October 24, 2015: The folly of the high school GPA rat race

The four-year-long competition among high school students to maneuver and outrank each other on the basis of their final grade point averages is perhaps as close as one might get to a real life Hunger Games. This single, sacred computation often functions as a primary filter for admissions officers who stand at the entry gates to college and by extension to a successful life.

The contestants, supporters and promoters of this annual reality event, however, should take note of Google executive Laszlo Bock's assertion that "GPAs are worthless as a criteria for hiring." Likewise, in a recent issue of The Atlantic magazine, human resources expert Peter Cappelli of the Wharton School speaks of the "long literature in psychology showing that job performance and college grades are poorly related."

What to make then of GPAs at the high school level? As a youth, I attended an affluent suburban high school in Ohio and, with the benefit of honors coursework, my final high school GPA surpassed 4.0. I was accepted by every college to which I applied. I was on the fast track. But the folly of my ways didn't become apparent to me until many years after I had graduated from college magna cum laude. As a student at Georgetown University in Washington, I was so fully invested in a GPA mindset that I rarely ventured off campus. Capitol Hill, the Supreme Court, and Ford's Theater comprise only a partial list of landmarks that weren't worth my time. I never even went to a Hoyas basketball game. But in a final stinging analysis, no employer has ever very much cared about my GPA.

Today, I am a father of two young girls who both have the aptitude to be future straight-A students. Maybe down the line they will choose to compete to become high school valedictorians. But if I successfully raise them according to the values I now hold, they won't. They won't compete. Understand, I would be ecstatic if my daughters became valedictorians -- but not if they spend years competing for it. I am truly awed by the tenacity of those gifted students who actively contend for that supreme honor in spite of the costs. I am only saying that I do not want my daughters to pay those costs.

As a high school administrator I have some visibility into the costs of GPA worship -- and they are worse than lost opportunities to go sightseeing. The most obvious cost comes from having to inhabit an ethical hazard zone where the pressure to take academic shortcuts is perpetual and intense. More subtle and troubling, kids who measure themselves on the basis of GPA are less free to explore educational interests and more likely to fixate on only what they think their teachers want to see. The result is an uninspired recipe for conventionality, or worse, cynicism.

What we desperately need from our youth, on the other hand, is creativity and boldness. Placing high school GPA in its proper place in our children's lives takes, above all, parental wisdom. The beauty of our children's teen years is too precious to squander away in the oppressive belief that there is only one precariously narrow pathway leading to that one transcendent college that will set life on a perfectly engineered trajectory. We all know better.

First of all, college education is a product, and for any given student there are dozens of institutions vying for the opportunity to win his or her business.  But more to the point: So much of how we emerge on the back end of our college experience depends on happenstance. The friends and professors we meet along the way. The discovery of new passions and pursuits. The maturing of our social and emotional selves. And by the way, the job market.

The finality of winning may be all that counts in Monopoly and the Super Bowl, but life with all its celebrations and setbacks is about progress.  Though we may feel like the weight of our educational system is forcing us to surrender our children into a winner-take-all, Hunger Games mentality, let's step back and reclaim for our youth their unique allowance to live and learn with authenticity.

January 17, 2011: Earning Civility from the Inside Out

I visit my local library every weekend to select a stack of books for my classroom students, and usually I can't help but slip in one or two for myself. This week one book caught my attention -- a shiny photo-journalistic book about the plight of migrant families.

November 13, 2010: Closing the talent gap: Oregon educators respond

The Oregonian asked six people around the state who are knowledgeable about teacher recruitment and training to read and react to the Paul Hihn-Matt Miller essay on the best-performing educational systems in the world. Their comments:

August 16, 2011: Rigor and individualism: Finding the path to academic success

Sometimes an issue resides at such an underlying, fundamental level that it manages to elude proper scrutiny. This is the case with the ubiquitous drive towards higher standards in our public schools, best encapsulated in the axiom, "If you present students with higher standards, they will rise to the challenge."

May 30, 2010: Oregonlive.com

The limits of language

I recently asked a Latino mother whom I had never met if she would allow me to interview her. Her son, a child who is not yet  a teenager, has been associated with drug use and gang activities. What I sought from her was a mother's narrative perspective on exactly how this  came to be -- a perspective, I explained, that my colleagues in the educational community would find immensely valuable. She agreed over the phone without any hesitation.

August 18, 2009: How to Handle Negative Attitudes and Behaviors

There's a part of every parent that can't help but celebrate the end of summer vacation and the return of the school year (parents of kindergartners excepted).

But the school year also brings perils. For many parents, releasing children "back into the wild" means having to deal with the emergence (or re-emergence) of vexing attitudes and behaviors, some of which can be downright distressing.

May 2, 2010: Video of Keynote Address for the Portland JACL

At the 63rd Annual Graduate Awards Banquet

I gave a 20 minute presentation to an audience of 170 members of the Japanese-American community in the Greater Portland area. A video of the speech has been uploaded to YouTube. Please note that the accompanying slideshow presentation was not captured.

Link 1: First half of address
Link 2: Second half of address