HGSE Introduces Urban Scholars Fellowship
Andrew
Weiss was walking in the halls of his Miami middle school among hundreds
of preteens rushing to class when Harvard Graduate School of Education
dean Kathleen McCartney called to let him know he was an Urban Scholar
Fellow. Mortified by all the background noise, he told her he would
call her back.
Once he reached his classroom, he needed to get his students to cooperate
while he returned the call. "We all celebrated for a minute, then
I begged them to quietly do some Internet research on Henry the Navigator,"
Weiss says. "I have never had a room so silent in my entire life.
It was amazing."
Weiss is one of nine HGSE students who received the call from McCartney
awarding the new Urban Scholar Fellowship, a program that provides tuition
and health insurance fees for selected educators from urban school systems.
For many of the students awarded the fellowship, graduate school--especially
at HGSE--wouldn't be an option without the fellowship. It
is a reality of education that it is increasingly difficult for educators
to finance their own continuing education.
"We want to provide a reward to people who have worked in urban
public schools, which we view as an important public service to this
nation," McCartney says. "We believe that this fellowship
will provide an incentive for people to return to urban public schools
in leadership roles."
During her year as acting dean, McCartney first began thinking about
creating a prestigious fellowship for educators in urban school systems.
The program builds off of the success of Harvard's Zuckerman and
Reynolds fellowships which offers tuition and a stipend for selected
students attending the Ed School, the School of Public Health, and the
Kennedy School of Government.
According to Jim Stiles, associate dean for degree programs, HGSE's
leadership team believed it was important to create a prestigious fellowship
to encourage the best students to come to the Ed School--and return
to their urban school systems--without a financial burden hanging
over their heads.
"In a way this fellowship is a challenge to us, our friends,
and supporters of the school," Stiles says. "Educators working
in public schools in urban systems are helping children already. Their
salaries barely cover living expenses, much less create savings to go
back for more education. If they want to go back to school and advance
professionally, they have to borrow money which they then have to pay
back in loans. So, we wanted them to get everything they could out of
Harvard, but also be able to return to the work they love unburdened
by heavy loan payments."
The Urban Scholars program is part of a larger effort at the Ed School
to provide additional financial aid to master's and doctoral students.
This year 10 percent of master's students will be receiving support
from targeted fellowships such as the Urban Scholars program. "This
is something that has been improving over time and hitting the 10 percent
mark is a milestone for us," says Mohan Boodram, associate dean
for enrollment and student services. "We are working diligently
to sustain the progress we have made and expand these kinds of opportunities
for our students."
Funding for the Urban Scholar Fellowship comes from a new unrestricted
endowment designated by McCartney for this purpose.
"Harvard College has a tradition of funding the full needs of
students and we [HGSE] aspire to do that too," Stiles says. "The
Ed School's financial situation has operated in a different paradigm.
This is our way of beginning to change the paradigm. We want to make
our education affordable for all students, and this is a first step
towards that goal. We need to challenge ourselves and others who care
about education to provide better access."
The selection process was rigorous. Each of the 13 master's admission
committees reviewed their top candidates and nominated students based
on their experience, background, test scores, academics, and engagement
with problems facing urban education. Finally, an Urban Scholar selection
committee comprised of faculty, admission and financial aid staff, and
two of HGSE's associate deans selected the final nine students.
"I can't underestimate the power of telling a teacher you
can take a year off," says Matthew Welch, Urban Scholar. "What
this program makes possible is for you to stop teaching and do this."
Marilyn Hylton agrees. She says she is thrilled to see HGSE doing something
to help urban educators rather than seeing urban schools as hopeless.
Throughout the year, the nine urban fellows will have monthly meetings
under the guidance of Stiles and John Collins, HGSE head librarian.
These meetings will provide the students with information from researchers
and practitioners in the Boston area who focus on issues facing urban
educators. In addition, the students will also get behind the scenes
opportunities at the university on a wide range of issues, such as how
geographical information systems are being used in scientific research
on urban education and where to find hidden secrets in the university
library or museums. Ultimately, these sessions are to engage the students
with each other and practitioners from across the country.
Many of these Urban Scholars are teachers who set out to work in urban
settings, which they say are stereotyped with negative images portrayed
throughout the media and country. These teachers are fighting the perceptions
of urban schools, which they say are depicted as having nothing going
on, parents that don't care, poor teaching, and apathetic students.
But that, they argue, is really the exception to the rule.
"There is a non-monolithic picture of what an urban school is,"
Hylton says. "There is so much there--potential and pitfalls."
As for the future of urban education, these scholars hope to take back
the lessons they learn at HGSE and bring them to their schools. Ultimately,
they view their opportunity at HGSE as an opportunity for all the students,
parents, and teachers back in their respective schools.
"My hope is that all kids have an equal chance regardless of
the zip code they are born in," says Emily Murphy, a member of
the inaugural Urban Scholars class.
Sonya Irving agrees. The goal, she says, is "to have the choice
up the street be just as good as across town--not equal, but equitable."
Image: 2006-07 Urban Scholars, pictured
from left to right: Matthew Welch, Learning and Teaching; Sonya
Irving, School Leadership (Teacher Leader); Kelly Langan, Language and
Literacy (Reading Specialist); Jonathan Chapman, Higher Education; Emily
Murphy, Education Policy and Management; Marilyn Hylton, Teacher Education
(History); Andrew Weiss, Teacher Education (History). Not pictured:
Gina Musumeci, Mind, Brain, and Education; Mayme Hostetter, Mind, Brain, and Education.