pride and satisfaction, as Priscilla's son Terry taught English in the first cohort of Student U. teachers last summer, and her younger son Nathan is working each week now as a Student U tutor with 6th grader Devin Autry.

• Anthony Clay is the Co-Director of College Counseling and a teacher of Economics and AP Government and Politics at Durham Academy. Anthony has been deeply engaged in Durham since he arrived ten years ago. He is the past Board President of Junior Leadership Durham and a Board Member of the Southern Association for College Admission Counseling. After stints at Raleigh Charter High School and Carolina Friends School, Anthony has become an effective catalyst for community involvement at Durham Academy.

• Omega Curtis Parker is a Durham native and recent retiree from the Durham Public Schools, where she served for 39 years as media center coordinator at Little River Elementary School. She now serves as one of the seven elected members of the Durham Board of Education. She is also a member of St. Mark A.M.E. Zion Church and a longtime leader in the Durham Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority. Omega is a graduate of Hillside High School with bachelors and masters degrees from North Carolina Central University.

Priscilla, Anthony, and Omega join our veteran board members in representing the 5 pillars of Student U.: Durham Public Schools, Durham Academy, North Carolina Central University, UNC-Chapel Hill, and Duke University.

We all know that Duke and Carolina are occasionally antagonistic. We know that private schools like Durham Academy and public systems like DPS are supposed to be competitive and oppositional. We have heard -- particularly from the national press in recent years - that Duke and North Carolina Central University serve opposite spheres in Durham.

But Student U. is helping to prove that none of this is true. Our shared goals, to lift up young people, to improve their lives and the collective life of this region, transcend the differences in our institutions.

My Board colleagues can speak for the universities, and at the end of the program you'll hear from the Chair of the Board of Durham Public Schools, but I can say unequivocally that Student U. is not simply an extra program at Durham Academy. At the core of our mission as a school, at the center of our strategic planning, and in the hearts of our faculty and students is a profound commitment to connect more fully with our city, to share the resources that we have, to steer our most talented graduates toward education and other careers for the public good.

Student U. is already bridging the gaps that have existed in Durham for decades. Who would have thought that the first check written to Durham Academy for Student U. would come from a Board Member of the Public Schools. (Thank you, Steve Schewel!). Who would have thought that Duke University would be paying its students from all around the country to spend their summers working 80-hour weeks in Durham (Thank you, Duke Engage). Who would have thought that a grad student from North Carolina Central University would be among those leading 100 Durham Academy 11th graders on a Civil Rights Bus Tour of Atlanta, Selma, Birmingham, Montgomery, and Memphis? (Thank you, Jamie Bennett). Who would have thought that Tar Heels and Eagles and Devils and Cavaliers would all come together so that 50, then 100, then 150, then who knows how many middle schoolers will change college from a distant and perhaps doubtful dream into an unavoidable and exciting reality?

Thanks to all of you, for all you've done already to support Student U. and its public-private collaboration. And thanks for all you will do to take this good idea turned great program into something truly transformative for our graduates, our students, our institutions, and our city.

Now, some might say that Student U. is just a drop in the bucket. Why should a school system with 33,000 students care about a little bitty program that serves just 100 or 150 of them? I think the answer will, in the course of the morning, become clear. Student U. is a program that changes individual lives radically, altering the trajectories of middle schoolers and revolutionizing the vision of college students. But it's also sending ripples already into the broader system - linking Durham Academy and the universities more fully with the rest of Durham, opening doors to public school teaching for our most talented college graduates, and best of all, sending super-charged Student U. alums into their Middle Schools and into the work force with high expectations for what a school can be and how an individual can change the world.