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THE HARKER SCHOOL
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THE UPPER SCHOOL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE HARKER SCHOOL
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UPCOMING DATES PARENT TEACHER CONFERENCES MONDAY & TUESDAY, NOV. 21 - 22 THANKSGIVING BREAK NOV. 18 - 26
VOL. 25 NO. 3
THURSDAY, NOV.16, 2023
Harker hosts first ever Social Justice Conference
ARTIST IN RESIDENCE RECEPTION WEDNESDAY, NOV. 29
inside the
opinions ........... 9
features ............ 05
stem .................. 14
a&e/lifestyle ..... 07
sports ............... 17
Honor Council kicks off annual Honor Week kinnera mulam
Harker Honor Council organized Honor Week activities, which commenced on Monday to allow the community to learn more about the school’s Honor Code. Monday’s activities centered around “Honesty” and invited students to share their thoughts on the matter on walking billboards during lunch. For “Accountability,” Tuesday’s events included a school meeting discussion. To explore “Respect” on Wednesay, the community wrote about the topic on campus chalkboards. On Thursday, advisories participated in an “Environment”-related activity. Tomorrow, the week closes out with the “Honor,” and the community can write and receive a “card of affirmation.”
New kid on the block: Furry friend turns campus cat kinnera mulam
A cat began frequenting the upper school campus in early September, typically wandering around the Nichols and Dobbins buildings. Associated Student Body (ASB) sent out a form to the community requesting names for the cat and provided details of the animal like “very friendly to humans and squirrels,” “meows if you meow at it” and “likes climbing trees behind Dobbins.” Students and faculty voted on the final name of the cat at Tuesday’s school meeting.
Harker hosts “get to know the upper school” event for current eighth graders
REFLECTIVE RECAP Sophomores Charlotte Ludlow and Pavitra Kasthuri share their takeaways from the conference. The event hosted three workshop sessions and two keynotes addresses open to attendees from all campuses.
felix chen, alison yang, brandon zau & vivek moorjani
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arker’s inaugural Social Justice Conference garnered a crowd of 275 people at the upper school from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Nov. 10. The conference featured a series of workshops on social justice, human rights and Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) topics. Students and staff from all campuses, as well as attendees from schools across the Bay Area, listened to three workshop sessions and keynote speakers. “My favorite thing that I saw today was a lot of laughter, a lot of smiles, the community supporting this,” Director of DEI Brian Davis said. “Your own story, your own experiences [are] enough for you to have the power and influence to make change — not only here [at] Harker, but beyond Harker as well.” Vassar College professor and morning keynote speaker Dr. Maria Hantzopoulos opened the day with a discussion of the core tenets of social justice in the Athletic Center. Dr. Hantzopoulos incorporated her personal experiences as a public school teacher and advocate for education in New York City to help define
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The upper school hosted an open house event for current eighth graders on Monday from 5-7:15 p.m. The event consisted of dinner and a following session where parents could explore different extraccuricular activites by visiting activity booths outside the Rothschild Performing Arts Center (RPAC). Attendees watched performances from Downbeat and Kinetic Krew and listened to presentations from upper school head Paul Barsky, assistant division head Kelly Horan and a student panel.
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Analyzing Western media’s coverage of the IsraelHamas conflict
key terms such as equity, equality and social justice. Throughout the keynote, Dr. Hantzopoulos encouraged discussion between attendees through question prompts that participants could write about or discuss. “I really wanted to set the tone for the day as the keynote because the workshops will be meatier to look deeply into things,” Dr. Hantzopoulos said. “I wanted to look at what social justice is and how it might manifest in our lives while also allowing the audience to reflect a little bit about our own personal experiences and how they might relate to some of the concepts we were talking about.” Following the keynote, attendees moved on to the first workshop session where they could hear about topics like “Pushin’ P: Power, Privilege, Positionality,” “Rooting our Futures in Peace, Justice, and Human Rights” or “Revolutionary Love: Practices for social justice collective care, wellness, and joy.” In the second session, attendees learned in workshops “Finding our Role in Social Change,” a genealogy workshop and “Towards an Understanding of the Earth’s Voice.” Genealogy workshop co-host and Berkeley Gender and Women’s Studies Associate Professor Courtney Desiree
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Morris emphasized the importance of attendees making present decisions for the betterment of their own futures. “Remember that you are a subject of history,” Morris said in her presentation. “You are a product of history and you’re also shaping history. If you can remember that, then I hope it will make people more conscientious about the choices that they’re making right now and that they really take seriously their ability to shape the kind of future world that they want to see.” A third round of workshops preceded University of San Francisco International and Multicultural Education Professor Dr. Monisha Bajaj’s afternoon keynote. Dr. Bajaj, who attended Harker Academy from 1985 to 1987, closed the conference with her presentation on human rights. She highlighted the concepts of accompaniment, amplification and action, encouraging attendees to consider the action that they could take in the face of inequality and injustice.
DR. MARIA HANTZOPOULOS
BRIAN DAVIS
DIRECTOR OF DEI
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LOVE FOR LEARNING Guest speaker Darius White hugs upper school history teacher Mark Janda during workshop “Pushin’ P: Power, Privilege, Positionality.”
ALISON YANG
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ALISON YANG
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Change starts with you. You don’t have to have a title to make an impact on the world
19 sports
Chief of my heart: Swift-Kelce romance spotlighted
VASSAR COLLEGE ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
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I wanted to look at what social justice is and how it might manifest in our lives
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