4A - Wednesday, January, 18, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 4A - Wednesday, January, 18, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom 4C fiiigan Bat,*1 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan since 1890. 420 Maynard St. y Ann Arbot, MI 48109 tothedaily@michigandaily.com ASHLEY GRIESSHAMMER JOSEPH LICHTERMAN and ANDREW WEINER JOSH HEALY EDITOR IN CHIEF EDITORIAL PAGE EDITORS MANAGING EDITOR Unsigned editorials reflect the official position of the Daily's editorial board. All other signed articles and illustrations represent solely the views of their authors. Imran Syed is the public editor. He can be reached at publiceditor@michigandaily.com. Sustain STEM programs Math and science majors should be promoted Any student who's taken a math or science class at the Univer- sity has grappled with the demands of a rigorous academic schedule. The burden is taking a toll as an increasing num- ber of students who enter college with the intention of majoring in a STEM - science, technology, engineering and math - discipline decide to switch majors. As the United States continues to lag in math and science education, it's important that the University continue to foster a supportive environment for students studying these subjects. Student warning! Do your homework early. Wikipedia protesting bad law on Wednesday!" - Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales tweeted Monday about the Wikipedia blackout today in protest of two anti-piracy bills, the Stop Online Piracy Act and Protect IP. Act. The catch-22 ofpolitics According to a study cited by a Nov. 4 arti- cle in the New York Times, about 40 percent of students who plan on majoring in engi- neering or science switch concentrations or fail to receive a degree. When pre-medical students are taken into account, this number rises to roughly 60 percent. It's encouraging that the Obama admin- istration has made math and science educa- tion a priority. The topic was mentioned in the State of the Union address last January, and last June the president called on univer- sities to produce 10,000 more engineers each year. As the U.S. navigates a more competi- tive global economy, an emphasis on math and science is essential to creating a healthy climate for technological innovation. More students sticking to the pre-medical track could mean better progress toward reducing the projected deficit of 91,500 phy- sicians by 2020, according to the Associa- tion of American Medical Colleges.w Action is better than rhetoric - Obama should set forward substantive policy initiatives that directly address shortcomings in college- level math and science education. The University should also address the issue. As a first step, tracking the number of students who switch majors would help determine the scope of the problem. Steps to combat attrition could include redesigning lower-level coursework, modifying grading procedures to ease freshmen into math and science learning and expanding tutoring resources available on campus. Though both the University and the federal government are aware of the issue, it must become a focus as the need for students with math and sci- ence backgrounds continues to grow. U pon hiring Washington D.C.'s first chancellor of schools, then-mayor Adrian Fenty was asked by his new- est employee, Michelle Rhee, "How much are you willing to risk?" "Everything," Fenty responded. And that he did. SARAH Fenty, who ROHAN spoke in Blau Auditorium at the Ross School of Business on Mon- day as part of the 26th annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Sym- posium, focused the majority of his speech - as he did his mayoral tenure - on education reform. The issue of education reform is perhaps foreign to students here in the eru- dite halls of the University, but the problemofafailingAmerican school system is real and widespread. Take, for example, the statistics of Fenty's own Washington, D.C. school district. At the time of his inauguration in 2007, reading pro- ficiency among eighth graders was 12 percent. The rate was even lower in math, with students showing an 8 percent proficiency. Washington, D.C.'s scores echoed hundreds of other schools systems across Ameri- ca, but Fenty - as mayor of a district with the worst scores in the nation - was unwilling to perpetuate the pitiful statistics. Fenty looked to the radically dif- ferent school models New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and for- mer Chicago Mayor Richard Daley employed in their own cities. Fenty felt that the best way to reform D.C.'s schools was to run them "like a pri- vate sector business" as Bloomberg and Daley had done. Consequently, Fenty transferred control of D.C. school systems from an elected school board to himself. In the final steps of transformation in 2007, Fenty hired Michelle Rhee, an inexperienced but determined for- mer teacher, as the school district's chancellor. Throughout Rhee's tenure as chancellor, she closed 23 schools and fired 266 "bad" teachers. Rhee introduced the notion Fenty refers to as "accountability" or the system of "rewarding good teachers and punishing bad teachers." While pub- lic school teachers in D.C. received salary increases based on senior- ity, Rhee wanted to reward teachers with salary increases based on the quality of their instruction, rather than the length of their career. It was a bold move and didn't go unchallenged. In the span of four years, profi- ciency of D.C.'s 8th grade students rose to 15 percent in both areas of reading and math. According to Fenty, the improvements in this short period were greater than any recorded improvement in the pre- ceding 30 years. Despite the greatest educational turn-around in D.C. history, Fenty was not re-elected for a second term. The most unsettling fact about his failed bid for re-election is that the majority of those who voted against him were African Americans, or those who would be the primary beneficiaries of an improved public school system. In trying - and succeeding - to make a radical change, Fenty ended his mayoral candidacy. The idea that marked change risks political backlash is not a new or unknown concept. Consider President Barack Obama, who won the 2008 presi- dential election largely through promises of great change but is now often criticized for being too pas- sive. As frustrating as it may be, can we really blame him? We live in an era where the payoff of employing actual change comes at the expense of a political career. Fenty's situa- tion underscores the great catch-22 of politics - people make a career of politics to bring about change, but once they are put in a position to do just that, they will shy away from anything too drastic so as not to lose Change comes at the expense of a career. their career. As sad as this reality is today, Fenty pointed out that it may not be the reality of tomorrow. Appropri- ately, Fenty quoted from King's "I've Been to The Mountaintop" speech wherein he recalled, "only when it is dark enough, can you see the stars." To also borrow from MLK's final speech, I believe that we have "seen the promised land" in both education reform and more broad- ly, political willingness to employ change thanks to Fenty's efforts. The positive changes that happened in Washington D.C. during Fenty's short tenure as mayor can happen in any arena where change is needed. Our politicians just need to practice a little more "dangerous unselfish- ness," as King would say. - Sarah Rohan can be reached at shrohan@umich.edu. al lure to follow through Maroun needs to allow proper repairs on bridge Matthew Maroun, the owner of the Ambassador Bridge that connects Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, has defraud- ed Michigan taxpayers by failing to follow construction orders from the state. Maroun and his company should meet the obligations set out for them or continue to face legal action. In2009,theMichigan DepartmentofTrans- portation filed a lawsuitcagainst Maroun's com- pany for not completing its part of the Gateway project. The project, which has been in devel- opment since the 1990s, would reduce traffic around the Ambassador Bridge by implement- ing a series of new ramps that connect to local freeways. Instead of completing the project as planned, Maroun diverted bridge traffic past a duty-free gas station and convenience store that he also owns. Maroun was held in con- tempt of court in November and was jailed last week for his failure to finish work on the Gate- way project, as ordered by court. Many of the nation's aging bridges are struc- turally deficient and need to be upgraded in order to meet modern demands. In this case, the state is in a unique position to renovate its infrastructure by sharing costs with the Cana- dian government to improve a critical crossing between Detroit and Ontario. Because of Maroun's actions, improvements to the current bridge, as well as construction on a proposed second bridge, are now in jeop- ardy. His mismanagement of resources hurts the people of Michigan by wasting tax dollars and delaying important improvements to a crossing that Michigan's manufacturing and tourism industries can't operate without. Maroun should face jail time until the Department of Transportation is satisfied with his company's work on the Gateway project. Hear Me Out: Maggie Chang says the student section at Yost Ice Arena is better than the football or basketball crowd. pod u U IGo to michigandaily.com/blogs/The Podium Dr. King's Northern dream EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS: Aida Ali, Kaan Avdan, Ashley Griesshammer, Nirbhay Jain, Jesse Klein, Patrick Maillet, Erika Mayer, Harsha Nahata, Harsha Panduranga, Timothy Rabb, Adrienne Roberts,Vanessa Rychlinski, Sarah Skaluba, Seth Soderborg, Caroline Syms, Andrew Weiner LAURA ARGINTAR fIE In defense of Dell Every time I find a seat and unpack my belongings - namely my laptop - in the Hatcher Graduate Library Reference Room, I can't help but notice that I have the only Dell in a sea of Macs. I don't have a lit up apple to proudly display as I'm hard at work. My com- puter is significantly less sleek and I can never don a cool case that fits my larger, heavier PC. It suddenly feels - for a split second - that I am in high school again. The odd man out whose mother packs her a hearty roast beef sandwich while the rest of the lunchroom sneers with their delicate cheese on white bread. In almost every meeting, every class- room, every table, my Dell is the only thing that separates me from the rest of the group. Growing up with a "techie" father who endorsed only PCs - so much so that when I was 10 years old he had me take apart a com- puter and put it back together again - I have never grown accustomed to Apple products. You'll never see me with an iPhone or Pad or MacBook, and I'll never understand how to even open Safari, let alone use it. My life as a student revolves around a dark navy blue, basic yet durable laptop that sometimes gets viruses and other times shuts down unex- A pectedly and forgets to save. More often than not, I am constantly ques- tioned about my brand choice. "It's weird you don't have a Mac," or "CanI borrow your char- ger?" that I clearly don't have. But at the end of the day, I've been with my same Dell for four years, and I know it better than I know the University campus. I don't stress about keep- ing up with the constantly updated Apple mer- chandise, I don't need all the fancy software like Final Cut or Photoshop. It's almost as if my world is a little simpler when it's just me and my Dell - and that's okay by me. Throughout our four years at college, we embark on a journey to better understand our- selves. A big part of going to school is trying out classes and clubs that may seem foreign to you at first, but eventually, as you gain an interest in the subject, you realize that the club you joined is made up of people with the same interests as your own. In some ways, we all start out as outsiders, yet ultimately find our niche. And maybe, if I'm lucky, these people will also have a Dell that I can share my charger with. Laura Argintar is an LSA senior and a Daily opinion blogger. This is the time of year when we used to watch documen- taries about the civil rights movement of the 1960s in elemen- tary and middle school. Class was set aside for assemblies where an actor read the Rev. Dr. Martin LutherS KingJr.'s "I Have SETH a Dream" speech SODERBORG and the gospel choir sang out in faithful strains. These were the only moments when the school cur- riculum acknowledged that religious communities were at the center of the civil rights struggle. The moviesshowed us an inspiring story of progress. Whether the move- ments began in Montgomery, Ala. in 1954, or in Little Rock, Ark. in 1957, they marched us from one southern city to the next until we arrived with hundreds of thousands of people in Washington, D.C. to watch King tell us of his dream in 1963. My teachers liked to say that the "Dream" speech was made up on the spot. Lastyear, I heard arecordingof King's speech to a crowd in Detroit, two months before the March on Washington D.C.. He reminded listeners that "injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere," and then rebuked satisfied North- ern sympathizers, "No community in this country can boast of clean hands in the area of brotherhood," King said. King came to Detroit - and marched with labor leaders like Walter Reuther of the United Auto Workers - to protest the "subtle and hidden" discrimination African- Americans faced in the North, where racialized realty practices and dis- criminatory hiring segregated the public schools. "I have a dream this afternoon," King said, "that one.day right here in Detroit, Negroes will be able to buy a house or rent a house anywhere their money will carry them, and they will be able to get a job." We've all seen videos of Bull Connor's cops beating marchers. Every civil rights documentary shows peaceful protesters forced to the ground by white men with water cannons. Most of us haven't seen images of whites rioting during a 1966 march for fair housingin Chicago. King was hit on the head by a thrown brick, and told reporters, "I think the peo- ple from Mississippi ought to come to Chicago to learn how to hate." The public school curriculum left out Northern civil rights battles completely. Perhaps that's because what King and others were fighting against - realtors' subtle ways of keeping non-white homebuyers out of certain neighborhoods - rarely produced shocking images like those caught during the Southern marches. There is an easy way to tell the story. Documentarians already have a story are in the boycotts and march- es of the 1950s and early 1960s, from Rosa Parks to the "Dream" speech. It's an arc full of pathos, replete with images that challenge viewers to understand how America has not always lived up to its ideals. By ending with the March on Washington, or with the signing of the great civil rights laws, the story of the civil rights movement becomes a closed narrative of triumph. African Americans suffered. Then - led by King - they overcame. That narrative is incomplete. In the years after the March on Wash- ington, King fought with other great We should be honest, and teach the whole story. whelming majority. If you visited a school in Detroit today, you would see that de facto segregation continues to deny children the opportunities they deserve. Walking down the city's empty streets, you would see that one of King's dreams - that one day Detroiters could get jobs, never came to pass. Teaching the struggle for racial equality as something that happened long ago in the South sends a mis- leading message. This narrative tells us that the American community has alreadyovercome discriminationand its legacies. It teaches Northerners to look down on Southerners for their intolerance, leaving us blind to the inequalities that continue to shape our own communities. We should be honest with ourselves and teach the whole story, so that someday, we might overcome. - Seth Soderborg can be reached at sethns@umich.edu. Follow him on Twitter at @thedailyseth. leaders for fair housing and an end to de facto discrimination in schools. That struggle never really came to an end. After California adopted a law - now part of the federal code - that made it illegal to refuse to sell property to someone on the basis of the buyer's race, whites rose up in protest. A year after the March on Washington, Californians overturned fair housing by an over- 0 A&