Rejected, bummed, but resolved

It’s a real bummer to work towards something so hard, to stack the chips in one’s favor and to practice and prepare and then get rejected (for the 2nd time).

I was keen on joining Teach For America because I believe I can make a difference in education given the opportunity.  It’s a hard reality to face that I just might not be good enough.  I feel somewhat a failure, cause 1000s of students and graduates did get it.  More so, I feel like I’m missing out on a huge opportunity to pay one forward to students around the country that are missing out on a higher quality education.

So, I’m a little bummed.  It’s like not getting that job that you were in the final round of interviews for.  Then finding out that all of the other candidates were ivy leaguers (which, apparently is the case for T4A).

I’m also resolved though, that we are on the right track (and yes, I include myself in the “we”).  It’s great that such educated graduates and students are filling the gaps that otherwise were filled with full-time substitutes and under qualified staff members.  T4A is an important stop-gap for our educational crisis, which is best, I think summed up by Friedman in a new Op-Ed in the Times:

In the 1950s and 1960s, the U.S. dominated the world in K-12 education. We also dominated economically. In the 1970s and 1980s, we still had a lead, albeit smaller, in educating our population through secondary school, and America continued to lead the world economically, albeit with other big economies, like China, closing in. Today, we have fallen behind in both per capita high school graduates and their quality. Consequences to follow.

According to Wendy Kopp, same article by Tom Friedman:

Our total applications are up 40 percent. Eleven percent of all Ivy League seniors applied, 16 percent of Yale’s senior class, 15 percent of Princeton’s, 25 percent of Spellman’s and 35 percent of the African-American seniors at Harvard. In 130 colleges, between 5 and 15 percent of the senior class applied.

At least I can say I made it to the final round.  Now if I can only figure out how to get Wendy Kopp to call me…

I may have missed this opportunity, but there will be more.  Now I have plenty of time on my hands to figure out what’s next.  I still have a job, I still have a wonderful life ahead of me.  Someday I’ll help tackle the issues in education a little bit more directly than just spouting nonsense on a blog, followed by no one, subscribed to by yours truly.  It is what it is.

Fahrenheit 451 and Twitter

My wife and I are both reading F451 and we like it.  I’m especially enjoying Ray Bradbury’s succinct writing style and character development. Plus the alternative future history is pretty interesting (though not necessarily as interesting/fantastical as Do Androids Dream Electric Sheep which I just finished).

One quote though really struck home with me:

“Picture it.  Nineteenth-century man with his horses, dogs, carts, slow motion.  Then, in the twentieth century, speed up your camera.  Books cut shorter.  Condensations.  Digests, Tabloids.  Everything boils down to the gag, the snap ending.”…

“Classics cut to fit fifteen minute radio shows, then cut again to fill a two-minute book column, winding up at last as a ten- or twelve-line dictionary resume…” (pg 86)

Sounds like the history of online communication: web pages, blogs, twitter.  Information summed up in 140 characters or less.  I’m not saying that we’re living in a world remotely like that of the scarcy, information deprived world of Montag the “fireman”, but it’s interesting that Bradbury was at least part-way right with his forward thinking.  Information will become more and more bite-sized…

Thank goodness we still have books available to inform our posts, pages and tweets.

I wish…

Misspelling is a pet peeve.  I hate finding words spelled incorrectly on websites (on corporate web pages), in emails or on blogs.  I know they are created quickly and each post is a “draft” but with the invention of Firefox and some other browsers spell checkers (WP has one built right in) it seems that we all (internet-users) should not have to see spelling errors.  They’re just too easy to correct, prevent, get rid of (and call out).

Students these days have atrocious spelling.  L33t speak, texting and perhaps a degraded education system (go NCLB!).  I’m privy to lots of discussion forum posts through my job (monitoring an education based site) and some of the spelling errors are deplorable (even for high schoolers!). 

Now, I know I’m setting up myself for criticism (just imagine if I spell something wrong in this post! what a hypocrite I will be/am).  

Here’s my wish: I wish that the web enforced it’s own spell checking.  So that no matter how bad someone’s spelling is, shouldn’t the web be able to correct it before I have to read it.  Can’t I go to my “tools” on Firefox of Chrome and choose to have my web filtered/corrected automatically so I get a clean, entirely comprehensible, easy read on my screen?

Internet gods: please deliver me from poor spelling.