C HRONICLE the harvard-westlake
Los Angeles • Volume 23 • Issue 8 • April 30, 2014 • hwchronicle.com
Discipline problems plague spring trips By Julia Aizuss
SCOTT NUSSBAUM/CHRONICLE
STORYTELLER: Brown Family Speaker A. Scott Berg, the biographer of editor Maxwell Perkins, aviator Charles Lindbergh, actress Katharine Hepburn and President Woodrow Wilson, explains the rationale behind his choice of subjects Monday April 28.
Award-winning biographer urges students to discover their passions By Jack Goldfisher
Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer A. Scott Berg implored students to follow their academic passions and act upon the knowledge they gain from these pursuits in an upper school assembly April 28. The author, whose personal life and writings on various subjects have made him capable of speaking on a wide array of topics, was this year’s Brown Family Distinguished Speaker. He emphasized his lifelong interest in great stories. “Ultimately, my job as a biographer is to tell great stories,” Berg said. “Great stories of great people’s lives.” Berg also visited U.S. History and Cinema Studies classes, discussing political movements, American figures and film star Katharine Hepburn and director Sidney Lumet, both of whom were covered in a biography Berg wrote about the late actress.
Berg said that at age 15 he wasn’t an avid reader, but his mother encouraged him to read a biography of author F. Scott Fitzgerald. “Though it’s not the case now, at that point [Fitzgerald] was a forgotten author,” Berg said. “But he so fascinated me that I spent the next two years in high school reading everything by, of and about F. Scott Fitzgerald.” In high school, Berg felt compelled to apply to Fitzgerald’s alma mater, Princeton University. In his application, he said he felt that even if the school didn’t admit him, he would have to come anyway, to make a “pilgrimage” to the author’s alma mater. Berg was admitted to Princeton, and after being on the campus for two days of his Fall 1967 semester, he sought out the library’s rare books and manuscripts room, where he found several hundred box-
es of Fitzgerald’s papers. The very first box he opened held Fitzgerald’s first draft of “The Great Gatsby,” a book often described as the “great American novel.” He also found personal correspondence between Fitzgerald and book editor Maxwell Perkins, with whom he became enthralled. In addition to being Fitzgerald’s editor, “[Perkins] became Fitzgerald’s best friend, money lender, marriage counselor and psychiatrist,” Berg said. “That one man changed [The Great Gatsby] by about 20 percent.” Berg wanted to write about Perkins, and took the idea to Princeton professor Carlos Baker, who was named in Ernest Hemingway’s will as the only person permitted to chronicle Hemingway’s life. “I just went to his office and knocked on his door,” Berg said. “He was an inspiration. You’ve got to find your own in• Continued on page A8
96 percent value academics, but only INSIDE 55 percent enjoy classes, study finds By Noa Yadidi
Although almost all upper school students find their academics valuable, only half find them enjoyable and only a slight majority of students are satisfied and not distressed, according to the workload survey’s culminating report finalized April 24 and released to faculty and staff via the faculty portal April 25. Some 95.9 percent of upper school students reported that they find their academics valuable, but only 54.5 percent reported that they find them enjoyable. The report also states that just over 60 percent of upper school students are satisfied and not distressed, while nearly 85 percent of middle
school students are satisfied and not distressed. The committee’s final report consists of observations made from the data collected from the survey, which was administered to all grades in November. Upper school science teacher David Hinden and middle school Dean of Faculty and Latin teacher Moss Pike led the committee, which has analyze the data from the workload survey and provided recommendations for the school’s direction. Head of School Jeanne Huybrechts and President Rick Commons will decide who at the school is in the best position to act on these suggestions, Huybrechts said.
Huybrechts said she hopes that all these elements will be acted upon by this time next year. “I’m not saying that there will be totally fleshed out solutions or plans from a year from now, but every one of these items will be further examined,” she said. The biggest changes during the last 12 years were that typically students were taking more courses, juniors and seniors were taking more AP classes and were getting significantly less sleep, she said. The survey found an increasing trend towards taking more academic solids. 71.2 percent of students reported taking five solids, 22.6 percent • Continued on page A9
UP TO BAT: The Wolverine baseball team, ranked second in the CIF Southern Section Division I Coaches’ Poll, currently holds a 16-4-1 overall record and a 4-1-1 league record.
Although various school trips over spring break were plagued by similar issues with drug and alcohol use, the extent and nature of the disciplinary action has varied. Five seniors caught drinking on the Jazz Band and Studio Jazz Band trip to Italy were given a one-day suspension while on the trip and had their senior privileges revoked, students said, while Chamber Singers were told by Choir Director Rodger Guerrero that next year’s Chamber Singers trip would be cancelled. Six jazz musicians were sitting at a table with a couple bottles of wine, one of the students said, when the chaperones and the tour guide walked into the same restaurant. “They walked in and saw the bottles of wine and the glasses on the table,” the student said. The student said he was not drinking, but everyone else had about “a glass or two.” He said the other five students, all seniors, were given the equivalent of a one-day suspension by performing arts teacher Shawn Costantino, so they did not perform one night. Head of Upper School Audrius Barzdukas called, the student said, and revoked the five students’ senior privileges for the foreseeable future. The student said most, if not all, of his companions are 18, which is the legal drinking age in Italy. “It’s part of the Italian culture,” he said. The student said he thought the punishments were • Continued on page A9
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ONtheWEB
CONCERT FOR CARR: Molly Chapman ’14 sings at the “Justin Carr Wants World Peace Concert” at All Saints’ Episcopal Church Monday night. Watch a video at: hwchronicle.com/ carrconcert