Archive for the ‘Quotes’ Category

Working inside the system

Saturday, March 8th, 2008
This is the big debate in education philanthropy right now.
There are two camps: the “fix the system” people and the “replace
the system” people. There are philanthropists who only want to help the
system get better, and they only invest through public-school districts. And
then there is a group of philanthropists who don’t believe the system
can be fixed or should be fixed, and they only invest in alternatives to the
system, like voucher programs or charter schools. There are a few, like the
Gates Foundation, that attempt to be a bridge. When I was at Gates, our belief
was that if your long-term goal is to provide quality schools for all kids,
then you have to do both. One of our main educational initiatives was to start
new small high schools. It was mostly an outsider approach, and it was pretty
successful. Of the 1,200 new schools, 80 percent of them are going to be good
to very good. That’s a high rate of success. But we only reached, with
those schools, 3 percent or 4 percent of American high-school students. You
look at that and you say: “O.K., that was a good investment. It’s
going to stick; it has lots of sustainability — but it won’t grow
to scale fast enough.” If you want to make a real impact, you have to
work inside the system, too.

Vander Ark lays this out in a group interview on how to make the biggest difference in education philanthropy, but that basic dictum applies in all sorts of other fields too. If you want to instigate political change within the United State, you’re far better served by pushing for it within one of the two major parties than to start or support a third-party that’ll likely never win any significant elections. Institutions often survive out of their skill at self-preservation, not necessarily their skill at intended tasks. And the ones that have been around for long enough are very good at it. Within the myriad, intertwining narratives of The Wire is a constant insistence that this is the way institutions perpetuate themselves, and that any institution will eventually turn against those whom it serves. Any reform has to be predicated upon accepting that fact, and Mr. Ark does just that.

Footnotes… of the FUTURE!

Sunday, November 4th, 2007

“Google’s famous search algorithm emulates the principle of scholarly citation—counting up and evaluating earlier links in order to steer users toward the source that others have already found helpful. In a sense, the system resembles nothing more than trillions of old-fashioned footnotes”
Anthony Grafton on the digitization of books in The New Yorker

Ron Paul in Time Magazine

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

“Representative Tom Tancredo, another long-shot GOP candidate, tells me that after a debate in New Hampshire, one of his staffers walked up to a guy in a shark costume and asked him if he was a Ron Paul supporter. ‘No. They’re all nuts,’ replied the shark. ‘I’m just a guy in a shark suit.’”
Time Magazine

Random quote from my Philosophy homework

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

“‘Esoteric morality’ is a contradiction in terms.”
Kurt Baier

Study Room Scratchings

Thursday, November 1st, 2007

“please let me OUT”
Message scratched into the table of the study room I’m working in right now

Screens, large and small

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

“If newspapers are windows onto the world, what are the consequences of shrinking that window to the size of an ipod screen?”
Ben Vershbow on The Institute for the Future of the Book’s blog

College Students on Ninjas

Monday, October 8th, 2007

“I feel like a ninja because I don’t make as much noise when I walk.”
Some resident walking by the Boyd Hall front desk

Politicians in Washington

Sunday, October 7th, 2007

“There are people who want to be in Washington, and there are people who want to do in Washington. Sadly the former vastly outnumber the latter.”
A friend of Samantha Powers

cLOUDEAD’s Ten album quote

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007

“Are all your cells in agreement?”cLOUDDEAD on “The Teen Keen Skip”

Umberto Eco on Libraries

Saturday, September 29th, 2007

“We have invented libraries because we know that we do not have divine powers, but we try to do our best to imitate them.”
Umberto Eco