The Spectator
“The Pulse of the Student Body”
The Stuyvesant High School Newspaper
The Race Issue Features
OPINIONS
“A Voice From the <1 Percent” and “Statistically Insignificant”
In this issue’s Voices, seniors Lucian Wells and Stephen Nyarko discuss what it’s like to be Native American and African American at Stuyvesant. see page 7
Volume 107 No. 6
Stuyvesant: A Model of Model Minorities
Junior Matteo Wong elucidates the harmful nature of the stereotypes that characterize Asian-Americans as a “model minority” and discusses ways of fighting them—even from within an institution that represents the model of an AsianAmerican success story.
December 13, 2016
Unconscious Separation: Racial Segregation in Our Friend Groups
NEWSBEAT Nancy Ko (‘13) has received a Rhodes Scholarship for her studies of Jewish History and the modern Middle East. students received Best Delegate awards at the Model United Nations conference from Friday, November 11, to Sunday, November 13 at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island. Six
By Alec Dai, Danielle Eisenman, Elizabeth Lawrence, and Emily Xu with additional reporting from Raibena Raita
The Science Olympiad team placed fourth at the Cornell
Science Olympiad Compe-
In the classic 2004 film “Mean Girls,” two high school students show a new student a map of the cafeteria’s sacred arrangement of cliques. Each clique has a label. To name a few, there are the preps, JV jocks, Asian nerds, cool Asians, varsity jocks, unfriendly black hotties, and sexually active band geeks. At Stuyvesant, things are a little different. It’s not a typical high school like the ones you see in movies. Social groups are not nearly as straightforward. While labels for cliques do exist (like “white squad,” “Queens squad,” “Slav squad,” and many others), the cliques themselves are often less rigidly defined than their names suggest. Many people float
tition from Friday, December
2, to Saturday, December 3, in Ithaca, New York. The Speech Team placed seventh in the team sweepstakes at the George Mason University Patriot Games National Invitational on Saturday, December 3 to Sunday, December 4. Senior Alec Dai was the national champion in Original Oratory, while senior Liam Elkind took third place in Dramatic Interpretation and first place in the Round Robin in Dramatic Performance. Six students won speaker awards on the varsity level at the Princeton Classic Tournament from Saturday, December 3, to Sunday December 4 in Princeton, New Jersey.
from group to group and some groups flow into one another. What is immediately apparent, however, is that people tend to stick with people who share their ethnic backgrounds. The small numbers of black, Latino, Native American, and multiracial students prevents groups made up exclusively of students with these backgrounds from forming. These students are often mixed into groups that, for the most part, are either predominantly Asian or predominantly white. And, among the white and Asian students, there exist countless sub-groups. The causes of this de facto segregation are complex, and they extend far beyond the walls of Stuyvesant. What follows is an exploration of this phenomenon, along with possible reasons for its existence. continued on page 8
Sports Analytics Elective to be Offered Starting Spring 2017
stuyspec.com
Deconstructing Race at Stuyvesant By Grace Cuenca, Nusheen Ghaemi, Chloe Hanson, and Pazit Schrecker
Seventy-two percent, the proportion of Asians at Stuyvesant, is a number that gets thrown around quite often in conversations relating to our school. But the number is misleading in its representation of Stuyvesant as a cultural monolith. Stuyvesant students trace their origins to over 70 countries around the world, some having moved to the U.S. in their lifetime, and some having never visited their ancestors’ countries. As we walk through the halls, some of us see students with the same color skin as our own, or students with family from the same part of the world as our families. Some of us do not see someone of our race on our daily walks from class to class. Either way, for most of us, race is more than just a box to check on a standardized test. The Spectator conducted a survey via stuy.edu e-mail to explore the backgrounds of our peers, and hear their stories and opinions on how race affects our experiences at Stuyvesant. Five-hundred and ninetytwo students responded. Here are the results.
A Breakdown of the 72 percent 68.3%
25.4%
7.5% 1.6%
2.1% Central Asia
South Asia
Southeast Asia
James Young / The Spectator Mathematics teacher Dr. Bernard Feigenbaum, above, will be teaching a new elective next spring.
their own models to evaluate issues and make decisions that corporations and sports teams care about, like buying a player or opening up the stand. Dr. Feigenbaum, whose passion for the subject of sports analysis began when he was a student himself, has been pushing for this course since last spring. However, no further action to implement the idea occurred until Principal Eric Contreras approved the course after Dr. Feigenbaum suggested it to him. “I am very excited to teach it,” Dr. Feigenbaum said. “That’s [the] area that I really enjoy—the application of math to real world problems.” The course could potentially
open up professional opportunities for Stuyvesant students. Recently, the Staten Island Yankees contacted the Stuyvesant Physical Education Department looking for a student intern who could do analytical work for them. More and more, teams are focusing on the value of analysis, and the class will focus on these areas. Many students have already heard about the new class either through online course selections or flyers around the building, building enthusiasm. “Stuy students are generally good at math, but a lot of us are passionate about the sports we play too,” junior Joey Chen said. “It’d be cool to see the two combined.”
East Asia
Other
continued on page 3
New Printing Station Opened On Second Floor By Shameek Rakshit and Sasha Spajic
By Chloe Doumar, Clive Johnston, and Jessica Wu A new math elective, Mathematical Analytics of Sports, will be offered beginning next semester. The course will be open to all students who have completed Algebra II/Trigonometry and have a math and overall average of at least 85. There will be only one section, and mathematics teacher Dr. Bernard Feigenbaum will teach it. While the curriculum is not yet finalized, the course will aim to use math to answer questions that arise for sports players or sports team managers. One aspect of the course will be determining the mathematical strategy behind sports.“Should you go for one or two extra points in the football game if you score a touchdown?” Dr. Feigenbaum raised as an example. Asset valuation is another aspect of the course, which entails examining the value of players, what salaries they should be earning, and how much a team is worth. The course may also explore other dimensions of sports, including ticket and food pricing. The elective will strive to teach the students how to analyze various situations in sports on their own from scratch, rather than simply memorizing analyses that have been previously done. Dr. Feigenbaum plans to supply the students with the skills needed to create
see page 17
A new printing station was opened outside Room 209 for student use in early November. The center, which currently has three computers and one printer, is open every day from 7:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.. By mid-November, students were able to print wirelessly from their own personal devices. Calls for a separate printing station began four years ago when the sixth floor library was under renovation and students were able to use temporary printers on the first floor. When these printers were closed after the renovation, a new problem arose. “After its renovation, more students would use the library. The librarians couldn’t get all the students in the library during the period because many students who needed to print took up a lot of the space,” Assistant Principal of Organization Randi Damesek said. “There [were] a substantial number of issues in the library. People who were trying to get in could not get in,” Student Union (SU) Vice President Tahseen Chowdhury said in an e-mail interview. “There was a lack of staff at times, and it created issues for students who just needed to print something.”
The SU approached the school administration in June 2016 about setting up a printer in a different part of the school. “They first proposed the idea of printers in the Student Union room and eventually settled for a station by the bridge,” Coordinator of Student Affairs Matthew Polazzo said. Unlike previous years, Chowdhury and Senior Caucus Vice President Max Bertfield continuously pressed the administration to implement the new system, facing many difficulties along the way. “Searching for funding and convincing the school and the administration was the hardest obstacle when it came to getting this done, but when we showed them the problem and how this would change/affect the atmosphere, the administration got on board,” Chowdhury said. The school has provided all funding for the current setup of the printers, though it monitors its investment into the station, limiting students to print eight pages at a time. The SU and the administration have added additional features to the new printing station. “[Bertfield] and [Senior Caucus President Laszlo Sandler] proved to me that we could share a printer with all the stuy.edu emails, continued on page 2