Category: Upper School

Recent Graduate Wins Poetry Contest

Daniela Lapidous ’12 recently won the Saratoga Library Teen Poetry contest in the high school category for her submitted poem, titled “Regression.” Lapidous attended a special reception on June 13 in honor of the winners of the contests. Her English teacher, Jennifer Siraganian, encouraged students to enter the contest during the spring semester.

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Essay Earns Second Place in Growing Up Asian Art and Essay Program

Like many teenagers, Michelle Deng ’12 grappled over questions of individuality and fitting in. However, in addition to those quite typical teen concerns, she also worked out equally pressing and broader issues of cultural identity.

Deng recently addressed her uplifting journey towards affirming her identity as an Asian-American youth in last spring’s “Growing Up Asian in America” high school-aged writing contest. Deng stood out from hundreds of other contestants and won second place for her powerfully written essay, “International Orange.”

Growing Up Asian in America is a competitive art and essay program sponsored by the Asian Pacific Fund, the largest celebration of Asian heritage in America. The Fund has operated the program since 1995. Now, with the Golden Gate Bridge celebrating its 75th anniversary, the organization asked this year’s contestants to reflect upon the “bridges” in their own lives.

In her entry, Deng artfully compared her experience at coming to terms with being a Chinese American to architect Irving Morrow’s selection of paint color during the historic construction of the Golden Gate Bridge.

In her work, Deng noted that as a second-generation Chinese girl, she found the Silicon Valley a friendly place to grow up. “I often joke with visitors that you don’t even have to go to Chinatown to run into Chinese supermarkets, dim sum places and boba milk tea cafes within five minutes of one another,” Deng wrote in her essay, noting that she, therefore, never really felt defined by her ethnicity.

That all changed, however, when she traveled to China with her mother, and felt as “out of the water as a fish could be.” She recalled feeling more American than Chinese.

Throughout her writing, the choosing of a paint color for the Golden Gate Bridge served as a metaphor for her slowly evolving sense of identity. Personal narrative was expertly juxtaposed and intertwined with snapshots of how, back in 1933, Morrow selected and fought for a color choice that some had a hard time accepting at first.

Deng ended her essay with a scene of her symbolically standing before the Golden Gate Bridge, noting that strangely enough, despite having grown up less than an hour away, she’d never actually stepped onto the bridge before. She vividly described feeling like a tourist standing on the bridge for the first time.

Yet, somehow, she continued, the connection was far deeper. “This was my home. Wherever I was, I would take a part of this place with me, and I would be American, Asian, Californian, human, or what have you, and I would soar,” she wrote in her essay’s final line.

“We asked students to explore bridges that have been meaningful to them – whether real, physical bridges, or symbolic bridges that connect important parts of their lives, or help them cross through challenging personal journeys,” explained the contest sponsor on its website.

The Asian Pacific Fund reported being inundated with entries from students who have struggled with their identities, whether they have just arrived from Asia and are negotiating what it means to be American and Asian, or whether they are multiracial children trying to reconcile each side of their heritage.

“They have built bridges by learning foreign languages, cooking new cuisines, mending broken relationships, overcoming disability, watching YouTube, and experimenting with musical instruments. Their journeys are as diverse as their cultures, but many have arrived at similar destinations: a place where they don’t need to choose one side over the other, but are at peace standing right where they are – in the middle,” noted the fund.

Every year, around 1,400 Bay Area students in K-12 compete in the program by submitting artwork, essays and poems on a specific theme for some $27,000 in prizes. Winners receive savings bond awards worth $1,000-$2,000, and are honored at an awards ceremony at the Asian Art Museum. Special exhibits displaying the winning artwork and essays go on tour during Asian Pacific Heritage Month, and are hosted throughout the year by more than 50 public libraries all over the Bay Area. All winning entries are also archived online at the Asian Pacific Fund website.

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Australian Exchange Teacher Spends Time at Harker

For two weeks in April, Sam Cleary, a teacher at St. Stephen’s College in Australia, visited the upper school to teach and observe classes as part of Harker’s teacher exchange program with the school.

Cleary observed classes in English, history and forensics, and taught a number of English and forensics classes himself.

Harker prides itself on building progressive academic and cultural partnerships between institutions around the world to provide meaningful experiences for students at all grade levels, preparing them to be true global citizens.

As part of Harker’s global education program, upper school students have the opportunity to travel to Switzerland to practice their French and Australia to hone their leadership skills. Harker also hosts several short- and long-term exchange students from various countries including Germany, Australia, Switzerland and Japan. Harker further hosts visiting teachers from China, Japan and Australia.

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Harker Journalism Takes Top Honors in Youth Journalism Awards

In May, Youth Journalism International announced the winners of its yearly contest, and Harker came up big. Class of 2012 graduates Sanjana Baldwa, Michelle Lo, Priyanka Mody, Jennie Xu, Laura Yau and grade 12 student Samantha Hoffman took second place in team reporting in a news story for their article, “Harpa Symbolizes a Turning Point for Icelandic Culture: A Monumental Resurrection.”

Harker won three awards in the team reporting feature story category, taking first place for a story by Michelle Deng ’12 and Allison Kiang, grade 9, titled, “Celebrating Survivors: Tales of Two Women and Their Victories Against Breast Cancer,” and second place for the story “Great White at Monterey Bay Aquarium” by Alisha Mayor ’12 and Samar Malik, grade 10. Priyanka Mody and Meena Chetty, grade 10, won an honorable mention for their story, “Self-Acceptance: Conquering an Eating Disorder.”

In the profile category, Shilpa Nataraj ’12 earned an honorable mention for “Japanese Musician Shares Traditional Instruments and Music.” First place in the first-person essay category went to Nayeon Kim, who wrote “Musicality, The Beauty of Chamber Music.”

Harker journalism’s photo squad also took home several awards, including first place in sports photo, for a water polo photo titled “Desperate Save,” taken by Megan Prakash, grade 10. Class of 2012 graduates Devin Nguyen and Laura Yau tied for second place in sports photo, Nguyen for his “Varsity Football” photo and Yau for “Running the Ball,” also a football shot. Prakash also took second place in the news photo category for her shot, titled “Pull!”

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Upper School Latin Students Earn High Placements at JCL Convention

Upper school Latin students attended the California Junior Classical League Convention in late March and took top spots in many of the convention’s events.

In the high school level 1 events, Serena Wang, grade 9, took first place in mottoes, abbreviations and quotes, second in reading comprehension and third in grammar. Tyler Yeats, grade 11, placed first in both reading comprehension and vocabulary.

At level 2 of the high school competitions, Annirudh Ankola, grade 9, placed second for boys costume, and William Bloomquist, also grade 9, finished second and third respectively in vocabulary and sight Latin reading. Richard Gu, grade 9, had first place finishes in both reading comprehension and vocabulary, and Mary Liu, grade 10, placed second in English oratory.

Harker had seven high placements at high school level 3, all from grade 9 students, with Maya Nandakumar taking second in history and third mythology, Aadyot Bhatnagar placing second in vocabulary and earning an honorable mention in reading comprehension, Sahana Rangarajan receiving an honorable mention in derivatives and Sophia Shatas taking third in dramatic interpretation.

The high school advanced level was Harker’s most successful category, with 12 students earning high placements. Sarika Bajaj, grade 10, took first in computer photography, second in multimedia and received an honorable mention in daily life. Nik Datuashvili, grade 11, had dual first-place finishes in ancient geography and derivatives. Sophomore Kevin Duraiswamy finished first in mottoes, abbreviations and quotes, second in grammar, third in reading comprehension and received in an honorable mention in sight Latin reading. Richard Fan, grade 11, placed second in ancient geography and received an honorable mention in history. Fellow junior Pranav Sharma placed third in vocabulary and received an honorable mention in mottoes, abbreviations and quotes. Another junior, Shannon Su, tied for third in sight Latin reading and received honorable mentions in both derivatives and vocabulary. Ashvin Swaminathan, grade 11, placed high in four events, earning first place in pentathlon, second place in both vocabulary and Latin oratory and third in grammar. Other students who placed well were grade 10’s Helena Huang, who took third in mythology, Zina Jawadi, also grade 10, taking second in sight Latin reading, recent graduate Jessica Lin winning first place in daily life, sophomore Brian Tuan earning an honorable mention in reading comprehension and Eric Zhang, grade 11, finishing third in ancient geography.

Harker Certamen (quiz bowl) competitors also performed well, with the team of Nik Datuashvili, Kevin Duraiswamy, Richard Fan and Jessica Lin taking second place in the high school advanced category. Serena Wang’s open certamen team took second in the high school level 1 open certamen contest, and Pranav Sharma’s high school advanced open certamen team finished second.

Harker was the number one high school overall in the medium-sized high schools category.

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Harker’s Summer Institute Combines Learning with Fun

For some middle school and high school students summer is all about relaxing and having fun. To others it’s a time to get a leg up academically. At Harker, it’s an opportunity to have the best of both worlds.

By combining a morning academic program with afternoon activities, Harker’s Summer Institute (SI) gives students in grades 6-12 the chance to earn credits, learn new skills, follow their passions and have a whole lot of summer fun.

But Harker students aren’t the only ones with these options. During summer the school opens its doors to the general public, attracting local residents to its Saratoga campus, where this year’s SI runs from June 18 to Aug. 10. A total of 722 students are enrolled in the program, of which more than half are non-Harker students.

The institute’s learning program offers rigorous for-credit courses such as algebra, economics and programming, as well as non-credit opportunities for enrichment and growth like creative writing, drawing and robotics.

A range of group afternoon activities are planned for middle schoolers. And, while there are no organized happenings for high school students, they have free afternoon drop-in access to the library, pool, art room, Ping Pong table, basketball courts and study spaces. For all grades, an on-site prepared lunch is included as part of the overall program.

Some examples of featured planned group events for the middle school grades are: making sidewalk art and tiki masks in the Olympic Village (aka the orchestra room next to Rosenthal Field), having water wars and boogie board relays in the pool, playing Hawaiian handball in the gym, and going on field trips to the beach.

On one particularly gorgeous sunny day, a group of SI participants were immersed in an exciting game of street hockey out on the front blacktop. Meanwhile, another group was equally engaged in a drum-making activity on the adjacent field.

Taking a break on a bench on the sidelines, participant Daniel Liu Miller, 11, looked up as a light breeze blew the paper he was holding. Miller is not a Harker student, but learned about the program from a friend who attends the school. Now back for his second year at the institute, he said he especially looks forward to all the fun afternoon activities.

Sitting next to him, Jedwin Mok, also 11, said he had previously attended camp over at the lower school, and has now moved up the ranks for his first year as a Summer Institute participant. His favorite part of the program is the morning academics where he is studying robotics.

Meanwhile, busily building a drum by hand, Sophia Angus, a Harker student who will be entering grade 6 this fall, said this is her third year attending a summer program and her second year attending Harker as a regular student. In fact, it was her initial experience going to camp at the lower school that prompted the switch to becoming a year-round Harker student. She said the best thing about SI, and Harker, are “the incredibly supportive people,” including her coaches, teachers and friends.

Standing out on the Rosenthal Field next to Angus, SI counselor Adam Smith explained that the campers were making drum sets from scratch and would then be decorating them. His first year working as a counselor, Smith, a staff member of Harker’s regular after-school BEST program (the Bucknall/Blackford Enrichment and Supervision Team) said he is really enjoying his new summer role, and that the institute had gotten off to a great start.

Street hockey and drum-making were just a couple of many fun activities which kicked off the SI. Another was making banana lumpia with Danae McLaughlin, Harker’s executive sous chef. For this activity, the students were allowed to get a “behind the scenes” look at The Edge’s kitchen facility, where they learned to make the yummy Filipino dessert made with bananas wrapped in spring-roll-like wrappers and fried.

Their hands-on session began by creating a solution called “egg wash” with eggs and water, and dipping the wrappers into the mixture before winding them tightly around a banana. After baking and topping them off with powdered sugar, cinnamon, chocolate syrup and whipped cream — their sweet smell wafting down the hallway — each student ate several of the delicious creations.

In addition to making banana lumpia, Sukrit Arora, 12, a first year SI participant and non-Harker student who will be going into grade 8, also enjoyed another Filipino-themed activity: a traditional dance routine. “It was really fun and interesting,” said Arora, who has family and friends who go to Harker. “I also liked the free throw competition and capture the flag game.”

According to Chris Florio, director of the SI program, the wide range of choices and flexibility allows each student to design a schedule around his or her own academic needs and personal interests, giving everyone just the right mix of summer activity, learning and fun.

Although it is her first time at a Harker summer program, soon to be seventh grader Jenna Sladlu has been attending the school since kindergarten. “Yeah, I’m a Harker K-lifer,” she enthused, noting how much has enjoyed meeting new summer friends. “It’s more laid back than during the regular school year … with more activities and freedom. I’m really glad Harker made the Summer Institute and highly recommend it!”

Student Attends Rotary Clubs’ Enterprise Leadership Conference at Asilomar

Rising senior Kathir Sundarraj attended this year’s Enterprise Leadership Conference, held at Asilomar in March. Organized by the San Jose and Los Altos Rotary Clubs, the ELC brings students selected from a number of different local high schools together and places them in groups, which then come up with a product and present it to a group of investors.

“In creating this business proposition, there were many areas that we needed to learn about,” Sundarraj said. Such areas included marketing, human resources and financing. “A presenter, usually a Rotarian, came to lecture about each of the topics.”

Sundarraj also got to socialize with the other students at the conference. “We went to the beach and participated in a couple of socials,” he said.

He particularly enjoyed meeting the students at the conference, who came from diverse backgrounds. “Usually, as a debater, the people I meet from other schools tend to be debaters,” he said. “However, it was very interesting to see many leaders all with their own unique talents and passions.”

He also relished the opportunity to meet the business leaders in attendance at the conference and listen to their success stories. “What the Rotary Cub is doing is a great enterprise, and I hope they continue to hold ELC!” Sundarraj exclaimed.

Humanities Endowments Produce Four Scholars: Papers Cover Charter Schools, Special Forces, Nuclear Policy and Churchill’s Public Relations

This article originally appeared in the summer 2012 Harker Quarterly.

The Mitra Family Endowment, established last year, has borne its first fruit. Sarah Howells, grade 12 and the first Mitra scholar, added her effort to the handcrafted social and historical analyses produced by this year’s three John Near Endowment scholars.

Howells chose a classic and controversial character for her subject and found an angle not fully explored for her paper, “Winston Churchill’s Efforts to Unify Britain From 1940-1941,” a look at his public relations efforts as they affected Britain’s morale in early World War II.

In 2011, Harker parents Samir and Sundari Mitra (Shivani, grade 11) established the Mitra Family Endowment for the Humanities, which matches gifts to the annual giving campaign up to a total of $100,000.

“The subject matters taught under humanities such as history, languages, communications and philosophy are critical skills and knowledge that develop well-rounded Harker students,” said Samir Mitra at last year’s reception. “Humanities is the bedrock of a superior education and will enable our students to stand out as recognized contributors in their future professions.”

“I knew I 
wanted to apply
 for the Mitra 
grant because 
I had enjoyed 
world history 
so much in my
 sophomore
 year,” said Howells. “I thought about Britain; my family was affected on two sides by World War II, both in Poland and in Britain.”

Too broad at first, her topic choices “quickly narrowed to Churchill’s remarkable unification of the government and retaining the trust of the people during the war,” said Howells, who will attend Princeton in the fall.

Howells noted, “The most interesting part of writing the paper was transitioning from the researching to the writing. That was the most difficult task for me, since I had a myriad of great resources but no idea how to put them all together.”

Howells took on a subject usually taken for granted – Churchill’s ability to relate to the “everyman” and to the highest in the land (he often personally briefed King George VI on the war’s progress) – and examined its worth in keeping the spirit of resistance alive in beleaguered England. Her writing, worth the read in itself, conveys the passion that Churchill used to inspire fellow politicians and those in the street. Her division of material shows the way for further research on how Churchill handled groups differently.

Like all good researchers, Howells pointed out the weakness in her own paper, the inability to examine the records of Mass Observation and Home Intelligence, a government bureau that monitored the public pulse, due to their volume and her limited access. Howells noted that lacking the confirming information in those records, it was hard to be sure of widespread public approval of Churchill.

“It’s been such a pleasure to work with Sarah,” said history teacher Ruth Meyer, Howells’ mentor through the process. “She is so balanced in her approach to research, she’s so steady in everything that she does, so well organized.”

“Overall, the process of writing the paper was an exciting and challenging opportunity,” said Howells, “and I’m glad I could get a taste of what real humanities research is like before I head off to college.”

At the reception, Howells gave emphatic thanks to her teachers and mentor, saying, “I don’t think I could have done this if you hadn’t suggested to me that I was capable of completing such a long senior thesis.”

“I’m overwhelmed,” said Sundari Mitra, noting the scholars’ efforts to “inspire us parents. 
We are really honored and proud that with whatever little we could do, the school has utilized it in such a tremendous manner, so thank you Mr. Nikoloff, the faculty, everyone. I’m really touched and inspired.”

The $300,000 John Near Excellence in History Education Endowment Fund, in memory of the 31-year veteran of Harker’s teaching staff who passed away in 2009, was made by his parents James and Patricia Near to, in John Near’s words, “help develop the history department, both through the acquisition of resources and by providing growth opportunities for both faculty and students.” Each year, three students receive grants from the endowment’s proceeds to be used for research.

Near scholar Max Isenberg, grade 12, chose a subject Churchill, as a former First Lord
 of the Admiralty, would have been very interested in: the use of on-station naval power as a worldwide deterrent, something at which the British were old hands.

Isenberg’s paper, “Arleigh Burke’s Submarine-Based Finite Deterrent: Alternative to the Nuclear Triad,” an examination of Admiral Arleigh Burke’s answer to ballooning costs involved
with maintaining a three-point nuclear deterrent (aircraft, missiles and submarines all carrying nuclear devices), was carefully researched and covered the salient points of the argument.

Isenberg, who will attend the University of Pennsylvania for the Jerome Fisher Management and Technology program in the fall in a dual-degree program for business and engineering, noted, “My favorite part of the entire project was looking at the competing theories of nuclear strategy, and how they had consequences not immediately obvious until later in the Cold War.

“The most difficult part of the project
was finding solid first-person sources, especially considering the tight classification of many details from the
Cold War,” he added. “That difficulty
 partly contributed to my eventual focus
on nuclear strategy as many of the major players in the development of the Triad and finite deterrence had published works, while a lot of the nitty-gritty details of submarines remain inaccessible.”

Isenberg is appreciative of the grant, thanking teacher and mentor Ramsey Westgate, Susan Smith, library director, and Donna Gilbert, history department chair, for their help. “I don’t think there are very many schools of any sort that offer such a rare opportunity to do history research specifically and then give the leeway to explore the topic in such a thorough manner,” he said.

Dwight Payne, grade 12, chose a current social topic and, as he was out of town during the reception, delivered his address via video. His work, “Can Charter Schools Close the Achievement Gap?” was mentored by teacher Kelly Horan.

Payne’s closely researched paper delves into the arcane world of evaluating charter school results. He located a number of studies which threw light on a portion
 of the process of evaluation and allowed limited conclusions to be drawn on the efficacy of the charter schools studied. Payne identified some commonalities within the studies and used them for his next step, interviewing charter school administrators and examining the records of their schools.

The schools examined in this portion of the project had a spectrum of student results and, although Payne found and used common criteria for eliminating or at least accounting for bias, the differences between schools, including stability, age of students (one was high school, the others lower and middle schools), location, teaching methods and teacher evaluation and training methods made drawing firm conclusions problematic.

Payne was comfortable, however, generally endorsing charter schools as an option
for helping those desirous of helping themselves, feeling that time will only improve the system as learning processes are refined and expanded.

When it came time to write the paper, “sifting through the breadth of literature was a difficult task,” said Payne, who will attend the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, majoring in business administration with a possible second major in either economics or psychology.

Another hurdle was maintaining objectivity. “It was difficult to swallow
my own biases going into the process
and accept that most of the literature I read presented inconclusive or conflicting data,” Payne said. “From that knowledge, however, it was rewarding to conduct interviews that examined specific examples of successes or challenges that were illuminating despite the difficulty of reaching an overall conclusion regarding the effectiveness of charter schools in closing the achievement gap. I particularly enjoyed meeting with school leaders, and I was very inspired by their dedication. The administrators whom I interviewed were incredibly helpful and eager to share their work; I am immensely grateful to them.”

Senior Cole Manaster, like Howells and Isenberg, chose a military topic with political ramifications. His effort, “The Changing Dynamic of Unconventional Warfare: The U.S. Special Forces in Vietnam and Their Impact on Modern 
War,” traced the development of special operations forces first as trainers of villagers in war zones to strengthen them against enemy efforts, then in their roles as covert, uniformed operators behind enemy lines. Manaster documented the status of special operations forces as, following WWII, they grew from a compound of various forces – Army, Navy, Marine and CIA – to the ultimate acceptance of these forces and their integration in the overall military effort.

Today, we are all familiar with the effort
to capture the “hearts and minds” of non- combatants in military zones, and Manaster illustrated how that effort grew from
early efforts to keep South Vietnamese 
and other indigenous groups in Vietnam from falling, or being coerced, under the influence of North Vietnamese communists, while noting that a special operations forces mandate also puts them in the most dangerous situations a soldier is likely to face, i.e., behind enemy lines.

“I was fascinated by this facet of the war – how special forces were used,” he said, “so I looked at how they were used in the Vietnam War and somewhat how they have been used since.”

Manaster, who will be going to the University of Southern California next year as a business administration major, said he “wanted to be able to use the things I have learned in my history classes and all my classes,” but noted, “the toughest part of writing such an extensive paper was keeping myself on track timewise.”

His topic firm, Manaster found the next step a challenge. “If I could do it all again, I would probably have spent more time solidifying my outline before writing the paper itself. What I had in my outline made the writing process itself immensely easier, but I think I probably could have done even more, looking back on it now.”

“I was really happy to be Cole’s mentor,” said Carol Zink, history teacher. “I’ve seen his intellectual growth and development over the years and it’s always tremendously rewarding for a teacher to get to see that.”

Zink noted one of the challenges Manaster had in pursuing his research is that it is difficult
to find unbiased sources on this topic. “There are a lot of books that are ‘Yay-rah, Green Berets!’” she said, “and then there are other books that say the United States should never have gone into Vietnam in the first place and they (the Green Berets) were the dirty dogs in the deal. It is very difficult to try to walk the middle line, and I know that was a struggle for Cole, but I know he persevered.”

Pam Dickinson, John Near’s widow 
and director of Harker’s Office of Communication, again represented the Near family. “Like last year, I felt very much as though John was channeled with the presentations,” Dickinson said, noting facets of each paper that interested the Near family. “John would be incredibly proud. I’m honored to be here on behalf of his parents, and it is a wonderful thing that the Mitras have done. Congratulations. You all have done a wonderful job.”

Manaster echoed the thanks of the other scholars, adding, “All of us have put in a lot of work and it is exciting to see our papers truly come to fruition and to have this at the close of our senior year, as well. I’m very honored to have been a part of this program, and it is something I’m going to remember for a long time.”

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