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Colin Steele graduated from Georgetown's School of Foreign Service in 2012 and earned the Religion, Ethics, and World Affairs certificate. In 2010-2011, Colin participated in the Berkley Center's...
Where do young people come down on questions of faith, values, and public life? How do they relate their values to public policy issues including education, economic inequality, and the environment? These questions, critically important for the 2012 election, are at the center of a campus conversation being organized by the Berkley Center and Georgetown University. This blog features an ongoing conversation about these issues between students selected as Millennial Values Fellows through a national competition. You can read and comment on their blogs here.
To learn more about the project, visit the Campus Conversation on Values page.
OTHER POSTS
Millennials on Social Media and Politics
November 15, 2012
Millennials on Social Issues and Diversity
November 12, 2012
Hira Baig (Rice) on Why the Presidential Election Matters to Millennials
November 7, 2012
Millennials on Religion and Interfaith Work
November 7, 2012
Ryan Price (Drake) on E Pluribus Duo
November 6, 2012
Mohammad Usman (DePauw) on Unpredictable Millennials
November 5, 2012
Millennials on Affirmative Action Policy
November 3, 2012
Seth Warner (Vassar) on What Happens as the "God Gap" Widens
November 2, 2012
Josina De Raadt (Dordt) on How Social Media Is Like Wii Bowling
October 31, 2012
Zachary Yentzer (Arizona State) on the Next Greatest Generation
October 29, 2012
Brice Ezell (George Fox) on Post-Racial America? Race, Millennials, and the 2012 Election
October 25, 2012
Tyler Bishop (Vanderbilt) on a Future of Hashtags #whatitmeansforus
October 23, 2012
Brice Ezell (George Fox) on How the People Can Heal a “Divided,” Partisan Nation
October 4, 2012
Hira Baig (Rice) on Religion and American Democracy
October 4, 2012
Tyler Bishop (Vanderbilt) on How It’s All About Relatability: Voter Turnout
October 3, 2012
Josina De Raadt (Dordt) on Mistaking Politics for a Hollywood Blockbuster
October 2, 2012
Mohammad Usman (DePauw) on the Internet Solution
October 1, 2012
>> more
AT THE CENTER
EVENTS (69)
Education and Social Justice International Summer Research Fellowships 2011 Report Launch
February 15, 2012
February 15, 2012
PUBLICATIONS (36)
The Education and Social Justice Project: International Summer Research Fellowships 2010
January 26, 2011
January 26, 2011
The Education and Social Justice Project: International Summer Research Fellowships 2011
February 6, 2012
February 6, 2012
INTERVIEWS (402)
LETTERS (291)
POSTS (57)
RELATED RESOURCES: EDUCATION
Colin Steele (Georgetown) on Educational Opportunity
March 20, 2012
Educational opportunity is the key to success not only in the United States, but for the United States. While the quantity and quality of one’s education will no doubt differ by circumstance and specialty, what seems incontrovertible is that at least some post-secondary education will be a requirement of 21st-century life. College – from community college for basic computer literacy to brand-name colleges and universities – really is the new high school.
But high school – not to mention college – is predicated on successful primary schooling (and optimally pre-schooling as well). And that is not something that can be taken for granted in many parts of this country. Spending an hour in a New Orleans elementary school on the last morning of my Alternative Spring Break trip was evidence enough of that: after reading with a classroom full of first-graders for about 45 minutes, we spoke to their teacher, a 2011 Georgetown graduate and current Teach For America corps member. As adorable as his students were, by age seven or eight most were already well behind grade level; some read about a half-dozen words per minute when the national standard for first grade is 40. The school had received a score of 60 out of 200 on New Orleans’s city-wide public school performance test, in which a score between 80 and 100 means that most students from a given primary school go on to high school.
In the face of such failure, this country has tended to take one of two views: either someone is to blame (we can argue about whom), or the “system” is at fault (we can argue about which) and expectations should be revised downward.
Both of these analyses are easy ways out, and both are dangerously wrong. We can’t blame our way out of a bad situation, and we certainly should not admit defeat by re-drawing baselines. Either of these approaches reduces to the willful abandonment of a significant slice of the population by attempting to “disappear” it beneath the veneer of perpetual growth and hoping no one notices.
This cannot work. The resource of the 21st Century will not be mineral or petrochemical, but human. The very shift in the use of natural resources that will be demanded by virtue of scarcity and side effects in this century will itself demand tremendous human ingenuity to cope with. If the United States does not make a sufficient and sustained commitment to its students (at all levels of education), the “system” of failing schools, the invisibility of poverty, and class immobility will ossify. If we accept that outcome, we will have no one to blame but ourselves.
In the face of such failure, this country has tended to take one of two views: either someone is to blame (we can argue about whom), or the “system” is at fault (we can argue about which) and expectations should be revised downward.
Both of these analyses are easy ways out, and both are dangerously wrong. We can’t blame our way out of a bad situation, and we certainly should not admit defeat by re-drawing baselines. Either of these approaches reduces to the willful abandonment of a significant slice of the population by attempting to “disappear” it beneath the veneer of perpetual growth and hoping no one notices.
This cannot work. The resource of the 21st Century will not be mineral or petrochemical, but human. The very shift in the use of natural resources that will be demanded by virtue of scarcity and side effects in this century will itself demand tremendous human ingenuity to cope with. If the United States does not make a sufficient and sustained commitment to its students (at all levels of education), the “system” of failing schools, the invisibility of poverty, and class immobility will ossify. If we accept that outcome, we will have no one to blame but ourselves.