Last week we posted Heather Mac Donald's criticism of an off-beat student project at Phillips Andover Academy on"The Perversion of the American Dream: Deconstructing Media Portrayals of Sex Workers through Analysis and Real Narratives." The student, Nikita Singareddy, writing on Facebook, protested the article and Heather Mac Donald responds here.
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Nikita Singareddy: Normally, I wouldn't respond to something so baseless and personally attacking, but I only ask that in the future Heather or any other writer actually reads my paper or attends my presentation before condemning it as some type of moronic vitriol. My family is personally connected to the topic at hand - so for "Minding the Campus" to claim my CAMD work (Community & Multicultural Development) was to attend my dream school is belittling and frankly disgusting. The sheer disgust for Andover and other such secondary institutions in this article, too, is almost sad. Andover commits itself to diversity and multiculturalism in all realms; it has opened doors for thousands of scholarship students like myself (with a need-blind policy) and adopts a pedagogy where students are encouraged to explore that which interests them and affects society at large. Not only do you not know anything about my research and clearly nothing about Andover, you don't know anything about me.
Heather Mac Donald: Ms. Singareddy reads my
article as a personal attack. My
dispute is with Andover, not with her, but it is completely understandable that
she would feel implicated by my criticism of her "Deconstructing Media
Portrayals of Sex Workers" project, and I am sorry for that. I by no means meant to suggest that she
chose the topic in order to boost her college admissions chances or that she
approached the subject with anything other than sincere interest, and I should
have made that clear. Nevertheless
it is the case that such a theme, so
perfectly in sync with current university culture, will jump off the page of an
applicant's file in any college admissions office.
To a teenager,
studying how pop culture silences prostitutes' "voices" may seem like an
important pursuit. I myself might
have been attracted to such an inquiry, given my own susceptibilities in
college to the allure of allegedly cutting-edge theory. An educator, however, should know
better--at least one who appreciates how vast is the universe of vital knowledge
and how little the time to expose students to it. Perhaps if a student had so nailed the basic facts of
American history that his head could not hold any more, was well on his way to
mastering at least one foreign language, had a solid mental map of the broad
movement of civilization and of world geography, had read key monuments of
Western literature, and could explain how cells replicate themselves, how
animals adapt to their environment, and what Newton's laws of motion are, then one might talk about whether there
was value in a "hookers in TV and movies" project. Otherwise, however, it is so far down the list of appropriate
objects of high-school study as to not even register. As for the over-rated "critical-thinking skills" that are
often invoked to justify such "unmask the -ism" media analysis projects, they
can be much more productively learned by writing a term paper on the causes and
effects of the Thirty Years War.
The real purpose of such a topic, of course, is to jumpstart a student's entry into the Gender Studies worldview awaiting him in college. And it is here where Andover and other elite prep schools are missing a vital opportunity. I do not regret that my Andover literature classes did not expose me to the deconstructive theory that would consume me at Yale. I would, alas, be wallowing in Jacques Derrida and Paul de Man, the precursors of today's narcissism studies, soon enough. I do deeply regret that as an Abbot student joining the newly coeducational Phillips Academy in 1973, I was grandfathered out of Andover's legendary American history course. Thanks to my own ignorance, it proved my last real opportunity to learn American history at the feet of a master teacher. Yale did not have the curricular courage to impose a serious history requirement on its students, and I was too clueless to take advantage of Yale's history faculty on my own.
Likewise today, high-school students of Ms. Singareddy's
generation will be exposed to Luce Irigaray and Peggy McIntosh soon
enough. Immersion in the claim
that females and certain minorities are the subject of unending oppression is the
only constant in today's college curriculum. It is even more uncertain than in the 1970s, however, that after
high school, students will ever again encounter the nonpolitical study of history
and classical literature. While Andover's
students undoubtedly spend much of their time in foundational courses, putting
today's shallow resentment theory on a par with the loving pursuit of core
knowledge does them a disservice. Prep
schools should seize their chance to preserve humanistic learning, rather than
ape the superficial social justice posturing of the academy.


Comments (2)
She was an Abbot who came to Phillips after the merger. She chose the wrong presentation and paper to avail herself to. Instead of picking on Nikita she should have read, "How Abbot Was Lost: How the 1973 Merger with Phillips Academy Became a Takeover". She seems to be taking out her disdain for Phillips Academy on a student who does not deserve her wrath. She has a problem with Phillips, not Andover. If only she knew!
Posted by Chelle Eerrum | January 24, 2013 7:32 AM
Posted on January 24, 2013 07:32
"An educator, however, should know better--at least one who appreciates how vast is the universe of vital knowledge and how little the time to expose students to it." I'm an educator. I disagree that every one of the topics MacDonald calls vital (e.g., "solid mental map of the broad movement of civilization") is vital. Nor does MacDonald make clear that the student involved had not mastered those topics. I believe educators should grasp (a) the purpose of education is not to create replicas of the people in charge of it and (b) the more a student is allowed to choose what to learn, the more they learn. In this particular case, Mac Donald seems to want to have all Andover students learn the same things. The world needs many different sorts of people. By encouraging diversity of what is learned, we help create them.
Posted by Seth Roberts | January 24, 2013 3:06 PM
Posted on January 24, 2013 15:06