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Mass of Missives
Over the summer, ninth and tenth graders
enrolled in Duke's Talent Identification Program for academically
gifted students found out just how talented they really are. Fifteen
of the teenagers had their letters to the editor accepted for publication
in The New York Times over a period of just five weeks.
Statistically speaking, even the most gifted high-school student
has a better chance of getting admitted to Duke than of having
her letter to the editor published in the Times. Letter submissions
come in "at a rate of roughly a thousand a day," Thomas
Feyer, the Times' letters editor, wrote in an article earlier this
year. "We can publish only about fifteen letters a day."
Submitting letters to the Times is a staple of a class on international
relations that Mark Duckenfield has taught in summer programs at
Duke over the last two years. "I thought that having the students
send letters to the editor would engage them in debates over issues
of interest to them and make their involvement with reading The
New York Times (which they did every day) more active and less
passive," he wrote in an e-mail message.
Duckenfield, who is on the faculty of the London School of Economics,
wrote that he was "quite surprised" at the number of
letters accepted for publication. "I have had my students
write letters for TIP and CTY (a similar program run by Johns Hopkins)
and in five years (ten classes) I had not had any accepted before
this summer."
He attributes this summer's success to a different plan of attack:
Having students submit their letters via e-mail, rather than by
post, as in previous sessions. It seemed, he says, "a ready
way to get letters to the Times in a timely fashion."
Although Duckenfield's international-relations class is an introductory
course, it's designed for advanced students, he says, and includes "the
range of materials that a freshman-level college course would cover." He
aims to bring his students "up to date on current events and
introduce them to theories of international relations," and
so he pushes them to be aware of the world beyond the borders of
their own country.
Many students, such as Isabelle Blankmeyer, a ninth-grader from
Deer, Arkansas, had never opened the Times before taking Duckenfield's
course. The class used the newspaper as a springboard for discussion
about journalistic bias, different types of publications, and disparities
between media in the U.S. and Europe. Blankmeyer says she found
these in-class deliberations "most influential" because
she was forced to argue her opinion convincingly to her peers.
Learning to make persuasive, informed arguments to each other came
in handy later in the course when she and her classmates began
writing their letters to the Times. The letters responded to a
variety of issues, ranging from politics to pornography. Blankmeyer
wrote to express her opposition to government-mandated filters
on adult websites, the subject of a June 30 front-page article.
In response to an article stating the voting records of both the
Democratic and Republican presidential candidates, Texan Claire
Constantino boldly asserted her political opinions. "Vice
President Dick Cheney surpasses all other candidates in extremism,
and his voting records show it," she wrote. "Perhaps
now the candidates can discuss what really matters--the issues."
Katie Noe, a tenth-grader from Lexington, Kentucky, discussed the
role that artists play in society. "Great art, in addition
to providing enjoyment, should express the opinion of the free-thinking
artist and challenge the perspective of an audience," she
wrote. Noe went on to criticize those who have "indirectly
admitted that an artist should be nothing but a slave who caters
to the whims of a narrow-minded audience."
The students say they were surprised and honored to be published
in the Times. "It made me think that I now have a real voice
in politics," reflected ninth-grader Tyler Brinkman of Hendersonville,
Tennessee. Maria Mitaeva, a tenth-grader from Stuttgart, Germany,
says she had been doubtful of her chances of getting published.
However, she found an article about the differences between American
and European lifestyles "perfect to write about, as I only
needed to communicate my impressions and observations." After
being notified on the last day of TIP that her letter was to be
published, she "felt proud and happy," she recalls. "I
caught myself thinking that I would leave a little part of myself
in America."
While Duckenfield acknowledges that having his students write to
the Times using e-mail probably contributed to much of the summer's
success, his use of a new incentive may have been the deciding
factor. "I told my second-session class that if they had more
letters than first session, I would buy them a Vermonster (a twenty-scoop,
ice-cream sundae) at Ben and Jerry's. Gluttony is a good motivator
for high-school students."
--Emily Znamierowski '07
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