WINGED POST
THE HARKER SCHOOL
Nonprofit Org. US Postage PAID San Jose, CA Permit No. 2296
500 SARATOGA AVE.
SAN JOSE, CA 95129
THE UPPER SCHOOL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE HARKER SCHOOL VOL. 26 NO. 3
500 SARATOGA AVENUE, SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA 95129
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2024
Day of Understanding enriches empathy and media literacy kairui sun, lily peng & samuel tong
“
It’s so important to remind ourselves to humanize one another, especially at times when a lot of people dehumanize the other.”
ATIA ABAWI JOURNALIST
Abawi also visited an Advanced Newspaper class the day before Day of Understanding, answering questions about her experiences working as a woman in the male-dominated journalism industry. She shared clips from moments in her reporting career, even showing her running away from Iraqi battlefields. “Empathy gets lost in the divisions that we see throughout the world and in
inside the
ISSUE
news ................. 02
opinions ........... 09
features ............ 05
stem .................. 14
a&e/lifestyle ..... 07
sports ............... 17
RO-SHAM-BO (TOP LEFT) Senior Aaron Chen triumphs over Rei Binkley (12) in rock-paper-scissors snake. After every round, the loser would follow the winner until two lines remained. DROWNED OUT (TOP RIGHT) Keynote speaker Atia Abawi asks the audience to raise their hands if they have felt that their voice was left unheard. FINDING FACTS (BOTTOM) Frosh Anastasia Broumas (middle) discovers the answer to a puzzle during the media literacy
session. The puzzle-like activities tested students’ data analysis and critical thinking skills to discern misinformation.
our own country,” Abawi said. “Because we all have empathy in us but sometimes forget to use and fall back on it, it’s so important to remind ourselves to humanize one another, especially at a time when a lot of people dehumanize the other.” Students then split off into plenary sessions in the multi-purpose room and the
05 features
Navigating politics in the age of algorithms
Nichols Auditorium. Librarian Meredith Cranston led an escape room media literacy game where students identified deepfaked digital pictures and followed clues to debunk fraud. Such skills prepare students to recognize misinformation. “We had to detect AI deepfakes in pictures, and that was really difficult,”
07 15 a&e/lifestyle stem New artist-inresidence maps memories
Buildings seek energy efficiency with high-tech solutions
17 sports
Sophomore Hanz Baek finds composure through archery
senior Aarush Vailaya said. “AI is getting better, and people can spread blatant misinformation that looks so realistic. We discussed looking at multiple news sources, keeping an open mind, not following information that can be just straight up fake.” Visit harkeraquila.com for more.
JOIN US ON SOCIAL MEDIA FOLLOW
@harkeraquilaDIA DESIGN BY VICTOR GONG AND CLAIRE ZHAO
PHOTOS BY KAIRUI SUN
The inaugural Day of Understanding invited 60 students for a full day of workshops, speaker events and a catered international buffet on Nov. 8. The Student Diversity Coalition along with a dozen teachers structured activities centered around media literacy and civil discourse. Attendees also listened to Keynote speaker Atia Abawi discuss her experience with journalism and authorship. “Harker has done a really good job of creating spaces where people feel safe to communicate,” learning specialist Kadar Arbuckle said. “I acknowledge that while students and adults alike still lack a lot of tools to achieve understanding, there are still a lot of things already happening that are facilitating these conversations.” Abawi opened the day by presenting on her experience covering the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts as a correspondent for CNN, where she emphasized the importance of recognizing all the perspectives when approaching situations of war. News broadcasts sometimes deliberately omitted Abawi’s coverage to conceal violent realities from viewers. She spoke on her mother’s experience as a refugee, and her own work with orphaned children.