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May 25, 2013  |  About the Berkley Center  |  Directions to the Center  |  Subscribe
 
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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


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AT THE CENTER

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Salt of the Earth
October 17, 2008
Pakistan's Quicksand
April 24, 2009

Kate Kelly (UPenn) on Educational Opportunity

Educationalopportunity

March 28, 2012

Picture Jessica, a nine-year-old girl living with her struggling family in the urban neighborhood of West Philadelphia. Jessica’s parents together work four jobs to support a family of five and their oldest daughter often serves as a babysitter for her siblings. She attends a local public school that is, as it has for her entire life, feverishly preparing its students for a statewide standardized test. However dull the reading and math assessment is, the instructors at her school cannot afford to skimp on practice: if the scores fail to adequately improve, the school will be declared failing and funding will again be slashed. Jessica is tired of arriving at school every day only to complete more multiple-choice questions and be sent home with another set. She is not motivated to complete her schoolwork and is intellectually stagnated; after reaching sixteen, she is relieved to formally end her schooling and begin work at a local grocer.
Jessica’s story does not have to end this way, though sadly it does for millions of children across the nation. A different approach to education could have challenged, nurtured, and motivated Jessica to take another approach. A more diverse curriculum could have introduced Jessica to a hidden passion, writing. A well-trained and passionate group of educators could have honed her talent and encouraged her to persevere. Extracurricular activities could have united her peers with similar interests into a poetry club or a school newspaper. A resourceful school could have explored her options and helped her apply to college for journalism or to a training program. Jessica could have graduated from high school with an active mind, tangible goal, and a clear set of skills to help her find a fulfilling career with a guaranteed income.

As long as the second story is the exception rather than the rule, progress in America towards equality will remain paralyzed. The only way to further American society is to ensure every child in the nation has the opportunity to receive a quality and diverse education of some kind, whether it is academic, pre-professional, or skills-based. Higher-level education is not the only path to success, but everyone should be given the choice and the chance to study what he or she wishes from plumbing to Shakespeare. Otherwise, poverty will continue to be systemic and the next generation will find itself woefully unprepared to confront the challenges of the modern world.