The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September 9, 2011 - 5A The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Friday, September 9, 2011 - 5A DUNCAN From Page 1A makes an enormous difference on kids' opportunities," she said in an interview after the event. "As Arne said, this is the civil rights issue of our time, and I really think he's right about that." The panel, also including School of Education Profs. David Cohen, Annemarie Palincsar and Rob Sellers and Associate Profs. Peter Bahr, Bob Bain, focused on a variety of issues in the realm of education reform. The pan- elists discussed the challenges of working with aging teachers wary of new federal standards, how to address the needs of under-performing schools and the need to increase the pres- ence of minority teachers in classrooms. The panel also highlighted the need to prepare a new generation of teachers for the challenges of teaching in low-performing schools in diverse communities. Duncan, in particular, stressed the need of acclimating a new crop of teachers to challenges in today's classrooms. "We have a new generation of teachers who are going to come in and fill about a million jobs of teachers about to retire, and we have to do a much better job of preparing them to be successful from day one," Duncan said. Peter Cunningham, assistant secretary for communications and outreach at the U.S. Depart- ment of Education, also stressed in an interview with the Daily that improvements in education start with preparing teachers. "This is a region of the coun- try that has struggled some but also has tremendous potential, and a lot of that potential is in our classrooms," Cunningham said. "We think that we need to do a better job of training teach- ers, and that really falls on the colleges and universities around the country that have schools of education to step up and do a better job preparing teachers to teach in classrooms." He continued: "We want to make sure that our young people reach their full potential and have every opportunity to suc- ceed." The panelists also discussed the role ofeducationprograms in ensuring new teachers' success in the classroom. The panelists stressed that classroom experi- ence alone - through programs such as Teach for America - doesn't always give teachers the complete skill set they need. In an interview with the Daily after the event, Ball highlighted the large number of University graduates who participate in the Teach for America program. In 2010, the University sent the sec- ond-most number of graduates into the teaching corps with 79 participants, according to Teach for America data. However, Ball said it would be beneficial for these students to have formal teacher training before starting in the classroom. "The University of Michi- gan has an amazing number of undergraduates who are very in touch with improving education, and they're so socially commit- ted," Ball said. "But one of the things I would like to invite more undergraduates to learn about is what it would mean to be skillful enough to work in an urban com- munity well, even if it's just for a couple of years. "(The University has) sent a ton of people to Teach for Amer- ica, and an alternative would be to come here (to the School of Education) and become very skilled so that you're really ready to work in those communities." GUPTA From Page 1A energetic pace and greeted a fel- low Wolverine he'd never met before like an old friend. He welcomed me in his cor- ner office overlooking Centen- nial Olympic Park, where giant steel torches remind tourists that Atlanta hosted the 1996 Summer Olympics. Though it was the mid- dle of June, grey clouds spanned the sky and threatened rain. At first, Gupta's mood reflected the odd summer weather as he told me about the segment he just finished about his longtime friend who was losing a battle with life. But as the subject turned to Michigan and the days he spent as a resident advisor in West Quad, the smile that got him named one of Peo- ple's "Sexiest Men Alive" made an appearance. It's also that smile that greets American Morningviewers at 7:30 a.m. to warn of the health risks of cell phones or announce ground- breaking medical discoveries like the cause of Lou Gerhig's disease. It's the smile that greets patients with life-threatening tumors to let them know they're going to be OK. And it's the smile that ignited after Michigan football games, when the Wolverines creamed Ohio State and Ann Arbor erupted in celebration. And it's that smile Gupta wore as he proudly talked of his college days: "I was pretty true blue. It would have taken a lot to get me not to go to Michigan." Gupta attended the University of Michigan starting in 1986. He remained there the next seven years as part of Inteflex - a now defunct program that combined pre-med and medical school and accepted students straight out of high school. While Gupta applied to several universities, he grew up watching Michigan sports with his dad, an alum, and fell in love with Ann Arbor at an early age. "I was pretty confident I want- ed to go there when I was in grade school," he said. At the University, he had men- tors like Karin Muraszko, current chair of the Department of Neu- rosurgery, neurosurgeon Greg Thompson and Julian Hoff, the chair of the neurosurgery depart- ment at the time, who Gupta con- sidered not only a role model, but a father figure. It was these surgeons, and many others, who trained the man Forbes would name one of "the most influential celebrities" in 2011. As a teen, Gupta suffered a significant head injury that was treated at the University Hospital. People mistakenly assume that sparked his decision to enter a career in neurosurgery. But Gupta originally wanted to be a pediatrician. That changed when his grandfather had a stroke during his third year in Medical School. Gupta came to know his grandfather's neurosurgeons who took time to answer questions the curious student posed about their field. "I thought the idea that you're working on a part of the body that is constantly changing in terms of what we know about it would make it a very-dynamic field, that every operation was different in some way - I thought that was exciting," Gupta said. Fast forward to today, and Gupta suits up in scrubs at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, but not as the full-time neurosurgeon he thought he would be. On a pie chart of his career, the circle is split half medicine and half media. So how did a neurosurgeon come to win an Emmy for Out- standing Feature Story, a Health Communications Achievement Award from the American Medi- cal Association and title of "Jour- nalist of the Year?" You could say it was all about timing - and meet- ing the right people. His journalism career kicked off at The Michigan Daily where he wrote opinion pieces about public health policies. After grad- uation, Gupta continued to write on the subject for local newspa- pers and small magazines. He also collaborated with other writers on a series of 14 articles on health policy for The Economist. In 1997, he worked in Washington D.C. as a White House Fellow and wrote health care speeches for then First Lady Hillary Clinton. Gupta described the experience as "quite daunting," but can now laugh about the times he present- ed speeches to Clinton after sleep- less nights filled with writing, checking grammar and checking it again. "She would sit there reading it with you, and you would be there reading her face - does she like it, does she hate it, is she going to yell at me?" said Gupta, only half joking. While trying to win approval from the First Lady, Gupta met CNN chair and CEO Tom John- son, who was trying to start a medical unit at CNN. This was the late 90s, when newspapers and magazines covered health news well, but television didn't, Gupta explained. Johnson wanted to change that by hiring Gupta. "I had really no idea frankly what he was talking about or how I would help because I didn't understand it," Gupta said. So he turned the offer down. In2001, Gupta ran into Johnson again. Johnson gave him a tour of the CNN newsroom that Gupta saw as a "really inspiring place filled with a lot of curious people." His own curious nature won him over, and Gupta accepted the job,thinkinghe would coverhealth policy. Six weeks later two planes struck the World Trade Center. Gupta was called to the scene where he reported from New York and later led breakingnews on the dangers of anthrax. He then covered the War in Iraq. Haiti earthquake. Pakistan floods. Japan tsunami. Somalia famine. "I evolved into this global health reporter as a result of what was happening in the world at the time," Gupta explained. CNN's senior medical cor- respondent Elizabeth Cohen described Gupta's reporting amid war zones and natural disasters as "nothingshort of outstanding." "He's fearless, yet tells people's stories so tenderly," Cohen wrote in an e-mail interview. "He gets right to the heart of what's hap- pening in that region." With each deadly disaster, Gupta redefined health coverage and set the standard for medical reporting - mostly because no doctor had done it before. "There was no sort of rule book for this ... there was no sort of prac- ticing surgeon who was on a 24 hour news network," Gupta said. Somehow, the neurosurgeon- journalisthybrid makes it all work. In the mornings and afternoons he's on air. Every Thursday he sees patients. Every Monday he's in the operating room - regardless of breaking news. Instead of abandoning a patient when the earthquake and tsunami struck Japan in March, Gupta took a flight on a Tuesday. "No one is going to die frankly if I'm not there 24 hours earlier," he said. "Everyone (at CNN) sort of gets that." Dr. Dan Barrow, chair of the department of neurosurgery at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, hired Gupta for a part- time position at Grady Memorial Hospital after the chair of CNN called him up one day and asked for a favor - to hire a man who wouldn't accept a CNN job if it meant giving up medicine. Barrow had met Gupta when he was a White House Fellow, and the two kept in touch throughout the years. When Barrow heard it was Gupta he was asked to hire, he didn't have to think twice. Sitting in his office at 8 a.m. one Friday in July, clad in greenish- grey scrubs, Barrow explained how his colleague has a "remark- able ability to step out of the CNN Dr. Gupta and step into the role as the Emory physician Dr. Gupta very readily." "(He can) turn the switch and go frombeing ahardcore investigative reporter asking tough questions of people, to being avery compassion- ate physician," Barrow said. Barrow also joked that Gupta has secretly figured out a way to not have to sleep. Gupta is one of two neurosur- geons at Grady, a hospital which covers the cost of patients from Fulton and DeKalb counties in Georgia who don't have the means to pay for medical care. Because he sees drop-in and trauma patients in a clinic setting, Gupta isn't obligat- ed to see patients regularlylike the 20 neurosurgeons at Emory Hos- pital. Barrow has also let him slide on taking emergency calls at night since he has to be on air before 8 a.m. for America Morning. "We've made accommodations for him very willingly because he is an asset to the department in many many ways," Barrow said. Gupta mostly attends to injuries and accidents, and he's never short of patients. "I get a lot of referrals because people are like, 'I want to see that guy. I see him on TV,' which is kind of silly," Gupta said. "I say, you know, 'just because I'm on TV, doesn't make me good.' I mean, I think I'm good, but it's not because I'm on TV." Muraszko, one of Gupta's men- tors from the University Hospital, says she's proud of what Gupta has done with his career but thinks it's tough for him to "live in two worlds." "He's in a very unique set of circumstances in that he ... tries to make sure that he stays valid as a neurosurgeon and not just be totally a health science reporter," she said. Atthisstageinhiscareer, Gupta has made neurosurgery a priority. It's a decision that became evident when he turned down President Barack Obama's offer in 2009 to be the U.S. Surgeon General. While sitting on a couch next to the upper body of a human skel- eton, Gupta confidently explained that he made the right decision. "Everybody who knows me knows I don't live in the world of regrets or second guessing," he said. If he had taken the job at age 39, he would have had to give up prac- ticing medicine during the four- year term. "It's a bit ironic that the surgeon general can't practice surgery," he admitted. Barrow was duck hunting with his father at 6 a.m. during the Thanksgiving holiday when his cell phone rang, and Gupta's name flashed on the screen. Barrow thought there was an emergency, but was pleasantly surprised when Gupta confidentially told him about his nomination and sought advice on what to do. "I was very torn because obvi- ously I thought he would do a great job... on the other hand, I selfishly didn't wanthim to leave," Barrow said. As the news started to spread, Barrow said he was amazed by the number of people and politicians who criticized Gupta as a can- didate. He pointed to Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) specifically who wrote aletter to fellow House Democrats, urging them to oppose Obama's nomination. "Clearly, it is not in the best interests of the nation to have someone like this who lacks the requisite experience needed to oversee the federal agency that provides crucial health care assis- tance to some of the poorest and most underserved communities in America," Conyers wrote. Even today, Barrow has trouble bottling his anger over the accusa- tion. "His comment that this guy 'isn't really a doctor' troubled me and made me realize that people probably just think that Sanjay spends all of his time at CNN," Barrow said. Barrow told one reporter who called him for a quote that "Mr. Conyers ought to do his homework before he makes comments like that" and that "Sanjay not only is a real doctor who practices, but he happens to practice in an indigent care 1,000 bedhospital." "He takes care of people that have all the issues and the prob- lems that our next president is going to have to face ... If anybody is in a position to understand what those needs areit's SanjayGupta," said Barrow, waving his arms behind his rich wooden desk. "This is what he does everyday of his life, he's not working in some country club hospital." Ultimately, Gupta came to a decision. By the time the term ended, he would be too removed from the evolving field of neuro- surgery to step back in the oper- ating room. Plus, he had a wife - who he met at Palio on Main Street where she waitressed -two young daughters and one more on the way at the time. , At age 41, Gupta recognizes he's still young, and there will be more chances to work in public service in the future. For now, his career and fam- ily are all that matter. And when there's time, the former Men's Glee Club member likes to visit a "special place" he calls Ann Arbor. In his previous visits, he gave the 2009 Medical School commence- ment address and conducted the last interview with euthanasia activist Dr. Jack Kevorkian before he died in June. His next return isn't work- related. The self-proclaimed "true blue" Wolverine made sure to buy tickets months in advance to the first ever football night game against Notre Dame. As he sat in his CNN office - as pristine as an OR -Gupta explained that when people look back on their life, they think of moments. If they're asked what happened in 2009, they may think of one moment from that year. The point, he said, is when you're hav- ing a moment, make it count. "Make it something that you will talk about 15, 20 years from now," he said. "I'm reminded of that because I'm really excited about going to this football game. I think it's going to be one of those moments I will remember from 2011. That moment. Memorable moments. That's how you look at your life." ABROAD From Page 1A sources and men's sexual practices and whether there were shortcom- ings in the sex education system that could lead to sexual health problems later in life. The most significant part of the trip, he said, was forming relation- ships despite the language barrier. "I would say, probably the big- gest (take away) would be the uni- versality of a smile," he said. "I don't know - there's something about it. People, when they travel, usually note that people are not as engaging, and I stuck out like a sore thumb in India, and I did get a lot of stares, but those occasional smiles did make a huge difference." While LSA junior Gallal Obeid did a little traveling around Europe this summer, he spent most of his time working at the Acole Poly- technique Federale de Lausanne in Switzerland, where he researched Parkinson's disease. "I've never learned so much in so little time," Obeid said. "I really wished I could stay longer." Like Hakim, Obeid said one of the main benefits of his time abroad was learning about a dif- ferent culture first hand. And he said he plans to return to Switzer- land next summer to continue his research. "I was really worried about the cultural boundaries and being alone," he said. "But I learned that wherever you go, if the people there are the ones that make the trip, the people make the journey and you really learn from them. They really made the experience worth it." LSA junior Mel Hebeisen's trav- els this summer involved a trip to Indonesia through the Univer- sity's Global Intercultural Experi- ence for Undergraduates program. Hebeisen's group researched the preservation of traditional Indo- nesian culture, which she said is being eroded by tourism. Hebeisen said she chose the program because she wanted to be immersed in an unfamiliar culture while experiencing the comfort and safety of traveling with Uni- versity students. "I chose Indonesia because I knew I'd probably never have a chance to go to Southeast Asia, and it was a culture that I really wasn't familiar with at all," she said. Hebeisen added that her favor- ite part of the journey was living with her homestay family because her experiences during that time allowed her to truly learn about life in Indonesia. "You got to see how a family functions, and you got really close to the parents and the siblings and you could kind of tell them about what the U.S. was like and they would tell you what their life was like ... which was really awesome," she said. Hebeisen added that along with the knowledge about Indonesian NGOs and their efforts to preserve traditional culture, her time abroad instilled in her two new ideas: the need to reduce stress in her life and to learn more about people. "We're so scheduled and every- thing is so intense and competi- tive, and it made me kind of step back and realize how stressful my life is and how I can change that," she said. "I learned how important it is to get to know people around you and how important it is to ask people questions about their life and really not just talk about sur- face things - talk about things that are important to people - because then you really get to know who they are." LSA junior Alexander Lud- wig also spent time this summer engaging in community outreach. Ludwig spent two weeks working with the Honduras Medical Bri- gade, which organized a medical mission trip. During the first week, partici- pants went to a preschool, helped open a free clinic and distributed health and hygiene samples to patients. The second week was spent providing basic necessities for local homes. "We helped them build a bath- room, a water storage system, a stove, and then we also cemented their floors so that they wouldn't get a deadly virus that people get in Honduras from walking barefoot on the ground," Ludwig said. Not only did the trip increase Ludwig's determination to go into the medical field, but it also forced him to reconsider his priorities. "The biggest life lesson I learned was to really appreciate the loved ones that you have, because the people of Honduras only really had their loved ones. They didn't have any materialistic items like we do," he said. "They just have the love of each other, and here in America we have been clouded by material things, and we sometimes forget about those closest to us." WANT TO WRITE FOR THE DAILY? Come to one of the Daily's mass meetings at 7:30 p.m. at the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard St. MONDAY, SEPT.12 TUESDAY, SEPT.13 SUNDAY, SEPT.18 TUESDAY, SEPT. 20