Palo Alto Unified School District Henry M. Gunn High School 780 Arastradero Rd Palo Alto, CA 94306
Students open up about being a part of adoptive families
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PG. 11 FEATURES
THEORACLE Henry M. Gunn High School
http://gunnoracle.com/
Friday, March 31, 2017 Volume 54, Issue 7
780 Arastradero Road, Palo Alto, CA 94306
Administration releases new bell schedule for next year Shagun Khare and Grace Tramack Editor-in-Chief and Reporter
On Tuesday, March 28, Principal Dr. Denise Herrmann officially released the new schedule for the 2017-18 school year via Schoology. The new bell schedule will maintain the same schedule as this year with the exception of the optional Thursday Tutorial, which will be replaced with a mandatory mid-day Flex Time on Thursday to accommodate for Gunn’s instructional minute deficiency and
Social-Emotional Learning (SEL) curriculum.
Student voice When Herrmann first announced that the bell schedule would be changing, many students expressed concern that administration wouldn’t include enough student voice. On Sunday, March 12, junior Advait Arun and 21 other students authored a petition calling for administration to recognize student voice, proposing an alternative bell schedule to the one planned for next year and claiming
that administration once again failed on its promise to incorporate student input into the decision. The petition currently has over 550 supporters. This petition is not the first to claim that administration has neglected student voice: there has been a consistent lack of trust among students in administration, especially after last year’s AP testing, the weighted GPA issue and the constant schedule changes, which were all mentioned in the petition.
SCHEDULE—p.2
Board cuts eugenecist ties with vote to rename schools
Sherry Chen
and Stanford University’s first president. When it opened in 1958, Terman Middle School was named to honor educational psychologist and eugenicist Lewis Terman. In 2003, the school adopted the name Terman Middle School to honor both Lewis and his son, Frederick Terman, who was influential in the development of Silicon Valley as a Stanford provost. Jordan helped found the Human Betterment Foundation, which promoted forced sterilization, while Lewis Terman was active in the American Eugenics Society, which promoted “racial betterment.” twenty thousand of the 60,000 people forcefully sterilized in the U.S. were sterilized in California under a 1909 eugenics law.
Sohini Ashoke and Amanda Lee Reporter and Tech Editor After 17 months of community debate, the Palo Alto Unified School District (PAUSD) Board of Education decided to rename David Starr Jordan Middle School and Terman Middle School in a unanimous vote on March 17. The schools’ names will officially be changed before the 2018-19 school year. The controversial backgrounds of David Starr Jordan and Lewis Terman, the namesakes of the two middle schools, caused the debate over changing the names. Jordan and Terman were both prominent figures in the eugenics movement, which supported selective breeding and forced sterilization in order to protect the NordicAmerican ethnicity. An advisory committee will select alternate names for the schools before Jan. 1, 2018. Part of the board resolution includes creating a secondary school curriculum about California and Palo Alto’s roles in eugenics. Eugenics’ connection David Starr Jordan Middle School was opened in 1937 and named after Jordan, who was a prominent eugenecist scientist
District decision Lars Johnsson, a Jordan Middle School parent, began the petition to rename Jordan Middle School in Nov. 2015. Johnsson said that he first learned about Jordan’s eugenics activities when he read his son’s report on Jordan. “[My son] was wondering how somebody like David Starr Jordan, who has a lot of accomplishments, but who also had a very dark side with his eugenist tendencies, [could have a school named after him], especially in this day and age,” he said. The Board of Education created the Renaming Schools Advisory Committee (RSAC), comprised of students, teachers, parents and community members to review all of Palo Alto’s school names, investigate Jordan and Terman’s involvement in eugenics and recommend whether Jordan and Terman should be renamed. Thirteen people volunteered to join RSAC and they met from Apr. to Dec. 2016, when they submitted their report to the Board. RSAC presented their findings to the Board at a board meeting on March 7, where many community members argued in favor or against renaming during the open discussion session. The Board made their final decision on March 17. Superintendent Dr. Max McGee says he supports the School Board’s decision, even though he previously only supported completely renaming Jordan. “My original recommendation was not to rename Terman, only to make it clear that it’s Frederick Terman Middle School,” McGee said. “So, I would not be opposed to renaming Terman ‘Frederick Terman Middle School’ to distinguish between Louis, who I think had a prominent role in eugenics, and Frederick, who did not.” McGee believes that Jordan’s avid support of eugenics is not something the district can overlook. “It’s not just that he believed in eugenics, but he really actively promoted it; he funded it, he used the power of his office to further the idea of racial cleansing [and] forced sterilization,” he said. “I don’t think that’s a good example for students. I don’t think that’s something to which we aspire.” Board President Terry Godfrey supported renaming both middle schools because she believes the district has to uphold students’ principles. “We want the names of our schools to RENAMING—p.5