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Faculty Figures

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Constrained growth in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences

January-February 2016 Harvard finances

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Faculty Figures
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An interesting perspective on faculty growth, a core element of Harvard’s mission, emerges from the intersection of Harvard Campaign plans and constrained research funding. In their annual-report letter, CFO Thomas J. Hollister and treasurer Paul J. Finnegan cited academic investments, including “expanded faculty.” The capital campaign aims at many objectives (financial aid, House renewal, the new engineering and applied sciences facility), but most schools do not identify faculty growth as a major goal. President Drew Faust noted that the campaign had secured endowments for 75 chairs, but most are understood to be existing professorships.

The problem is sufficiently acute that Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) dean Michael D. Smith, sharing his annual report with colleagues in early October, emphasized research funding as among his highest priorities. The report’s financial commentary singled out the importance of “enhanc[ing] our internal program of research support to lessen faculty anxiety in an increasingly competitive market and challenging external funding landscape”—so much so that FAS expects to maintain its tenured- and tenure-track-faculty ranks at roughly the current 729 members, rather than seeking to add professorships, with implications for its composition.

From academic year 2000-2001, when these “ladder” faculty numbered just below 600, to the current population, FAS’s profile has shifted. Arts and humanities professors rose from 185 to a peak of 210, and now number 196; the ranks of social scientists increased from 214 to a peak of 251, before settling at 245 now. The science cohort, at a multiyear low of 139 in 2000-2001, peaked at 214 and now numbers 203—up by nearly half. And engineering and applied sciences, with 54 faculty members 15 years ago, before becoming a full school, has been on a steep upward trajectory, to 85 now: up nearly 60 percent. With the faculty census essentially level and engineering-related fields targeted for significant expansion (funds are in hand to add a dozen computer-sciences professors alone), FAS’s mix of disciplines might continue to evolve.

Harvard arts and sciences faculty growth
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The Fiscal Norm

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Financial gains—and pains

The University's annual financial report

Thomas Hollister, vice president for finance, and Paul J. Finnegan, University treasurerPhotographs from left: Paige Brown/Courtesy Tufts Medical Center and Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications


Thomas Hollister, vice president for finance, and Paul J. Finnegan, University treasurerPhotographs from left: Paige Brown/Courtesy Tufts Medical Center and Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications

January-February 2016 Harvard finances
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The Fiscal Norm
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The University’s fiscal year 2015, concluded last June 30 and detailed in the annual financial report released in late October, mirrors the outcome of the prior year: Harvard again operated in the black, following a couple of years of small deficits. In their introductory letter, Harvard’s senior financial-management team—Thomas J. Hollister, vice president for finance and chief financial officer, and Corporation member Paul J. Finnegan, who is treasurer—wrote, “[T]he results of this past fiscal year follow a recent trend of modest, but continued improvement in the University’s overall financial health.” Among the highlights:

• Revenue increased 3.1 percent, to $4.53 billion from $4.39 billion (figures are rounded). Major contributors were the endowment distribution for operations (up $54.8 million, or 3.6 percent); tuition and other income from students (up $52.3 million, or 6.0 percent); and gifts for current use (up $16.5 million, or 3.9 percent). Total support for sponsored research edged up by $5.9 million, to $805.8 million—but only because corporate, foundation, and international underwriting rose by more than 10 percent, while federal direct funding decreased by nearly $15 million.

• Expenses increased 2.2 percent, to $4.46 billion from $4.37 billion. Salaries and wages were 5.2 percent higher, reflecting a larger workforce and merit increases in compensation. Employee benefits were reported to have decreased 4.7 percent—but adjusting for a one-time, $45.9-million pension-related charge incurred in fiscal 2014, benefits costs increased somewhat less than 5 percent, to nearly $500 million. Space and occupancy costs soared more than 9 percent, but were more than offset by a $40-million reduction in other expenses; both reflect one-time items.

• An operating surplus was the result: Harvard finished the year in the black to the tune of $62.5 million. As originally reported, fiscal 2014 yielded a surplus of just $2.7 million; that has been restated to a surplus of $22 million. If the pension-related charge were excluded, fiscal 2014 would have closed with a surplus of $68 million—slightly ahead of the fiscal 2015 gain.

More broadly, income from students (typically the schools’ largest source of unrestricted funding) has been growing smartly: up 7.3 percent in fiscal 2014 after deducting scholarships applied to tuition and fees, and a further 6 percent in fiscal 2015, to $930 million. As recently as fiscal 2013, sponsored-research funding was Harvard’s second-largest source of operating revenue (after the endowment distribution, and ahead of student income); now, with research funding stagnant and tuition and fees growing, their relative standing has been reversed, with tuition and fees progressively outstripping sponsored support.

The 7.4 percent rise in continuing-education and executive-programs tuition (to $346 million) has to please Hollister and Finnegan, who repeat a theme from recent financial reports: the focus on “exploring alternative revenue sources.” Tiny now, but of prospective importance as one of those “alternative” revenue sources, is income from general-interest online courses; in a recent white paper on HarvardX and other teaching initiatives (see page 24), Provost Alan Garber listed “economic sustainability” as the first of three priorities deserving “special attention.”

The after-financial-aid tuition and fee figure is what matters: the cash available to deans once they have met student needs. The fiscal 2014 and 2015 results are suggestive. Scholarships applied to student income (reductions in term bills, for instance) rose just 3.0 percent, to $384 million—below the 3.7 percent growth in fiscal 2014. And other scholarships and awards paid directly to students increased just 4.6 percent. Even with robust growth in continuing and executive education (which affects the tuition mix), demand for financial aid in degree programs appears to be easing—a proxy for the improving economy.

Data from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) confirm the trend: its undergraduate-aid spending rose from $164.2 million in fiscal 2012 to $165.6 million the next year, and $170.2 million in fiscal 2014—before decreasing, minimally, to $170.1 million in the most recent year. That reflects a sharp change from the period beginning in 2007, when financial aid was expanded significantly, and then demand soared as the recession crimped family incomes.

In the meantime, University fundraisers continue to pursue gifts for aid: to secure the programs put in place during the past decade; to cope with families’ rising education costs; and to enable deans to apply more of those unrestricted net tuition receipts to other academic needs. President Drew Faust focused on The Harvard Campaign (see updates, page 26) in her letter in the financial report; she noted that some $686 million had been secured for financial aid across the University—about halfway toward the goal for scholarships.

The message to eager faculties would appear to be twofold: be patient and be clever.

The endowment remains at the center of Harvard’s finances, again contributing 35 percent of operating revenues: $1.59 billion in fiscal 2015, and $1.54 billion in fiscal 2014. The Corporation is being careful with endowment funds: the operating distribution equaled just 4.6 percent of the endowment’s value at the beginning of the fiscal year, down from 4.9 percent in the prior year. As previously reported, Harvard Management Company (HMC) realized a 5.8 percent return on endowment assets, net of all expenses, in fiscal 2015 (see “Endowment Gain—and Gaps,” November-December 2015, page 22, and “Overhauling the Endowment,” below). For fiscal 2016, the planning guidance to deans envisions a 4 percent increase in the operating distribution, plus a “bonus” distribution of 2 percent for one-time expenses (ensuring that those extra activities will not be built into schools’ permanent expense base, and perhaps reflecting HMC’s most recent results).

Not for nothing have higher-education administrators and science professors been raising alarms about the nation’s research budget. As noted, federal direct sponsorship for research continued to decrease. Other sources of direct research support increased by $18 million; but indirect-cost recoveries associated with such nonfederal grants are a small fraction of those accompanying federal sponsorship, placing a burden on the institution to maintain the research enterprise (see the discussion in “Faculty Figures,”).

Even with the campaign’s success, a conservative course toward growth appears to be in place, given persistent, large operating deficits in FAS and Harvard Medical School. Still, the campaign is having its intended effect. Gifts for current use, generated during the current fund drive, yielded 10 percent of Harvard’s fiscal 2015 revenues. Pledges receivable, a good gauge of what is on tap, surged to $2.25 billion at year-end, up from $1.59 billion at the end of fiscal 2014.

The pipeline is filling robustly—but there is a lag, sometimes considerable, between donors’ pledges and the delivery of the funds to Harvard. FAS, where current-use gifts rose 21 percent during fiscal 2015, explicitly noted the importance of “a new hybrid gift policy”—encouraging donors to provide a share of certain major gifts in the form of current-use funds. The message to eager faculties would appear to be twofold: be patient—the fruits from the campaign are coming; and be clever, so that donors who are committed to investing in Harvard may be encouraged to do so more quickly.

Harvard’s annual financial report
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Brevia

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Medical dean stepping down, Rhodes and Marshall scholars, more conservative Winthrop House addition, and more

Portrait of Harvard Medical School dean Jeffrey S. Flier

Jeffrey S. Flier
Photograph by John Soares/Harvard Medical School


Jeffrey S. Flier
Photograph by John Soares/Harvard Medical School

January-February 2016 News Brevia
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From Dean to Doctor

Jeffrey S. Flier, dean of Harvard Medical School since 2007, announced in November—a year after launching the school’s $750-million capital campaign—that he would step down on July 31. He steered the school through the financial crisis and recent declines in federal research funding; supported significant initiatives in systems pharmacology and biomedical informatics; and saw the new M.D. curriculum introduced during this past fall semester. After a sabbatical, Flier, an endocrinologist, will return to the faculty. A search for his successor is to be organized soon. For a full report, see “Harvard Medical School Dean Flier to Step Down.”

 

Campus Construction

Cambridge zoning authorities have approved Harvard’s plans to reconfigure the former Holyoke Center into the Smith Campus Center, including a pavilion along Massachusetts Avenue that will face a reconfigured public open space; less of the outdoor Forbes Plaza will be enclosed than under Harvard’s original proposal. Construction is slated to begin this spring.

 

Margarets Mead and Mitchell

The Faculty of Arts and Sciences has adopted a new voting procedure for electing the 18 members of its Faculty Council, a body that works closely with the dean and makes recommendations to colleagues on legislative matters. The new protocol distributes membership among senior and junior professors, and assures representation among the academic divisions. Accordingly, the explanatory paper brought before the faculty for discussion and a vote during its fall meetings populated a sample ballot with examples including, among other luminaries, Eudora Welty and Maya Angelou (humanities); Charles Darwin and Marie Curie (sciences); and Margaret Mead and Max Weber (social sciences). Ansel Adams, Copernicus, and Margaret Mitchell were among those proposed for at-large seats. At press time, it is unknown whether any would accept if nominated.

 

On Other Campuses

Even as Harvard received gift proceeds totaling $1.16 billion in the fiscal year ended June 30, 2014, the Chronicle of Higher Education noted in a roundup, Stanford—though not in capital-campaign mode—came in second, with $928 million. Note to Harvard development officers: Stanford is now in a year-long celebration of its 125th anniversary (this coming October 1)—no doubt replete with gift opportunities.…The Yale Quantum Institute, established in October, will focus the work of 120 researchers and staff members who are exploring quantum data storage and information processing. Separately, Yale is devoting $50 million during the next five years (half from central funds and half from schools) to augment the diversity of its faculty through recruitment, appointments, and junior-faculty development.…Duke’s new Washington Duke Scholars Program will support first-generation college students and those from disadvantaged high schools; it includes enhanced financial aid, a for-credit summer bridge program, faculty and peer mentors, and seminars on wellness and networking. The fall 2016 cohort will total 30; the plan is to double the number enrolled in the future.

 

The $100-Million Club

J.B. Pritzker and M.K. Pritzker made a $100-million naming gift to Northwestern University’s School of Law, his law alma mater (see page 26 for information on the Harvard Law School campaign). Downtown, the University of Chicago’s Harris School of Public Policy received $100 million for an institute devoted to studying and resolving global conflict; the donor was the Pearson Family Foundation. New York University received $100 million, a naming gift, for its school of engineering from Chandrika and Ranjan Tandon; Chandrika Tandon, an NYU trustee, was a partner at McKinsey and Company, and now chairs a financial-advisory firm. Ranjan Tandon, M.B.A. ’77, founded a hedge fund that is now a private family office. Entertainment executive David Geffen gave UCLA $100 million (raising his total benefactions there to $400 million); it will fund a college-preparatory school (grades 6-12) on campus, in part to accommodate the children of faculty members—an important tool in recruitment efforts.…And, ramping up from nine digits to 10, Brown in October unveiled its $3-billion BrownTogether campaign, with $950 million already raised; at the celebration, ground was broken for a new 80,000-square-foot engineering research building, paid for with resources from the fundraising drive. MIT is expected to be among the next institutions to  announce a multibillion-dollar capital campaign.

 

Reverting to Red

 
Artist's renderings courtesy of Beyer Blinder Belle

After a brief fling with modern design, Winthrop House and architects Beyer Blinder Belle have reverted to the familiar comforts of red brick. The five-story addition to Gore Hall, scheduled for construction when the House undergoes renovation beginning this summer, is now conceived in a Neo-Georgian idiom, shown here, rather than the contrasting, contemporary scheme unveiled last winter (see “Plans for Winthrop House Renewal Include Expansion”).

 

Nota Bene

Rhodes roster. Five seniors have been awarded American Rhodes Scholarships, among them the vice president of the Harvard Islamic Society (Hassaan Shahawy) and the son of a Syrian immigrant (Neil M. Alacha). Their fellow winners: Grace E. Huckins, Rivka B. Hyland, and Garrett M. Lam. In addition, Yen H. Pham ’15 has received an Australian Rhodes. Read a full report

 

Marshall duo. Two seniors have won Marshall Scholarships for graduate study in Britain. Bianca Mulaney will attend the London School of Economics and Political Science. Rebecca Panovka is bound for the University of Cambridge. Read more in “Two Harvard Students Awarded Marshall Scholarships.”

 

A bookish professor. Lea professor of history Ann Blair, director of undergraduate studies in that department, has been named Pforzheimer University Professor, effective January 1. A European cultural and intellectual historian, she has worked on the history of the book (among other topics), a suitable field for a chair strongly associated with the University’s libraries; Robert Darnton, who relinquished the chair last summer, was director of the University Library.

 

Medical honorands. The National Academy of Medicine has elected as members Friedhelm Hildebrandt, Grupe professor of pediatrics; Frank Hu, professor of nutrition and epidemiology, and of medicine; Joan W. Miller, Williams professor of ophthalmology; and Kevin Struhl, Gaised professor of biological chemistry and molecular pharmacology. 

 

Urbanology. The Graduate School of Design has established an office for urbanization to focus interdisciplinary applied research on contemporary cities; Irving professor of landscape architecture Charles Waldheim is director. An initial project will focus on the municipal responses to changing sea levels, in partnership with the city of Miami Beach.

 

Laws online.Harvard Law School has partnered with Ravel Law to digitize its entire collection of U.S. case law. The “Free the Law” project aims to make available, in a searchable database, some 40 million pages of court decisions.

 

International overseer. Schwartz professor of Chinese and Inner Asian history Mark C. Elliott has been appointed vice provost for international affairs, succeeding Madero professor for the study of Mexico Jorge Domínguez, who stepped down last summer. Elliott, who also directs the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, has lived in Taiwan, the People’s Republic of China, Japan, and Poland, and has held academic appointments in several other countries. He speaks Chinese, Japanese, French, and Polish.

 

Endowment evolution. Amid changes in Harvard Management Company’s policies and practices (see page 22), Jameela Pedicini, vice president of sustainable investing for the past two years (see "Jameela Pedicini Named First HMC VP For Sustainable Investing"), departed in December to join Perella Weinberg Partners in New York. And joining two other new members of the HMC board (see “Endowment Gain—and Gaps,” November-December 2015, page 22), Amy Falls, M.P.P. ’89, has been elected a director. She is chief investment officer at The Rockefeller University.

 

Miscellany.Niall Ferguson, Tisch professor of history and a frequent commentator on public affairs, is leaving Harvard; as a senior fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institution, he hopes to accelerate work on the second volume of his biography of Henry A. Kissinger ’50, Ph.D. ’54, L ’55. He was profiled in “The Global Empire of Niall Ferguson” (May-June 2007, page 33).…Mitchell R. Julis, J.D.-M.B.A. ’81, has underwritten the new Julis-Rabinowitz Program in Jewish and Israeli Law at Harvard Law School, named in honor of his parents.…Six sophomores declared the new theater, dance, and media program as their primary concentration by the November deadline, as did two juniors who changed their course of study earlier in the year (read about the program at "Toward Theater"). Two other students have chosen the program as their secondary concentration.…Pope professor of the Latin language and literature Richard J. Tarrant has won an international award from the Academia Nazionale Virgilia for his recent commentary on Book 12 of the Aeneid; it was conferred in Mantova, Virgil’s home town, on the poet’s birthday in October. The first recipient of the prize, in 1994, was Wendell Clausen, also a member of the classics department.…Landesa, which works to secure legal land rights for the world’s poor, has been awarded the $2-million Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize; Christopher B. Jochnick, J.D. ’93, is CEO, and Roy L. Prosterman, J.D. ’58, is the organization’s founder.

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Engineering a School’s Future

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Engineering and applied sciences outlook

SEAS dean Frank Doyle shares insights.

Francis J. Doyle III

Photograph by Eliza Grinnell/Courtesy of Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences


Francis J. Doyle III

Photograph by Eliza Grinnell/Courtesy of Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

The reconceived Allston engineering complex, as it will face Western Avenue

Rendering by Behnisch Architekten


The reconceived Allston engineering complex, as it will face Western Avenue

Rendering by Behnisch Architekten

January-February 2016 News Engineering a School’s Future
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One hundred days into his new position as dean of the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), and after consultation with faculty members in the school and across the University, Francis “Frank” J. Doyle III shared insights into SEAS’s future during an autumn conversation.

Computer science, in which he will make 10 senior appointments, will grow in Allston, when much of the school occupies new quarters at the end of the decade (see below). The department, strong already in the theoretical realm, looks to add expertise in applied directions like machine learning and optimization (developing efficient solutions for problems: a simple example is how to get from point A to point B in the shortest time). Bioengineering, a relatively small presence now, is poised for growth, perhaps with collaborators at Harvard Medical School, particularly in the quantitative-leaning systems biology and biomedical informatics departments.

He sees enormous opportunity for more cross-school collaboration. SEAS offers a collaborative degree with the Graduate School of Design, but Doyle says Harvard has “arguably the world’s leading business school,…medical school, and…law school”—all with professors eager to explore potential partnerships with engineers. As one example, he points to the many faculty members throughout the University who are working in some way on climate change.

“The nature of these big challenges in [engineering] research going forward, is that they are going to touch on policy issues, legal issues, computing, data-privacy issues.” Like climate change, “The nature of these big challenges in [engineering] research going forward,” Doyle asserts, “is that they are going to touch on policy issues, legal issues, computing, data-privacy issues.” Personalized medicine, for example, is bound to affect the healthcare discussion, get into legal issues of privacy, and have an entrepreneurial dimension, thereby involving the schools of business, medicine, law, and public health, in addition to SEAS. These are problems “that require rallying something on the order of a couple hundred people to tackle,” he explains. “We weren’t well-positioned” for these kinds of partnerships in the past. “Today we are.”

For a full account of the conversation on the future of SEAS, read “Poised for Partnerships.”

Meanwhile the school, whose cohort of professors and tenure-track faculty members has risen nearly 80 percent in the past two decades, to 85 this academic year, reports that it is spilling out of its 410,000 square feet of labs, classrooms, and offices. A solution is in sight—but patience is required: the plan submitted to the Boston Redevelopment Authority for review in November envisions 496,850 gross square feet of new facilities facing Western Avenue, in Allston, with occupancy scheduled in the fall of 2020. The project includes 445,350 square feet of new construction, atop part of the platform for the science facilities on which work was halted by the financial crisis in 2010 (see “Allston: The Killer App,” March-April 2013, page 47). The remaining space would be landscaped, but reserved for future development. The project now also encompasses 51,500 square feet of SEAS administrative offices in the existing Harvard-owned building at 114 Western Avenue, which is to be renovated.

The project is smaller and simpler—and presumably less expensive—than the four-building science complex envisioned nearly a decade ago. Among other changes, it has shed a conference center, meant to serve several other buildings planned then, and a daycare facility. [Update January 19, 2016: An SEAS representative notes that as part of the planning for the new facility, the University is pursuing daycare alternatives in the vicinity.]

The new complex, conceived as six stories above grade and two levels below, masses three blocks of laboratories, totaling 209,000 square feet of science facilities, facing Western Avenue; they sit atop a quadrangle, where “teaching environments”—“maker space, design studios, fabricating garages, clubhouse plaza rooms, as well as traditional flat and sloped-floor classrooms”—will be concentrated (58,200 square feet in the new building, plus some in the renovated space next door). The complex steps down to the south, to the temporarily landscaped plaza. There are also an expansive atrium and circulation areas, meant to tie the whole facility together (122,250 square feet); a cafeteria and lounges; and some retail space. Public access is envisioned to the cafeteria, part of the atrium, and auditorium (the latter on a scheduled basis), as well as the retail areas: about 20,000 square feet of the total project.

Projected tenants include at least parts of SEAS’s applied mathematics, applied physics, computer and computational science, bioengineering, electrical engineering, environmental science and engineering, material science, and mechanical engineering groups. According to the regulatory submission, the project is designed to accommodate 360 faculty and staff members; 1,000 graduate students and researchers; and 600 undergraduates daily.

It is a safe bet that many of them are counting the days until they can see steel rising, and then anticipate moving in. The ranks of SEAS undergraduate concentrators continue to swell, from 291 in 2007-2008, when SEAS became a school, to 887 or more this academic year (driven largely by growth in applied mathematics and computer science). Maybe the University should not plant too deeply on the southern part of the site.

Engineering the future of Harvard’s SEAS
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The Harvard Remarks of the Aga Khan

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His Highness speaks about welcoming differences in the modern world.

His Highness the Aga Khan 
Photograph by Jon Chase/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications


His Highness the Aga Khan 
Photograph by Jon Chase/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications

Opinion

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Aga Khan at Harvard
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During his Jodidi Lecture at Harvard’s Memorial Church, co-sponsored by the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs and the Prince Alwaleed Islamic Studies Program, on November 12, His Highness the Aga Khan, Imam of the Shia Ismaili Muslims (and a member of the College class of 1959), addressed an issue, already rising steadily in prominence, that in recent weeks has been caught in the heated extremes of American presidential campaign rhetoric.

Before the address, professor of Indo-Muslim and Islamic religion and cultures Ali Asani, the director of Harvard’s Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Islamic studies program, spoke in a Weatherhead Center interview about addressing religious illiteracy and fostering pluralism. Asked about popular perceptions of Islam, he said:

We are witnessing an ideological competition, a battle between different interpretations of the faith, which profoundly impacts popular perceptions of the faith. His Highness the Aga Khan espouses a cosmopolitan vision of Islam which embraces religious, ethnic, and cultural diversities. Others interpretations of Islam are ahistorical and acultural in their approach, often defining it through negative or purely ideological terms.

Several such groups are opposed to the cultural arts and music. They go around destroying our shared human cultural heritage. They have their reasons for doing so, grounded in their context, but their highly ideological and polarizing vision of Islam contrasts starkly with the Aga Khan’s vision, which promotes the arts through various initiatives such as the Aga Khan Program in Islamic Architecture, jointly administered by Harvard and MIT; the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, which is engaged in restoring historic monuments in several cities in Africa and Asia; and the Aga Khan Music Initiative.

Asani put the Aga Khan’s work into perspective this way:

The Aga Khan talks about how the Qur’an itself embraces pluralism, diversity, and differences of opinion. For example, one verse [49:13] says, “We [God] have created you male and female, and appointed you races and tribes, that you may know one another,” or to that effect depending on how one translates it.

The purpose of God creating difference in human society—whether it is gender difference, or ethnic, or any kind—is supposed to be an occasion for learning and knowledge. Through that knowledge, as we engage with “the other,” we see that we’re actually engaging with other viewpoints and in the process coming to know ourselves better. It’s not meant to eliminate difference. It’s used to celebrate difference and engage with it in a very positive way.

In his remarks, titled “The Cosmopolitan Ethic in a Fragmented World,” the Aga Khan recalled his personal experience as a student, and addressed the polarization and fear that have poisoned discourse and understanding among peoples of different faiths and traditions. Excerpts follow.

From Boyhood, as Student and Imam, to a Life Promoting Opportunity

Now, you may have been wondering just what I have been doing over these past six decades since I left the Harvard playing fields. Let me begin by saying a word about that topic.

As you know, I was born into a Muslim family, linked by heredity to the Prophet Muhammad (may peace be upon him and his family). My education blended Islamic and Western traditions in my early years and at Harvard, where I majored in Islamic History. And in 1957 I was a junior when I became the 49th hereditary Imam of the Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims—when my grandfather designated me to succeed him.

What does it mean to become an Imam in the Ismaili tradition? To begin with, it is an inherited role of spiritual leadership. As you may know, the Ismailis are the only Muslim community that has been led by a living, hereditary Imam in direct descent from Prophet Muhammad.

That spiritual role, however, does not imply a separation from practical responsibilities. In fact for Muslims the opposite is true: the spiritual and material worlds are inextricably connected. Leadership in the spiritual realm—for all Imams, whether they are Sunni or Shia—implies responsibility in worldly affairs; a calling to improve the quality of human life. And that is why so much of my energy over these years has been devoted to the work of the Aga Khan Development Network.

The AKDN, as we call it, centers its attention in the developing world. And it is from this developing world’s perspective, that I speak to you today. So what I will be referring to is knowledge that I have gained from the developing world of Africa, Asia, the Middle East. What I will be speaking about has little to do with the industrialized West.

Through all of these years, my objective has been to understand more thoroughly the developing countries of Asia, Africa and the Middle East, and to prepare initiatives that will help them become countries of opportunity, for all of their peoples.

As I prepared for this new role in the late 1950s, Harvard was very helpful. The University allowed me—having prudently verified that I was a student “in good standing”—to take 18 months away to meet the leaders of the Ismaili community in some 25 countries where most of the Ismailis then lived, and to speak with their government leaders.

I returned here after that experience with a solid sense of the issues I would have to address, especially the endemic poverty in which much of my community lived. And I also returned with a vivid sense of the new political realities that were shaping their lives, including the rise of African independence movements, the perilous relations between India and Pakistan and the sad fact that many Ismailis were locked behind the Iron Curtain and thus removed from regular contact with the Imamat.

When I returned to Harvard, it was not only to complete my degree, but I was fortunate to audit a number of courses that were highly relevant to my new responsibilities. So as an undergraduate, I had the opportunity to benefit from the complete spectrum of courses offered by this great university.

Incidentally, I must have been the only Harvard undergraduate to have two secretaries and a personal assistant working with me. And I have always been very proud of the fact that I never sent any of them to take notes for me at my class!

…Today, the Aga Khan Development Network embraces many facets and functions. But, if I were trying to sum up in a single word its central objective, I would focus on the word “opportunity.” For what the peoples of the developing world seek above all else is hope for a better future.

Too often however, true opportunity has been a distant hope—perhaps for some, not even more than a dream. Endemic poverty, in my view, remains the world’s single most important challenge. It is manifested in many ways, including persistent refugee crises of the sort we have recently seen in such an acute form.….

Sixty years ago as I took up my responsibilities, the problems of the developing world, for many observers, seemed intractable. It was widely claimed that places like China and India were destined to remain among the world’s “basket cases”—incapable of feeding themselves let alone being able to industrialise or achieve economic self-sustainability. If this had been true, of course, then there would have been no way for the people of my community, in India and China and in many other places, to look for a better future.

Political realities presented further complications. Most of the poorest countries were living under distant colonial or protectorate or communist regimes. The monetary market was totally unpredictable. Volatile currencies were shifting constantly in value, making it almost impossible to plan ahead. And while I thought of all the Ismailis as part of one religious community, the realities of their daily lives were deeply distinctive and decidedly local.

Nor did most people yet see the full potential for addressing these problems through non-profit, private organizations—what we today call “civil society.”

And yet, it was also clear that stronger coordination across these lines of division could help open new doors of opportunity. We could see how renovated educational systems, based on best practices, could reach across frontiers of politics and language. We could see how global science could address changing medical challenges, including the growing threat of non-communicable disease. We could see, in sum, how a truly pluralistic outlook could leverage the best experiences of local communities through an effective international network.

But we also learned that the creation of effective international networks in a highly diversified environment can be a daunting matter. It took a great deal of considered effort to meld older values of continuity and local cohesion, with the promise of new cross-border integration.

What was required — and is still required—was a readiness to work across frontiers of distinction and distance without trying to erase them. What we were looking for, even then, were ways of building an effective “cosmopolitan ethic in a fragmented world.”

… Today [the AKDN] embraces a group of agencies—non-governmental and non-denominational—operating in 35 countries. They work in fields ranging from education and medical care, to job creation and energy production; from transport and tourism, to media and technology; from the fine arts and cultural heritage, to banking and microfinance. But they are all working together toward a single overarching objective: improving the quality of human life.

Opposing “Tribal Wariness” with a Vision of Diversity as an “ Opportunity To Be Welcomed”

When the Jodidi Lectureship was established here in 1955, its explicit purpose (and I quote) was “the promotion of tolerance, understanding and good will among nations.” And that seemed to be the way history was moving. Surely, we thought, we had learned the terrible price of division and discord, and certainly the great technological revolutions of the twentieth century would bring us more closely together.

In looking back to my Harvard days, I recall how a powerful sense of technological promise was in the air—a faith that human invention would continue its ever-accelerating conquest of time and space. I recall too, how this confidence was accompanied by what was described as a “revolution of rising expectations” and the fall of colonial empires. And of course, this trend seemed to culminate some years later with the end of the Cold War and the “new world order” that it promised.

But even as old barriers crumbled and new connections expanded, a paradoxical trend set in, one that we see today at every hand. At the same time that the world was becoming more interconnected, it also became more fragmented.

We have been mesmerized on one hand by the explosive pace of what we call “globalization,” a centripetal force putting us as closely in touch with people who live across the world as we are to those who live next to us. But at the same time, a set of centrifugal forces have been gaining on us, producing a growing sense—between and within societies—of disintegration.

Whether we are looking at a more fragile European Union, a more polarized United States, a more fervid Sunni-Shia conflict, intensified tribal rivalries in much of Africa and Asia, or other splintering threats in every corner of the planet, the word “fragmentation” seems to define our times.

Global promise, it can be said, has been matched by tribal wariness. We have more communication, but we also have more confrontation. Even as we exclaim about growing connectivity we seem to experience greater disconnection.

Perhaps what we did not see so clearly 60 years ago is the fact that technological advance does not necessarily mean human progress. Sometimes it can mean the reverse.

The more we communicate, the harder it can sometimes be to evaluate what we are saying. More information often means less context and more confusion. More than that, the increased pace of human interaction means that we encounter the stranger more often, and more directly. What is different is no longer abstract and distant. Even for the most tolerant among us, difference, more and more, can be up close and in your face.

What all of this means is that the challenge of living well together—a challenge as old as the human race—can seem more and more complicated. And so we ask ourselves, what are the resources that we might now draw upon to counter this trend? How can we go beyond our bold words and address the mystery of why our ideals still elude us?

In responding to that question, I would ask you to think with me about the term I have used in the title for this lecture: “The Cosmopolitan Ethic.”

For a very long time, as you know, the term most often used in describing the search for human understanding was the word “tolerance.” In fact, it was one of the words that was used in 1955 text to describe one of the objectives of this Jodidi Lecture.

In recent years our vocabulary in discussing this subject has evolved. One word that we have come to use more often in this regard is the word “pluralism.” And the other is the word “cosmopolitan.”

…A pluralist, cosmopolitan society is a society which not only accepts difference, but actively seeks to understand it and to learn from it. In this perspective, diversity is not a burden to be endured, but an opportunity to be welcomed.

A cosmopolitan society regards the distinctive threads of our particular identities as elements that bring beauty to the larger social fabric. A cosmopolitan ethic accepts our ultimate moral responsibility to the whole of humanity, rather than absolutizing a presumably exceptional part.

Perhaps it is a natural condition of an insecure human race to seek security in a sense of superiority. But in a world where cultures increasingly interpenetrate one another, a more confident and a more generous outlook is needed.

What this means, perhaps above all else, is a readiness to participate in a true dialog with diversity, not only in our personal relationships, but in institutional and international relationships also. But that takes work, and it takes patience. Above all, it implies a readiness to listen.

What is needed, as the former Governor General of Canada Adrienne Clarkson has said, and I quote, is a readiness “to listen to your neighbor, even when you may not particularly like him.” Is that message clear? You listen to people you don’t like!

A thoughtful cosmopolitan ethic is something quite different from some attitudes that have become associated with the concept of globalization in recent years. Too often, that term has been linked to an abstract universalism, perhaps well-meaning but often naïve. In emphasizing all that the human race had in common, it was easy to depreciate the identities that differentiated us. We sometimes talked so much about how we are all alike that we neglected the wonderful ways in which we can be different.

One result of this superficial view of homogenized, global harmony, was an unhappy counter-reaction. Some took it to mean the spread of a popular, Americanized global culture—that was unfair and an assessment that was erroneous. Others feared that their individual, ethnic or religious identities might be washed away by a super-competitive economic order, or by some supranational political regime. And the frequent reaction was a fierce defense of older identities. If cooperation meant homogenization, then a lot of people found themselves saying “No.”

But an either-or-choice between the global and the tribal—between the concept of universal belonging and the value of particular identities—was in fact a false choice. The road to a more cooperative world does not require us to erase our differences, but to understand them.

A responsible, thoughtful process of globalization, in my view, is one that is truly cosmopolitan, respecting both what we have in common and what makes us different.

It is perhaps in our nature to see life as a series of choices between sharply defined dualities, but in fact life is more often a matter of avoiding false dichotomies, which can lead to dangerous extremes. The truth of the matter is that we can address the dysfunctions of fragmentation without obscuring the values of diversity.

A cosmopolitan ethic will also be sensitive to the problem of economic insecurity in our world. It is an enormous contributing factor to the problems I have been discussing. Endemic poverty still corrodes any meaningful sense of opportunity for many millions. And even in less impoverished societies, a rising tide of economic anxiety can make it difficult for fearful people to respect, let alone embrace, that which is new or different.…

All of these considerations will place special obligations on those who play leadership roles in our societies. Sadly, some would-be leaders all across the world have been tempted to exploit difference and magnify division. It is always easier to unite followers in a negative cause than a positive one. But the consequences can be a perilous polarization.

The information explosion itself has sometimes become an information glut, putting even more of a premium on being first and getting attention, rather than being right and earning respect. It is not easy to retain one’s faith in a healthy, cosmopolitan marketplace of ideas when the flow of information is increasingly trivialized.

One answer to these temptations will be found, I am convinced, in the quality of our education. It will lie with our universities at one end of the spectrum, and early childhood education at the other—a field to which our Development Network has been giving special attention.

Let me mention one more specific issue where a sustained educational effort will be especially important. I refer to the debate—one that has involved many in this audience—about the prospect of some fundamental clash of civilizations between Islam and the West. In my view, the deeper problem behind any prospective “clash of civilizations” is a profound “clash of ignorances.” And in that struggle, education will be an indispensable weapon.

Finally, I would emphasize that a cosmopolitan ethic is one that resonates with the world’s great ethical and religious traditions.

A passage from the Holy Quran that has been central to my life is addressed to the whole of humanity. It says: “Oh Mankind, fear your Lord, who created you of a single soul, and from it created its mate, and from the pair of them scattered abroad many men and women…”

At the very heart of the Islamic faith is a conviction that we are all born “of a single soul.” We are “spread abroad” to be sure in all of our diversity, but we share, in a most profound sense, a common humanity.

This outlook has been central to the history of Islam. For many hundreds of years, the greatest Islamic societies were decidedly pluralistic, drawing strength from people of many religions and cultural backgrounds. My own ancestors, the Fatimid Caliphs, founded the city of Cairo, and the great Al Azhar University there, a thousand years ago in this same spirit.

That pluralistic outlook remains a central ideal for most Muslims today.

There are many, of course, some non-Muslims and some Muslims alike, who have perpetrated different impressions.

At the same time, institutions such as those that have welcomed me here today, have eloquently addressed these misimpressions. My hope is that the voices of Islam itself will continue to remind the world of a tradition that, over so many centuries, has so often advanced pluralistic outlooks and built some of the most remarkable societies in human history.

Let me repeat, in conclusion, that a cosmopolitan ethic is one that will honor both our common humanity and our distinctive identities—each reinforcing the other as part of the same high moral calling.

The central lesson of my own personal journey—over many miles and many years—is the indispensability of such an ethic in our changing world, based on the timeless truth that we are—each of us and all of us—“born of a single soul.”

Aga Khan speaks at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard
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Getting General Education Right?

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Harvard prepares to reset its undergraduate curriculum—again.

Sean D. Kelly
Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications


Sean D. Kelly
Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications

Harvard College

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Harvard College overhauls curriculum
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Following a review committee’s sharp criticisms of the undergraduate General Education curriculum (Gen Ed) published last spring, its chair, Martignetti professor of philosophy Sean Kelly, on December 1 briefed the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) on proposed changes. The committee found that the current requirement (that students take eight Gen Ed courses in thematic areas, amounting to one-fourth of their academic work) is shaped by a specific definition of the purpose of an education in the liberal arts: to prepare students for a life of civic and ethical engagement with a changing world, apart from any specialized knowledge they acquire through their concentration. But Harvard has also historically wanted students to acquire deeper knowledge of a field through their concentration, and broader familiarity with other areas through distribution requirements; and has sought to encourage elective courses, among which students can freely choose. (Read the committee’s succinct overview of these alternatives and its full proposal here.)

Triangulating among these approaches, the committee’s recommended reworking of Gen Ed, in effect, embraces all of them: “We propose a structure that does justice to the importance of each of the three motivating philosophies for a liberal arts education, while addressing the problems of identity and size” discovered in the review of the program’s current workings.  Its principal proposals are:

A four-course General Education requirement, to be met by courses explicitly designed for the program. (That means that reflagged concentration courses, which now make up 75 percent or more of the courses for which General Education credit is being granted, would be excluded.)

The courses would fall into four categories:

  • aesthetics, culture, interpretation;
  • individuals, societies, histories;
  • science and technology in society; and
  • ethics and civics.

The first three, roughly, aggregate separate categories within the current, eight-course Gen Ed program, respectively:

  • aesthetic and interpretive understanding, and culture and belief—corresponding to FAS’s arts and humanities division;
  • societies of the world, and the United States in the world—corresponding to the social sciences; and
  • science of living systems, and science of the physical universe, but tweaked to put these subjects explicitly into their social context—corresponding to the sciences and engineering.

The last corresponds to the current ethical-reasoning field.

One “College course” in empirical and mathematical reasoning, in place of the current Gen Ed requirement in that realm. (The committee suggested that this course be taken in the freshman year, but that timing is subject to further consideration, given faculty concerns about congesting the first year, presumably a time for intellectual exploration, given the existing expository-writing requirement or requirements, foreign languages, freshman seminar offerings, and so on.) A separate committee would convene to define the quantitative-reasoning requirement and courses, which might be drawn from current Gen Ed offerings, departmental courses (in mathematics, statistics, or applied mathematics), or wholly new ones.

Three distribution courses, to encourage disciplinary breadth: one each from FAS’s divisions of arts and humanities; social sciences; and natural sciences/engineering and applied sciences. Courses from the student’s concentration could not be used to satisfy the distribution requirement.

Logistics and Implementation

The review committee notes that “General Education courses should be among the best in the College. But they are also the hardest to teach well.” The latter problem arises from multiple causes discussed in the committee’s report last spring. The courses are meant to be neither simply introductions to a discipline for concentrators, nor dumbed-down surveys, but rather, synoptic and integrative in approach. Although some professors embrace the challenge, many faculty members’ natural inclination is to develop and teach courses focusing on their field of expertise and research: concentration classes. They may need both time and support to develop new courses that effectively interpret content, intellectual approaches, and research protocols for a broader student cohort; join that work to the aims of general education; and train and support the required teaching fellows.

Surmounting such challenges involves both creating incentives for the faculty members and providing the required resources. Indeed, the review committee has suggested that implementation of the current version of Gen Ed, beginning in the fall of 2009—during the financial crisis—was hampered by resource constraints. Among the complaints about the Core Curriculum (the predecessor to Gen Ed) was that it offered too few course options for students as they sought to construct their class schedules; the current Gen Ed offerings number more than 100 truly purpose-built courses, Kelly has reported (roughly as many as were typically available each academic year a decade ago, when the curriculum revision began). But the options were padded out by granting Gen Ed credit for hundreds of departmental, concentration courses, which do not fulfill the broader aims of this part of the curriculum.

Accordingly, the committee recommended an array of steps to assure the success of the Gen Ed system it has outlined, ranging from “first-rate course-development” and technology support to paying for course administrators (head teaching fellows who would remain with a course from year to year), training for teaching fellows and assistants, and funding small section sizes (a target of 12 students, and a cap of 14). As a matter of exhortation, departments would be encouraged to embrace Gen Ed as part of their educational mission (alongside their disciplinary, concentration missions), and to “take into account needs of Gen Ed” during searches (as Columbia apparently does, according to the statement of one  speaker during the December 1 faculty meeting).

Making a commitment to generating and supporting Gen Ed courses implies overcoming a structural obstacle that is unrelated to students’ needs. As reported, graduate students in the sciences are typically supported by research grants—so serving as teaching fellows in Gen Ed courses in a sense represents a diversion from their principal responsibility. But arts and humanities graduate students are typically supported precisely through their teaching roles—and so faculty members in those fields have an incentive to offer courses with large enrollments and a lot of sections. Obviously, an undergraduate-centered Gen Ed curriculum needs to overcome those unrelated, structural matters so as to meet students’ learning needs.

Whatever curriculum the faculty adopts, toting up the costs and finding the resources that will attract faculty members to devise and teach Gen Ed courses, and to support them and teaching fellows appropriately, will fall to FAS dean Michael D. Smith.

Finally, the scope, content, and definition of the new course in empirical and mathematical reasoning are to be “curated” by a new committee of faculty members from across the College. Some existing Gen Ed and concentration courses may qualify; they and other offerings will have to be adapted to students’ level of preparation. Unlike the only other required course, the freshman expository-writing class, this Gen Ed offering is to be developed and taught by regular faculty members; filling out the course list may take some time.

That suggests that even if the proposed Gen Ed reforms are legislated in the spring, it may still take another academic year to put the recommendations into practice.

Context on Content

The review of Gen Ed, and faculty discussion of the proposals this year, have differed strikingly from the debate from 2004 to 2007, when the current curriculum was finally adopted. Then, interim president Derek Bok had to lead multiple faculty meetings to sort out professors’ strongly held opinions about the broad fields of knowledge to which students were to be exposed. (In the event, the new review committee has reported, students have typically fulfilled their eight Gen Ed requirements by taking perhaps four courses that genuinely meet the program’s broadening and civic aims, and another four from among the hundreds of more focused concentration courses that have been granted Gen Ed credit.)

This fall, there was almost no public discussion about what subjects students should have to encounter in their Gen Ed classes—either because faculty members who experienced the prior ordeal are wary about undergoing it again (or suspect the outcome of such a discussion would have limited practical effect on what students learn); or because they have come to feel that the review committee’s three-pronged approach (Gen Ed; distribution; a quantitative requirement) satisfies pedagogical or procedural needs better than any other outcome they might pursue.

During the faculty meeting on December 1, two faculty members asked questions about the content of the new, four-course Gen Ed proposal. A professor of history noted that the faculty had been on record requiring students to encounter the past in at least one course. Given the proposed, broadened Gen Ed categories (aesthetics, culture, interpretation; and individuals, societies, histories), it would be possible for a student to satisfy the requirements without any exposure to history. Was that what the faculty intended? And an arts professor, noting the discussions of human difference, diversity, and inclusion under way this autumn at Harvard and on other campuses (matters about which the faculty had heard a full report earlier in the same meeting, from its Committee to Study the Importance of Student Body Diversity), asked whether encountering a course on such matters were not fundamental to a twenty-first-century education meant to prepare students for civic life, as Gen Ed aims to do.

Sean Kelly responded in each case with wariness, saying that there were Gen Ed courses on offer in both areas; that more should be offered; and that students should certainly be advised to take them. But he acknowledged that the broader Gen Ed categories did not dictate the areas to which students should be exposed in this part of their studies, and that attempts to prescribe such requirements would involve the faculty in, as he put it, “chasing shadows,” a pursuit that could be a “slippery slope”—apparently a reference to the heated, messy 2007 debate. Maintaining their apparent posture that this discussion belonged solely to the teaching faculty, neither Dean Smith nor President Drew Faust (her passionate views on race, difference, and history, in the form of a text about historian John Hope Franklin, Ph.D. '41, LL.D. ’81, had been published earlier that week) spoke to the point.

The outcome—a tripartite Gen Ed structure, affording both professors and their students much more leeway in what fields they will pursue and in how they fulfill their requirement for this part of the curriculum—appears likely to be legislated in the spring term. Its ultimate educational effect, therefore, will flow less from a structured set of areas to which the faculty has determined students ought to be exposed, and much more from the incentives and supports provided to elicit such courses from professors; the quality and appeal of the offerings; and the advising students receive as they make their course selections.

Curriculum overhaul at Harvard College
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Kerry Washington Named Hasty Pudding’s Woman of the Year

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The Hasty Pudding picks the Scandal actress for its famous pot.

Kerry Washington

Kerry Washington
Photograph by iStock


Kerry Washington
Photograph by iStock

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Kerry Washington Named Woman of the Year
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Kerry Washington has been chosen to receive the 2016 Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year Award, honoring a “talented and socially engaged film, TV, and stage actress who keeps breaking barriers in Hollywood,” the Harvard student group announced on January 6. She joins an elite list of actresses honored by the nation’s oldest undergraduate drama troupe, among them Katharine Hepburn, Meryl Streep, Julia Roberts, Helen Mirren, Elizabeth Taylor, Anne Hathaway, Claire Danes, and, most recently, Amy Poehler.

“We are so excited to honor Kerry Washington as the Hasty Pudding Theatricals Woman of the Year and welcome her to Cambridge to celebrate her many achievements,” said Kennedy Edmonds ’17, producer of the group’s forthcoming show. “Kerry is an amazing actress with many fans in the company, and the perfect choice for this honor…But we also feel a bit nervous as we set out to coordinate a perfect event for legendary PR whiz Olivia Pope!”

Known best for her portrayal of crisis manager Olivia Pope on ABC’s Scandal, Washington has earned multiple Golden Globe, Emmy, and SAG Best Actress nominations, as well as an NAACP Image Award for Best Actress. In addition to many film credits—including Lift and Django Unchained—she has produced, and will star as Anita Hill in, a new HBO movie, Confirmation, depicting Clarence Thomas’s 1991 Supreme Court confirmation hearings. 

"Uh-oh. Here we go… #HastyPudding #Honored So excited!!!!" the actress tweeted Wednesday. 

The Woman of the Year festivities will begin at 2:45 p.m. on January 28, when Washington will lead a short parade through Harvard Square. Following the parade, Hasty Pudding Theatricals will host a celebratory roast for the actress at Farkas Hall. At 4 p.m., Washington will be presented with her Pudding Pot, before Hasty Pudding cast members perform musical numbers from the group’s 168th production, That 1770s Show.

Harvard's Hasty Pudding names Kerry Washington Woman of the Year
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Harvard and HUCTW Reach Tentative Contract Agreement

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The deal marks the end of nearly a year of strained negotiations between the University and its largest labor union.

A Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers publicity poster


A Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers publicity poster

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Harvard and HUCTW reach tentative contract agreement
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More than 4,600 members of Harvard’s largest labor union will not see deductibles or coinsurance in their healthcare plans for at least three more years, in a tentative contract agreement reached this week. The deal marks the end of nearly a year of strained negotiations between the University and the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers (HUCTW), which extended four months past the expiration of the previous three-year contract in September. HUCTW members will vote on contract ratification February 25.

A typical HUCTW member will receive annual raises of 3.4 percent, consistent with the pay increases provided to workers under the previous contract. Before the financial crisis, HUCTW workers received notably higher annual raises, averaging 4.5 percent between 1992 and 2009. Adjusted for inflation, which currently hovers around 1 percent in the Boston area, the raises negotiated in the new contract more closely mirror raises workers have received historically. “All HUCTW members will enjoy raises significantly greater than the current general inflation rate,” according to an e-mail sent by the union to its members. Still, “Inflation numbers don’t capture a lot of the micro-factors that can hit hard on our members, like the extremely high increases in rental housing in the Boston-Cambridge area,” HUCTW director Bill Jaeger said in an interview. About half of HUCTW workers say they have “very little left over” after paying their bills and basic expenses, according to a 2015 survey of the membership. 

“Both parties came to these negotiations in good faith and we are pleased that our work produced an agreement acceptable to both sides,” University executive vice president Katie Lapp said in a statement

Covered workers won’t have to pay healthcare deductibles or coinsurance—a major sticking point in the negotiations. Employees instead will see increases in copayments for office visits, prescription drugs, and hospital stays, beginning in 2017. The contract also creates a new healthcare tier for workers earning less than $55,000, or about 40 percent of HUCTW members, who will pay the least in monthly premiums. Currently, the lowest tier includes all workers earning less than $70,000, who contribute 15 percent of the cost of their premiums. Beginning next year, the sub-$55,000 tier will contribute 13 percent. The change will save workers in the lowest tier about $150 annually for individual plans and $400 for family plans, Jaeger estimated. The deal also includes union concessions on retiree health benefits: future hires and workers who are far from retirement will see increased premiums. 

“Our union and the University have been going at each other on questions of health-plan design in an unproductive way for five years now, and it’s gratifying for the whole community that this seems like it will work for everybody,” Jaeger said.

HUCTW members have feared that the University would expand cost-sharing in its union plans, after the introduction more than a year ago of deductibles and coinsurance to the University’s health coverage for faculty and nonunionized staff members. The changes provoked sharp criticism from some employees, who feared that increased cost-sharing would discourage lower-income workers, postdoctoral fellows, and junior faculty members from seeking necessary medical care. The administration answered these concerns by introducing a fund to defray some of the extra medical costs that might be incurred by lower-paid beneficiaries, and, in the current year, offering a higher-premium-cost coverage option with less cost-sharing. The 2016 benefit plan also made the cost structure of health premiums more progressive: for 2016, nonunion employees earning up to $75,000 are eligible for the largest University subsidy of their monthly premiums, up from $70,000 since 2007. Still, premiums rose by more than 7 percent across the nonunion plans this year, reflecting rapid inflation in medical prices.   

The changes in Harvard’s health plans, and the issues negotiated at length in arriving at the HUCTW contract proposal, mirror broader workplace and national trends. The proportion of workers covered by employer-sponsored insurance with deductibles of $1,000 or more has shot up from 10 percent in 2006 to nearly half today. In general, health economists back cost-sharing designs, which they believe will encourage patients to become better consumers of medical care and help to contain inflation in medical prices.

Data on whether cost-sharing has made Americans better healthcare consumers, though, have been mixed. A 2015 study found that after a firm moved 75,000 employees to high-deductible plans, they simply used less care, even when they needed it. This is the position HUCTW has taken on large-scale cost-sharing, which Jaeger called the “skin in the game” approach to healthcare. “Of all the pressures you can put on the system, patients seem the least able to withstand it. If we’re going to take market-based approaches, let’s put the pressure on prestigious hospitals that are price-gouging, not on patients to decide whether they can afford to do what their doctor tells them,” he said.

Some 72 percent of HUCTW workers say that Harvard’s affordable health benefits are an “important factor” in their decision to stay at the University, and another 11 percent call it their “main reason.” Harvard’s health benefits remain some of the most generous in the region, and will continue to be an important tool for the recruitment of high-quality staff. Still, as cost-sharing expands nationally and especially at Harvard’s peer institutions, University workers appear likely to bear increasing responsibility for their own health costs.

Harvard and largest union reach contract deal
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Overseers Petitioners Challenge Harvard Policies

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Petitioners pursuing election to Harvard’s board seek to change admissions and tuition policies.

Ron Unz—shown speaking about Proposition 227 in Los Angeles in 1998—brings deep experience in initiative campaigns to the slate of petitioners for the Board of Overseers.
Photograph by Chris Pizzello/APimage


Ron Unz—shown speaking about Proposition 227 in Los Angeles in 1998—brings deep experience in initiative campaigns to the slate of petitioners for the Board of Overseers.
Photograph by Chris Pizzello/APimage

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Overseers petitioners challenge Harvard policies
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As campaign announcements go, it was as splashy as could be: a page-one story in The New York Times of January 15, headlined “How Some Would Level the Playing Field: Free Harvard Degrees.” The article detailed a plan by five people to petition for slots on the annual ballot for Harvard’s Board of Overseers election under a common campaign theme, “Free Harvard, Fair Harvard.”

That the effort, helped by its catchy theme, would attract high-profile news coverage at the outset should be no surprise: its quarterback is Ron Unz ’83, who describes himself as a physicist by training and software developer by profession. (Unz created financial-services applications and founded and sold a company.) Of relevance in the current circumstances, he has published political and policy-advocacy media (The American Conservative and the Unz Review—an online articles archive and blog), and he is a veteran of California electoral politics (he sought the Republican gubernatorial nomination in 1994). Unz is especially known for engaging in that state’s high-stakes initiative process, where he was involved in campaigning against Proposition 187 (an anti-immigration measure; Updated January 28, 1:45 p.m.: Ron Unz notes that the proposition passed, but was subsequently ruled unconstitutional upon court review and was therefore overturned; the text previously indicated that the measure had been defeated by voters) and in a successful campaign to dismantle bilingual schooling (Proposition 227).

The issues raised in the shorthand language of the statements defining the petitioners’ campaign—which seeks to alter an expressed core value of the University, and its financial model—merit detailed discussion. This article accordingly reports on their objectives and the slate itself, and then directs readers to contextual information on the substantive matters.

The Platform and the Slate

Each winter (this year, on January 12), the Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) announces nominees for election as members of the Board of Overseers and as HAA directors, and notes further that “Candidates for Overseer may also be nominated by petition, that is, by obtaining a prescribed number [currently, 201] of signatures from eligible degree holders. The deadline for all petitions is Feb. 1.” The petition group is pursuing the required signatures now, with a platform, in two one-page statements, that proposes:

•“Harvard Should Be Fair,” and promises, “As Harvard Overseers we would demand far greater transparency in the admissions process, which today is opaque and therefore subject to hidden favoritism and abuse.”

Beyond this focus on “transparency,” the statement cites The Price of Admission, by Daniel Golden ’78 (reviewed here), as describing “the strong evidence of corrupt admissions practices at Harvard and other elite universities, with the children of the wealthy and the powerful regularly granted admission over the more able and higher-achieving children of ordinary American families. In some cases, millions of dollars may have been paid to purchase an admissions slot for an undeserving applicant.

“A nation that selects its elites by corrupt means will produce corrupt elites. These abuses must end.”

It then pivots to another point, drawing a substantive conclusion about admissions practices. It says, “…top officials at Harvard, Yale, Princeton and the other Ivy League schools today strongly deny the existence of ‘Asian quotas.’ But there exists powerful statistical evidence to the contrary.…Racial discrimination against Asian-American students has no place at Harvard University and must end.” [This claim is a subject of current litigation against Harvard; it is also an issue on which some members of the petition slate have expressed their conclusions—see discussion below.]

•“Harvard Should Be Free,” and promises, “As Harvard Overseers we would demand the immediate elimination of all tuition for undergraduates since the revenue generated is negligible compared to the investment income of the endowment.”

In support of this proposal, the statement continues, “Each year, the investment income the university receives from its private equity and securities holdings averages some twenty-five times larger than the net tuition revenue from its 6,600 undergraduate students. Under such circumstances, continuing to charge tuition of up to $180,000 for four years of college education is unconscionable.”

As a rationale, the statement asserts that, despite financial aid, “relatively few less affluent families even bother applying because they assume that a Harvard education is reserved only for the rich.” A Harvard decision to eliminate undergraduate tuition, the statement concludes, “would reach around the world, and soon nearly every family in America would be aware that a Harvard education was now free. Academically successful students from all walks of life would suddenly begin to consider the possibility of attending Harvard. Other very wealthy and elite colleges such Yale, Princeton, and Stanford would be forced to follow Harvard’s example and also abolition tuition. There would be considerable pressure on all our public colleges and universities to trim their bloated administrative costs and drastically cut their tuition.” [See the discussion below of endowment earnings, tuition and other unrestricted income, the sources of financial-aid funds, and other matters.]

The slate of petitioners who seek to be on the Overseers ballot includes:

  • Ralph Nader, LL.B.’58, the consumer advocate, author, and founder of the Center for the Study of Responsive Law.
  • Ron Unz
  • Stephen Hsu, vice president for research and graduate studies, Michigan State University, where he is also a professor in the department of physics and astronomy. A Caltech graduate who earned his doctorate at Berkeley, he was a Junior Fellow at Harvard between 1991 and 1993. The biographical note put out by the petition campaign notes that Hsu has “written widely on public policy issues, including the indications of anti-Asian discrimination at elite universities.”
  • Stuart Taylor Jr., J.D. ’77, journalist and author, former legal-affairs and Supreme Court reporter for The New York Times. He is affiliated with the Brookings Institution, where his biography states, “He has coauthored two critically acclaimed books. In 2012, Richard Sander ’78 and Taylor coauthored Mismatch: How Affirmative Action Hurts Students It's Intended to Help, and Why Universities Won't Admit It. In 2007, Taylor and KC Johnson coauthored Until Proven Innocent: Political Correctness and the Shameful Injustices of the Duke Lacrosse Rape Fraud. They are planning a new book on the supposed ‘epidemic’ of campus rape.” The Federalist Society lists him as an “expert” (meaning only that he has spoken at or participated in events).
  • Lee C. Cheng ’93, chief legal officer of Newegg Inc., and a co-founder of the Asian American Legal Foundation (Updated February 2, 8:10 a.m.: the website, previously reported as inactive, has been restored after a software update). The petition biographical note observes that he has “been actively involved for over two decades in issues related to anti-Asian discrimination at secondary schools, colleges, and universities.”

In a January 19 post, “Meritocracy: Will Harvard Become Free and Fair?” (at his Unz Review), Unz again focused on “increasing the transparency of today’s opaque and abuse-ridden admissions process” and eliminating College tuition. In campaign mode, he writes,

Will our campaign succeed? Maybe, maybe not. Based on all indications so far, I have little doubt that if our names do appear on the annual Overseer ballot and our position statements are mailed out to the 320,000 Harvard alumni, we will win a resounding victory throughout the Harvard community, and soon thereafter Mighty Harvard will agree to forego 4% of its annual investment income and henceforth become tuition-free, while also starting to shift its admissions process from abusive total opacity to some degree of reasonable transparency.

Conflicting Worldviews on Admissions

•University Policy

Harvard has long emphasized the diversity of its student body as a core institutional value: one of the principal ways to expose students to difference, choice, and intellectual stimulation as a fundamental part of their education not only within the classroom, but also in extracurricular activities and in the residential setting. (The institutional amicus filings submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court during recent rounds of litigation over the use of race in admissions at public universities, discussed below, indicate that selective universities and colleges generally share this view.) Harvard’s leaders during the past half-century have gone to unusual lengths to articulate the importance of this value. A summary of some of the important statements follows.

In 1995, President Neil L. Rudenstine delivered “Diversity and Learning,” a report to the Overseers, devoted entirely to the history and importance of the idea of diversity as fundamental to learning, broadly and at Harvard. In a conversation about the essay, Rudenstine emphasized that diversity underpins effective learning and promotes the conditions for democracy in a heterogeneous society. (Read Harvard Magazine’s excerpt here.) He prefaced his report with two resonant quotes from prominent predecessors. He cited Charles William Eliot to the effect that

Democracy does not seek equality through the discouragement or obliteration of individual diversities. It does not aim at a general average of gifts and powers in humanity. The prairie is not its social ideal. Its conception of social and political equality does not involve a dead level of human gifts, powers, or attainments. On the contrary, democratic society enjoys and actively promotes an immense diversity among its members….

He also cited James Bryant Conant’s observation that “A college would be a dreary place if it were composed of only one type of individual. A liberal education is possible, it seems to me, only in an atmosphere of tolerance engendered by the presence of many [individuals] with many minds.”

Rudenstine observed that “student diversity has, for more than a century, been valued for its capacity to contribute powerfully to the process of learning and to the creation of an effective educational environment. It has also been seen as vital to the education of citizens—and the development of leaders—in heterogeneous democratic societies such as our own,” and so has shaped Harvard’s admissions policies.

Those policies, he noted, reflect the reality that “When such a large proportion of applicants are barely distinguishable on statistical grounds, SAT scores and GPAs are clearly of only limited value. Admissions processes therefore must remain essentially human. They must depend on informed judgment rather than numerical indices. And they will be subject to all the inevitable pressures and possible misconceptions that any exceptionally competitive selection process involves.”

Effective admissions policies, committed to excellence, required Harvard to “continue to admit students as individuals, based on their merits: on what they have achieved academically, and what they seem to promise to achieve; on their character, and their energy and curiosity and determination; on their willingness to engage in discussion and debate, as well as their willingness to entertain the idea that tolerance, understanding, and mutual respect are goals worthy of persons who have been truly educated.” Evaluation of applicants gives “appropriate consideration” to grades, test scores, and class rank” but those metrics are “viewed in the context of each applicant’s full set of capabilities, qualities, and potential for future growth and effectiveness.” Further, Harvard also “will seek out—in all corners of the nation, and indeed the world—a diversity of talented and promising students.”

Indeed, “any definition of qualifications or merit that does not give considerable weight to a wide range of human qualities and capacities will not serve the goal of fairness to individual candidates (quite apart from groups) in admissions. Nor will it serve the fundamental purposes of education. The more narrow and numerical the definition of qualifications, the more likely we are to pass over (or discount) applicants—of many different kinds—who possess exceptional talents, attributes, and evidence of promise that are not well measured by standardized tests.”

Looking beyond undergraduate education, Rudenstine made an argument about society, and about graduates’ future directions (and economic prospects) generally:

[I]f we want a society in which our physicians, teachers, architects, public servants, and other professionals possess a developed sense of vocation and calling; if we want them to be able to gain some genuine understanding of the variety of human beings with whom they will work, and whom they will serve; if we want them to think imaginatively and to act effectively in relation to the needs and values of their communities, then we shall have to take diversity into account as one of many significant factors in graduate and professional school admissions and education.

A few years later, Princeton president emeritus William G. Bowen, LL.D. ’73, and Harvard president emeritus Derek Bok collaborated on The Shape of the River: Long-Term Consequences of Considering Race in College and University Admissions, drawn from data on the life experiences of students at 28 selective colleges and universities (excluding Harvard). In this magazine’s review, Daniel Steiner (who had been vice president and general counsel in the Bok administration) noted the two presidents’ roles in “taking race into account as a ‘plus factor’—in their own and other institutions.” Their book gave “two clear reasons for supporting race consciousness in admissions to selective schools”: preparing “qualified minority students for the many opportunities they will have to contribute to a society that is still trying to solve its racial problems within a population that will soon be one-third black and Hispanic”; and providing “a racially diverse environment that can help prepare all students to live and work in our increasingly multiracial society.” Steiner found the authors’ evidence supportive of affirmative action in admissions on both counts.

He also found persuasive the authors’ argument that proxies for race, such as low socioeconomic status, would not have a similar benefit—on sheer arithmetic grounds alone (given the large number of lower-income but academically qualified white students compared to similar black students). He also cited their finding that “The data do not support those who believe that blacks with lower scores than their classmates at the most selective schools would fit better at less selective schools” (the “mismatch” theory; see discussion below).

During the Supreme Court review of admissions policies at the University of Michigan and its law school, in the 2002-2003 academic year (see below), President Lawrence H. Summers emphasized the “vital educational benefits for all students” of bringing them together from different backgrounds, and the benefit to society of educating graduates who will, accordingly, be better prepared to “serve as leaders in a multiracial society.” Such admissions policies, he noted, “carefully consider each applicant as a whole individual, not just as a product of grades or test scores,” and so are more appropriate than externally imposed “blunter” policies or standards that purport to be oblivious to ethnicity or race. When the ruling in Grutter v. Bollinger upheld the law school’s consideration of race in admissions, Summers cited the “paramount significance for our community” of the court’s embrace of “the core principles that have long informed Harvard’s approach to admissions.”

At the beginning of the current academic year, last September, President Drew Faust used the occasion of her Morning Prayers remarks (read the text) to highlight diversity:

I often remark that for many if not most of those arriving at Harvard for the first time, this is the most varied community in which they have ever lived—perhaps ever will live. People of different races, religions, ethnicities, nationalities, political views, gender identities, sexual orientations. We celebrate these differences as an integral part of everyone’s education—whether for a first year student in the College or an aspiring M.D. or M.B.A. or LL.M.—or for a member of the faculty or staff, who themselves are always learners, too.

She then pointed to litigation (see below) seeking to overturn the University’s admissions procedures in support of that diversity, and announced sharp opposition to the claims being made:  “Harvard confronts a lawsuit that touches on its most fundamental values, a suit that challenges our admissions processes and our commitment to a widely diverse student body. Our vigorous defense of our procedures and of the kind of educational experience they are intended to create will cause us to speak frequently and forcefully about the importance of diversity in the months to come.”

Finally, in December, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences heard a report from the Committee to Study the Importance of Student Body Diversity (chaired by Harvard College dean Rakesh Khurana), and will be asked, in formal legislation, to endorse it as a “statement of the values embraced by the Faculty” during a meeting this spring. It cites Rudenstine’s 1995 report and Faust’s Morning Prayers remarks, and finds that “The exposure to innovative ideas and novel ways of thinking that is at the heart of Harvard’s liberal arts and sciences education is deepened immeasurably by close contact with people whose lives and experiences animate those ideas. It is not enough, Harvard has long recognized, to read about or be taught the opinions of others on a given subject.”

To that end, the report continues,

Our students arrive at Harvard with their identities partially formed, shaped by racial, ethnic, social, economic, geographic, and other cultural factors, a sense of self both internally realized and externally recognized. Four years later, our students are welcomed by the President of the University to embrace an additional identity, that of membership in “the community of educated men and women.” A critical aspect of our transformational goal is to encourage this second and complementary identity, one inclusive of but not bounded by race or ethnicity, one that is sensitive to and understanding of the rich and diverse range of others’ identities, one that opens empathic windows to imagining how other identities might feel. This we aspire to do by creating contexts where students interact with “other,” with those having different realized and recognized identities, and by providing academic, residential, and extra-curricular opportunities for these interactions.

If the only contact students had with others’ lived experiences was on the page or on the screen, it would be far too easy to take short cuts in the exercise of empathy, to keep a safe distance from the ideas, and the people, that might make one uncomfortable. By putting those people and those ideas on the other side of the seminar table—and in one’s own dormitory rooms and dining halls—we ensure that our students truly engage with other people’s experiences and points of view, that they truly develop their powers of empathy. As President Conant explained, “[t]olerance, honesty, intellectual integrity, courage, [and] friendliness are virtues not to be learned out of a printed volume but from the book of experience.”

The role played by racial diversity in particular in the development of this capacity for empathy cannot be overstated.

 Admissions issues before the Supreme Court

Whether and under what conditions public universities may constitutionally consider race and ethnicity in admissions has been the subject of recurrent litigation. Harvard and other private institutions with selective admissions policies have been interested parties, filing amicus briefs, in these cases (both because of their diversity goals, and because they receive public research funding). Harvard has become particularly involved because its admissions policy, described in one such filing—including consideration of applicants’ race or ethnicity as part of a holistic review of individual applicants’ candidacy—was cited with approval in the Supreme Court’s ruling in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke (1978), the landmark case that has since shaped institutions’ practices and subsequent litigation.

When the issue reached the Court again, in 2002-2003, Harvard filed an amicus brief supporting the Bakke standard (see President Summers’s comments above). The Court’s ruling in Grutter v. Bollinger (2003) upheld consideration of race in admissions to the University of Michigan’s law school; Justice Sandra Day O’Connor cited Justice Lewis F. Powell’s Bakke opinion extensively.

The issues have arisen again in two further rounds of Supreme Court deliberations: the 2012 litigation in Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, which was sent down to a lower court for further review; and the review and new arguments in Fisher this past December.

Concerning the 2012 case (extensive background here), President Faust said, “A diverse student body is fundamental to the educational experience at Harvard. Bringing together students from different backgrounds and walks of life challenges students to think in different ways about themselves, their beliefs, and the world into which they will graduate.” Robert W. Iuliano, senior vice president and general counsel, said that the amicus brief Harvard filed with peer institutions sought to underscore “why we think student-body diversity both improves the quality of education on campus and creates successful citizens in a world that is diverse and pluralistic.” The institutions emphasized the “profound importance of assembling a diverse student body—including racial diversity—for their educational missions.” Diversity, they argued, “encourages students to question their own assumptions, to test received truths, and to appreciate the spectacular complexity of the modern world. This larger understanding prepares Amici’s graduates to be active and engaged citizens wrestling with the pressing challenges of the day, to pursue innovation in every field of discovery, and to expand humanity’s learning and accomplishment.”

Because race continues to play a role in society, the brief continued, some students are inevitably affected or even shaped by it. Given that, the brief argued, “If an applicant thinks his or her race or ethnicity is relevant to a holistic evaluation—which would hardly be surprising given that race remains a salient social factor—it is difficult to see how a university could blind itself to that factor while also gaining insight into each applicant and building a class that is more than the sum of its parts…In view of that reality…it would be extraordinary to conclude at this time that race is the single characteristic that universities may not consider in composing a student body that is diverse and excellent in many dimensions, not just academically.”

When the case returned to the Supreme Court last fall, Harvard again filed an amicus brief. In summarizing the University case both for diversity in its student body and the admissions process used to admit those students, the brief noted:

This Court has long affirmed that universities may conclude, based on their academic judgment, that establishing and maintaining a diverse student body is essential to their educational mission and that the pursuit of such diversity is a compelling interest. Petitioner does not directly challenge that holding here, with good reason. It is more apparent now than ever that maintaining a diverse student body is essential to Harvard’s goals of providing its students with the most robust educational experience possible on campus and preparing its graduates to thrive in a complex and stunningly diverse nation and world. These goals, moreover, are not held by Harvard alone, but are shared by many other universities that, like Harvard, have seen through decades of experience the transformative importance of student body diversity on the educational process. This Court should therefore reaffirm its longstanding deference to universities’ academic judgment that diversity serves vital educational goals.

The Court should also reaffirm its previous decisions recognizing the constitutionality of holistic admissions processes that consider each applicant as an individual and as a whole. Harvard developed such policies long before they were embraced by Justice Powell in Bakke and reaffirmed by this Court in Grutter. In Harvard’s judgment, based on its decades of experience with holistic admissions, these admissions policies best enable the university to admit an exceptional class of students that is diverse across many different dimensions, including race and ethnicity. Admissions processes that treat students in a flexible, nonmechanical manner and that permit applicants to choose how to present themselves respect the dignity and autonomy of each applicant, while also permitting Harvard to admit exceptional classes each year. Compelling Harvard to replace its time-tested holistic admissions policies with the mechanistic race-neutral alternatives that petitioner suggests would fundamentally compromise Harvard’s ability to admit classes that are academically excellent, broadly diverse, extraordinarily talented, and filled with the potential to succeed and thrive after graduation.

Thus, the University argues for a diverse student body along multiple dimensions— including, it is no secret, applicants who have distinguished skills as athletes, artists, and organizers and leaders of groups of peers (as well as academically qualified legacies). Further, the College regularly reports the expressed academic interests of admitted candidates, suggesting its interest in a student body whose fields of study span the areas (from arts and humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences to engineering and applied sciences) in which it has determined it is important to offer teaching faculty and to support faculty research. And in support of those interests, it advocates an admissions process that relies onall sorts of evidence of the sort Rudenstine described: academic metrics—like test scores and transcripts, evaluation of the rigor of high-school courses—and recommendations, essays, presentations in interviews, examples of academic research or artistic performance, etc.

The petitioners’ views

As the recurrent litigation indicates, the issues surrounding admissions remain controversial. Some litigants argue that any consideration of race is impermissible. Others claim that students admitted to selective institutions under any sort of preference are likely to be disadvantaged by the experience (the mismatch argument). Some Asian Americans have argued that preferences granted to one group in pursuit of diverse student bodies constitute discrimination against Asian-American applicants; much of the evidence advanced focuses on quantitative metrics of academic qualification (grades and standardized test scores), and deemphasizes or dismisses as illegitimate other evaluative criteria. Several of these arguments arise in the work of the slate of petitioners seeking to become Overseer candidates, under the “Harvard Should Be Fair” claims about admissions transparency, admissions abuses, and racial discrimination (see above). Ron Unz, in particular, has written extensively on these subjects.

His January 19 post refers to his more substantial writing on the subject and carries a link after the post to “The Myth of American Meritocracy,” published in late 2012 by his magazine, The American Conservative—the source for his subsequent online roundtables on admissions and finances in The New York Times, and opinion columns elsewhere.

Unz’s background in quantitative disciplines and theoretical physics very much comes through in his approach and analysis. In part, the “Myth” essay is a review of the argument in Golden’s book and other books on admissions, documenting past infamies such as the “Jewish quota” on admissions in the early twentieth century. In part, it is a statistical analysis of the family names of National Merit Scholarship (NMS) semifinalists (which are based on students’ Preliminary SAT, or PSAT, scores), “a reasonable proxy for the high-ability college-age population,” and of winners of elite national mathematics and science competitions, also seen as proxies for academic achievement and capacity.

Unz then compares his findings from those samples to the ethnic composition of elite universities’ enrollments. Relative to the quantitative metrics he uses as proxies for achievement and ability, he finds systematic, wholesale under-enrollment of Asian Americans. By the same measures, he finds that “Jewish academic achievement has apparently plummeted in recent decades,” resulting in a “massive apparent bias in favor of far less-qualified Jewish applicants” being enrolled, coinciding with “an equally massive ethnic skew at the topmost administrative ranks of the universities in question.” He speculates that the apparent over-enrollment of Jewish students at elite institutions perhaps reflects the school leaders’ unconscious, implicit biases.

Citing other works, Unz concludes that “it seems likely that some of these obvious admissions biases we have noticed may be related to the poor human quality and weak academic credentials of many of the university employees making these momentous decisions.” Thus,

I suspect that the combined effect of these separate pressures, rather than any planned or intentional bias, is the primary cause of the striking enrollment statistics that we have examined above. In effect, somewhat dim and over-worked admissions officers, generally possessing weak quantitative skills, have been tasked by their academic superiors and media monitors with the twin ideological goals of enrolling Jews and enrolling non-whites, with any major failures risking harsh charges of either “anti-Semitism” or “racism.” But by inescapable logic maximizing the number of Jews and non-whites implies minimizing the number of non-Jewish whites.

He concludes that in battles over admissions policies at elite, selective institutions,

Conservatives have denounced “affirmative action” policies which emphasize race over academic merit, and thereby lead to the enrollment of lesser qualified blacks and Hispanics over their more qualified white and Asian competitors; they argue that our elite institutions should be color-blind and race-neutral. Meanwhile, liberals have countered that the student body of these institutions should “look like America,” at least approximately, and that ethnic and racial diversity intrinsically provide important educational benefits, at least if all admitted students are reasonably qualified and able to do the work.

My own position has always been strongly in the former camp, supporting meritocracy over diversity in elite admissions. But based on the detailed evidence I have discussed above, it appears that both these ideological values have gradually been overwhelmed and replaced by the influence of corruption and ethnic favoritism, thereby selecting future American elites which are not meritocratic nor diverse, neither being drawn from our most able students nor reasonably reflecting the general American population.

He considers a pure-diversity admissions scheme (“require our elite universities to bring their student bodies into rough conformity with the overall college-age population, ethnicity by ethnicity”), which would be “extremely difficult to implement in practice” and would “foster clear absurdities, with wealthy Anglo-Saxons from Greenwich, Conn., being propelled into Yale because they fill the ‘quota’ created on the backs of the impoverished Anglo-Saxons of Appalachia or Mississippi.”

On the other hand, he states that “strictest objective meritocracy,” with students “automatically” selected “in academic rank-order, based on high school grades and performance on standardized exams such as the SAT,” risks introducing a high-stakes testing atmosphere like those that plague admissions to national universities in Japan, Korea, and the People’s Republic of China. That approach would also “heavily favor those students enrolled at our finest secondary schools, whose families could afford the best private tutors and cram-courses, and with parents willing to push them to expend the last ounce of their personal effort in endless, constant studying. These crucial factors, along with innate ability, are hardly distributed evenly among America’s highly diverse population of over 300 million, whether along geographical, socio-economic, or ethnic lines, and the result would probably be an extremely unbalanced enrollment within the ranks of our top universities, perhaps one even more unbalanced than that of today.”

His solution is “two rings” of admissions. For an entering Harvard College class, the inner ring, of perhaps 300 academic and intellectual stars, would be carefully selected on purely objective academic and intellectual meritocratic criteria (“representing just the top 2 percent of America’s NMS semifinalists”) from among the most promising candidates. Everyone else, the outer ring in each class (1,300 undergraduates per year), could be selected randomly—the proverbial flip of the coin—from among all the applicants who seem able to handle rigorous undergraduate studies.

(Note that this randomization would eliminate admissions officers’ review of applicants’ files for “outer-ring” candidates, consistent with Unz’s criticisms of those officers’ qualifications. It would also do away with efforts to achieve various kinds of diversity in constructing an undergraduate class as a whole, leaving the result to the composition of the applicant pool and randomization. He is also explicit in giving greater weight to what might be considered purely academic or intellectual achievement than to outstanding performance in other realms. As he put it, “Under such a system, Harvard might no longer boast of having America’s top lacrosse player or a Carnegie Hall violinist….But the class would be filled with the sort of reasonably talented and reasonably serious athletes, musicians, and activists drawn as a cross-section from the tens of thousands of qualified applicants, thereby providing a far more normal and healthier range of students.”)

In “Racial Quotas, Harvard, and the Legacy of Bakke (National Review, February 5, 2013), Unz wrote about admissions policies then under review as the Supreme Court weighed its first ruling in Fisher v. University of Texas. Citing the 1978 Bakke ruling, he concluded:

Suppose we accept the overwhelming statistical evidence that the admissions offices of Harvard and other Ivy League schools have been quietly following an illegal Asian-American quota system for at least the last couple of decades. During this same period, presidents of these institutions have publicly touted their “non-quota” approach to racial admissions problems, while their top lawyers have filed important amicus briefs making similar legal claims, most recently in the 2012 Fisher case. But if none of these individuals ever noticed that illegal quota activity was occurring under their very noses, how can their opinions carry much weight before either the public or the high court?

If the “Harvard Holistic Model” has actually amounted to racial quotas in disguise, then a central pillar of the modern legal foundation of affirmative action in college admissions going back to Bakke may have been based on fraud. Perhaps the justices of the Supreme Court should take these facts into consideration as they formulate their current ruling in the Fisher case.

(Jeff Neal, the University’s chief spokesman, issued this statement pertaining to these matters:

Harvard College’s admissions policies are essential to the pedagogical objectives that underlie its educational mission and are fully compliant with the law.

When a similar claim—that Harvard College discriminated against Asian American applicants—was investigated by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights, federal officials determined that the College’s approach to admissions was fully compliant with federal law. 

In fact, within its well-rounded admissions process, and as part of its effort to build a diverse class, Harvard College has demonstrated a strong record of recruiting and admitting Asian American students. For instance, the percentage of admitted Asian-American students admitted to Harvard College has increased from 17.6 percent to 21 percent over the past decade. Asian Americans today make up less than 6 percent of the American population.)

Other members of the petitioners’ slate have attacked the use of race in admissions decisions head-on. In a February 2012 online New York Times“Room for Debate,” Stephen Hsu, then at the University of Oregon, wrote:

Race-based preference produces a population of students whose average intellectual strength varies strongly according to race. Surely this is opposite to the meritocratic ideal and highly corrosive to the atmosphere on campus. Furthermore, the evidence is strong that students of weaker ability who are admitted via preference do not close the gap during college. For these reasons, the Supreme Court would be wise to end the practice of race-based preference in college admissions.

In a Bloomberg View published the same month (“What Harvard Owes Its Top Asian-American Applicants”), he wrote, “It is terribly corrosive to use race as an important factor in what are superficially (disingenuously?) described as meritocratic evaluations.”

Hsu has detailed his criticisms of Harvard in posts on his blog, for example: “…a simple calculation makes it obvious that the top 2000 or so high school seniors (including international students, who would eagerly attend Harvard if given the opportunity), ranked by brainpower alone, would be much stronger intellectually than the typical student admitted to Harvard today.”.

Lee C. Cheng appears as a counsel with the Asian American Legal Foundation on amicus briefs to the Supreme Court in both 2012 and 2015 in the Fisher cases, opposing the admissions practices of the University of Texas. In the 2012 brief, the argument concluded that “this Court should expeditiously reject racial diversity as a compelling interest and overrule its holding in Grutter.” The 2015 amicus brief, for the Court’s rehearing of Fisher, cites Unz’s 2012 report, among many other sources; it concludes that “the Court should find the UT admission program to be unconstitutional. This court should also revisit its holding in Grutter, to make clear that outside of a constitutionally permissible remedy to prior discrimination, race may not be considered in college admissions.”

(A separate matter is the litigation to which President Faust referred in her Morning Prayers remarks. The Project on Fair Representation, founded to “Support litigation that challenges racial and ethnic classifications and preferences,” represents Abigail Fisher in the University of Texas cases. It has also filed suits against Harvard and the University of North Carolina, both aiming at overturning Bakke. The claim against Harvard, brought under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 —therefore applicable to a private entity—asserts that “the proper judicial response” is “the outright prohibition of racial preferences in university admissions—period.” The claim focuses on alleged discrimination against Asian Americans, using the kind of data Unz has presented—and in fact citing his 2012 Myth piece explicitly. In responding to the complaint, the University has argued that until the Supreme Court rules in Fisher, determining the admissions issues raised there, it would be premature to proceed with discovery in the Harvard case. For now, the action is largely in abeyance.)

In an amicus brief in the 2012 Fisher case, Stuart Taylor and Richard Sander (of UCLA School of Law)—speaking for themselves in advance of publication of their Mismatch book on affirmative action—argued that:

  • racial preferences were not effective;
  • the Court should order institutions to make much greater disclosure (to applicants and in the aggregate) about their “current and planned use of racial preferences in admissions and the academic consequences thereof”—the transparency theme;
  • the Court should order schools to disclose their “timetable for phasing out racial preferences by 2028” as envisioned in Grutter; and
  • schools “that wish to take race into account [should] demonstrate (through disclosure) that the weight assigned to race in admissions decisions does not exceed the weight given to socioeconomic factors.”

(Taylor and Sander’s mismatch argument about the suitability of various kinds of institutions for students of varying academic abilities figured prominently in the Court’s oral arguments on the new round of the Fisher case, last December, when Justice Antonin Scalia, LL.B. ’60, appeared to refer to it, asking whether black students might be better served by going to “a school where they do well” rather than to a more elite, selective one that uses racial preferences in its admissions evaluations; read a New York Times account here.)

•Admissions criteria

The College Board, academic analysts generally, and Harvard admissions officers have indicated that SAT scores are predictive of students’ possible performance during their first undergraduate year, but not beyond. In fact, dueling studies, including one just released, question whether the SAT even predicts one year of performance reliably. Presumably, evidence from PSAT tests, taken earlier in high school, has no stronger predictive value. And as noted, access to tutoring may have some influence on scores.

Harvard College’s admissions announcements have regularly noted that thousands more applicants than can be admitted to an entering class are at the top tier of various single-point measurements. For the class of 2010, for example, nearly 2,600 applicants achieved a perfect (800) score on the SAT’s verbal test, and 2,700 achieved that score on the math section: more than 10 percent of that year’s applicant cohort. (In recent years, the College has published SAT scores by the number of applicants exceeding 700 on the verbal, math, and writing sections: more than 10,000 in each category each year.) And applicants to the class of 2018 included 3,400 high-school valedictorians: one-tenth of those in the applicant pool, more than double the number of those eventually enrolled in the class—and down from the 3,800 valedictorians in the pool of applicants for the class of 2016.

Unz took note of the latter phenomenon in his 2012 essay, observing that “Harvard could obviously fill its entire class with high-scoring valedictorians or National Merit Scholars but chooses not to do so. In 2003, Harvard rejected well over half of all applicants with perfect SAT scores, up from rejecting a quarter a few years earlier….” (He did not address the possibility that the increase in rejections reflected rising applicant numbers.)

During an extended telephone conversation from Palo Alto on January 22, Unz was asked what he thought ideal admissions criteria and procedures might be, in pursuit of his preferred meritocratic process.

Unz responded that his ideal criteria were “not entirely clear,” and reiterated his call for “greater transparency” about admissions. The Golden book, he said, was a “horrifying” view of admissions, and his own analyses of admissions “shocked” him, making him “much, much more supportive of a much more meritocratic admissions” system focused on academic ability and performance. Evaluations based on determining “has this person been involved in that project, [and] all these essays,” in contrast, presented “tremendous opportunities for outright corruption.” In search of a system focused on his preferred academic criteria, he had suggested his “thought experiment” about randomizing much of the decisionmaking about most of the applicant pool.

Such a system, he said, was “several steps” beyond what the petitioners are presenting as their platform as potential Overseer candidates. Given his focus on academic merit, he said, consistent with his 2012 essay, “I have doubts about Harvard selecting top athletes or musicians or artists,” whose presence might tend to crowd out peers who sought a spot on the football team or in the orchestra. An outstanding musician, he said, might go to Juilliard instead of the College. But such issues, he noted, are “awfully complicated” and “not what we’re running on.” 

Abolishing Undergraduate Tuition?

In arguing that “Harvard Should be Free,” the petitioners note that undergraduate tuition revenue “is negligible compared to the investment income of the endowment”—typically, “some twenty-five times larger than the net tuition revenue” from College students.

The argument then proceeds to several other steps:

  • First, given endowment earnings, charging tuition is “unconscionable.”
  • Second, Harvard financial aid is insufficient or ineffective because “relatively few less affluent families even bother applying because they assume that a Harvard education is reserved only for the rich” (given the nominal price of tuition, room, and board); announcing a tuition-free plan would broaden the applicant pool as students “from all walks of life would suddenly begin to consider the possibility of attending Harvard.”
  • Third, other elite, selective institutions “would be forced to follow Harvard’s example,” and public institutions would face pressure “to trim their bloated administrative costs and drastically cut their tuition.”

During a populist U.S. presidential campaign, that platform rolls up many resonant issues, including: college affordability generally; public concern about the cost of higher education; and public institutions’ increased term bills since the 2007-2008 financial crash and ensuing recession (when hard-pressed states reduced budgets for higher education, absolutely and per capita, and institutions responded by increasing their term bills).

It also speaks, indirectly, to the line of reasoning that socioeconomic status might, or ought to, supplant other kinds of preferences or plus-factors in admissions decisions—a case made in many arguments against using any racial or ethnic considerations in assembling a diverse student body. Unz, who raised the tuition issue in a sidebar to his 2012 "Myth" essay, spelled out his thinking about tuition and admissions in a 2015 New York Times online forum. He wrote:

Harvard claims to provide generous assistance, heavily discounting its nominal list price for many students from middle class or impoverished backgrounds. But the intrusive financial disclosures required by Harvard's financial aid bureaucracy may be a source of confusion or shame to many working-class households. I also wonder how many lower-income families unfamiliar with our elite college system see such huge costs and automatically assume that Harvard is only open to the very rich.…

The announcement of a free Harvard education would capture the world's imagination and draw a vastly broader and more diverse applicant pool, including many high-ability students who had previously limited their aim to their local state college.

•Levels of aid

Responding to the New York Times article on the petitioners’ campaign, Robert D. Reischauer, former Senior Fellow and a member of the Corporation through the period when undergraduate financial aid was increased significantly (beginning in 2004 and subsequently extended and enhanced), wrote to the newspaper. His letter, headlined “Free Tuition at Harvard? It’s Already Affordable,” noted:

Over the last decade Harvard has awarded undergraduates $1.4 billion in financial aid. Aid is based on need and consists entirely of grants. No student is required to take out loans.

Over all, nearly 60 percent of students receive grant aid, and on average their families pay $12,000 a year for tuition, room, board and fees combined. For nearly 20 percent of students—those from families with the most modest incomes—the expected family contribution is zero.

Separately, University spokesman Jeff Neal issued this statement:

Through Harvard College’s generous, need-based, loan-free financial aid program, every undergraduate has the opportunity to graduate debt-free, regardless of their financial circumstances.…

One in five undergraduate families pays nothing for tuition, room, and board because their annual income is $65,000 or less. At higher income levels, families pay between zero and 10 percent of their annual income for tuition, room, and board (for example, $12,000 for a family with $120,000 a year in income and typical assets).…

Today, a Harvard College education costs the same or less than a state school for 90 percent of American families, based on their income and because of Harvard’s financial aid.

In conversation, Unz said that families simply were unaware of the extent of aid, and that aid formulas were complex, involving calculations of family means and contributions, student work, possible loans, and so on. In contrast, “Free tuition is very, very simple.”

Asked whether he had any concerns about providing a free ride to the 30 percent to 40 percent of undergraduate families who now pay full term bills, Unz said, “I don’t think it makes much difference one way or another.” (The Harvard Crimson, citing “an unnecessary subsidy to students whose families…can afford to pay for college,” on January 26 editorialized, “Don’t Eradicate Tuition.”)

Research-university finances

If the petitioners’ slate qualifies for the ballot and its argument about tuition proceeds toward fuller discussion, several interesting issues will arise from the operation of the endowment, distributions from it, and the flow of restricted and unrestricted funds within the University and its components.

At a gross level, the petitioners’ exhibit compares investment income to tuition. But investment income is not the same as the funds distributed from the endowment for Harvard’s operating budget; the University, like most endowed institutions, distributes a portion of endowment value each year (plus or minus 5 percent) in an effort both to smooth the effects of volatile investment results (so the University can adhere to a budget) and to protect its future value and support for future operations, in perpetuity. In fiscal year 2015, when endowment returns net of investing expenses were a relatively low 5.8 percent, the investment returns totaled about $2 billion, and endowment distributions totaled about $1.6 billion. (Before financial-aid expenses, student income from undergraduates—tuition, room, and activity fees collected by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences [FAS], plus dining and health revenues collected by the University—was about $392 million.)

At a slightly finer degree of resolution, the FAS owned $15.4 billion of the endowment, which was valued at $37.6 billion last June 30: about 41 percent. Approximately $2.5 billion (slightly less than 7 percent) of the endowment is presidential funds—the income from some of which may be directed to FAS and the College. But the remaining majority of endowment assets is owned by other schools or units, and presumably the income distributed from them is largely or completely unavailable to pay for undergraduate tuition (though undergraduates benefit from funds that may support those schools’ faculty members who teach freshman seminars and General Education courses, as well as graduate teaching fellows, libraries, and so on).

Refining still further, many endowment gifts come with restrictions on their use. (Neal issued a statement indicating that 70 percent of endowed funds carry restrictions.) FAS has aggressively sought endowment support for financial aid, both undergraduate and graduate. But (based on data from FAS’s managerial financial report, which is not in conformance with the GAAP accounting for Harvard’s annual financial statement), it remains the case that in the fiscal year ended last June 30, for FAS’s core operations—the College, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and the faculty proper:

  • Unrestricted income totaled $592 million, of which $410 million (gross) or $320 million (net of undergraduate and graduate financial-aid spending) came from tuition and room and activity fees.
  • After unrestricted financial-aid spending, those net tuition and fees of $320 million were more than half of FAS’s total unrestricted revenues, and nearly one-third of total revenues ($974 million) for the core operations.
  • A major use of unrestricted funds ($90 million) was for financial aid (benefiting both College and graduate students). More than half this sum was for undergraduate aid.
  • Total spending for undergraduate financial aid in the year was $170 million—suggesting that unrestricted funding (of which tuition and fees is the principal source) accounted for about one-third of the total College aid budget.

Thus, a decision to eliminate undergraduate tuition (holding aside room, board, and all associated student fees, for which FAS of course also incurs aid expenses) would imply reducing FAS’s core income by somewhat more than 10 percent, and its unrestricted core incomeby more than one-sixth. FAS’s unrestricted funds in total pay for more than half of salaries and benefits, most of building operations, virtually all of the debt service on FAS’s borrowings, and some of the start-up costs for new professors’ laboratories and research, libraries, and so on. (This comes at a time when the FAS is operating at a budget deficit.)

Research universities all have such internal transfers—and all undergraduates accordingly benefit from faculty members, libraries, and so on for which they do not fully pay. To the extent that some students can and do pay the full term bill, they are in effect agreeing to help subsidize the operations (teaching and, importantly, research), facilities, and assets—and some of the fellow students among whom they choose to study.

A decision to eliminate College tuition thus goes to the financial model of the FAS and the larger University.

•Attracting applicants

Unz, who has recent relevant experience, may well be right that were Harvard to announce it was making the College tuition-free, the story, as he put it, “would be on the front page of half the world’s newspapers.” It would be, he said, “a gigantic earthquake in U.S. higher education.”

Beyond the obvious problem of costs, higher-education scholars have also examined the extent to which factors such as the lack of mentors, inadequate high-school counseling, and other conditions surrounding potential applicants deter them from pursuing admission to a selective institution in which they might thrive, and from which they might receive significant financial aid. Asked about those constraints, Unz focused again on tuition per se: “I think it’s a bigger factor than most people think.” Elite families in New York, Boston, and Palo Alto are aware of college costs and aid programs, he said, but “I would bet that the overwhelming majority of people on the nonelite side of things are very skeptical about Harvard being affordable.”

As noted, the cost of eliminating tuition would seem to be about $100 million in annual unrestricted income—an expensive way to gain extensive news coverage that would boost the College admissions office’s already extensive outreach to potential applicants (mailings, visits, students and alumni, etc.) Although there have been discussions in Congress about forcing well-endowed private institutions to boost their spending on undergraduate financial aid, it is far from clear that financially strained public institutions welcome either heightened pressure to cut their own costs further or intensified competition from richer, endowed colleges and universities—which already offer aid packages that undercut in-state tuition, thus luring away the most qualified local applicants.

In Prospect

In a recent e-mail communication, Unz indicated that “matters are now looking pretty good on the signature side.” He had previously said that petitions had been express-shipped to several hundred alumni. As noted, each petitioner must present 201 eligible signatures by February 1.

This magazine has been advised that if sufficient signatures are verified to place some or all of the petitioners on the ballot, it will be notified as soon as practicable after February 15, so the full slate of nominees can be published. (The magazine’s March-April issue goes to the printer earlier in February; if additional candidates qualify by petition, the full slate will be noted in the online version of the March-April issue, which goes live toward the end of February, and then in the printed May-June issue.) Ballots are mailed April 1 and results are announced during the annual meeting of the Harvard Alumni Association on the afternoon of Commencement, May 26.

Candidate statements are circumscribed: a couple of hundred words. In past petition campaigns for Overseer, the petitioners have invested in more extensive outreach, and Unz has previously demonstrated his skill in organizing such efforts. In conversation, he said, a “campaign itself is a very useful means to focus attention on these issues,” and noted that “a crucial thing in any initiative campaign is media attention.” But he obviously would like to achieve more.

If there is a vigorous campaign, University staff members, who ultimately report to the governing boards—the Overseers and the Corporation—would be expected to refrain from involvement. The boards themselves are not under that constraint. As Harvard’s presidents for the past half-century have made clear, the University regards the diversity of the student body, and the process the College uses to admit students, as fundamental to its educational enterprise. The University has engaged vigorously in voicing its views in the Fisher cases, and has retained the same counsel to represent it in the pending complaint directed at Harvard: Seth P. Waxman ’73—a former U.S. solicitor general, and former president of the Board of Overseers. President Faust’s Morning Prayers remarks reemphasize that commitment.

And if the petitioners’ slate is nominated and elected? There would be 25 other members, plus the 13 Corporation Fellows (including the president) with whom the newly elevated Overseers would have to engage in debate about admissions and Harvard’s basic financial model.

An Overseers’ Challenge?
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Frank Gehry to Receive Arts Medal

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Gehry is the first architect to earn the distinction. 

The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Bilbao, Spain. Photograph by Myk Reeve


The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Bilbao, Spain. Photograph by Myk Reeve

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Frank Gehry to Receive Arts Medal
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Architect Frank Gehry, Ds ’57, Ar.D. ’00, creator of the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and MIT’s Stata Center, will receive the Harvard Arts Medal at the opening event of the annual Arts First festival on April 28. The event’s host, actor John Lithgow ’67, Ar.D. ’05, will join Gehry in a discussion about his life’s work.

Gehry is beloved by critics, contemporaries, and the public for his use of bold curves, vivid shapes, and everyday materials. The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, completed in 1997 is one of most celebrated achievements in modern art. The medalist earned his bachelor of architecture degree from the University of Southern California in 1954. He briefly studied urban planning at the Harvard Graduate School of Design—citing his interest in creating affordable, utilitarian designs for the public—but left before completing his degree.

“Frank Gehry is a true original, a visionary artist whose work has revolutionized architecture and place-making in the twenty-first century,” Lithgow said in announcing the award.

The Arts Medal is awarded each year to a “Harvard or Radcliffe graduate or faculty member who has achieved excellence in the arts and has made a contribution through the arts to education or the public good.” Gehry is the first architect to earn the distinction. Previous recipients include ballet dancer Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, actor Matt Damon’92, and poet John Ashbery’49. 

Frank Gehry to Receive Harvard Arts Medal
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Are Graduate Students Employees?

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Graduate students seek to form a labor union 

Photograph by Kris Snibbe/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications


Photograph by Kris Snibbe/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications

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Are Graduate Students Employees
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Harvard faculty and staff members have access to child-care subsidies worth thousands of dollars per year, while graduate-student parents get none. Harvard’s employees enjoy dental care generously subsidized by the University, but grad students must pay the full cost of their own. These are some of the concerns that graduate students working to form a labor union hope to address through collective bargaining with the University.

The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has ruled in previous cases that graduate students aren’t entitled to collective bargaining rights, but students and administrators across the nation are waiting on an NLRB decision that could soon reverse that position, forcing Harvard and other private institutions to recognize graduate student labor unions. Whatever the outcome of that case, organizers in the Harvard Graduate Student Union (HGSU) plan to continue mobilizing support among their peers and applying pressure on the University to bargain collectively with grad students engaged in teaching and research.

Harvard, like other institutions, continues to oppose student unionization. The NLRB’s decision hinges on whether graduate students should be considered employees, or—as universities assert—students who complete teaching appointments as part of their academic training.      

The Case for Organizing

hgsu began collecting student signatures in favor of unionizing this past fall, following similar movements at Yale and other peer universities. It officially partnered with the United Auto Workers (UAW), which represents graduate-student unions at Columbia and New York University, in September. Organizers say the campaign for union representation is about gaining a voice in decisions that affect them, more than about any specific grievance. “We feel like we are workers—we provide a lot of work for the University through research and teaching,” said HGSU-UAW organizer Sam Klug, a Ph.D. candidate in history. “Right now, decisions about the conditions of that are made unilaterally by Harvard.”

But students have much to say about working conditions, too. In some departments, for example, students receive no more compensation for serving as head teaching fellow for a large course than for simply teaching a section in the course. Under those circumstances, there is little incentive for students to take on an often very demanding role, said Nancy Khalil, a Ph.D. candidate in anthropology. But, she added, “If it’s a faculty member you can’t say no to, what do you do in that situation? With a union, we can start to bargain around these issues.”

Klug said HGSU-UAW volunteers gathered hundreds of pro-unionization signatures weekly during the fall, but he did not provide specific numbers. He declined to comment on whether the union plans to expand its campaign tactics this semester, but stressed that organizers will continue gathering student signatures and hope the University will voluntarily recognize the union.

Khalil said a majority of grad students from Harvard's schools have signed cards in favor of unionizing. It's not yet clear, though, which graduate programs would be included in a bargaining unit. Signatories include students engaged in teaching and research across various degree programs, including not just doctoral candidates, but also master’s candidates and other degree-seekers.

Not all students have embraced the call to unionize. Jae Hyeon Lee, a Ph.D. candidate in physics, called into doubt the union’s claims and campaign strategy in a paper he presented at a Graduate Student Council meeting in October. “The HGSU-UAW has been waging a fast and aggressive campaign to achieve their goals. … I believe there are still many unanswered questions and unvalidated assumptions about the proposed student union,” he wrote, questioning the union’s ability to improve conditions for students. A union may not be able to realize better annual pay increases than students receive now, he wrote, because a portion of members’ earnings would be paid as union dues.

Institutional Opposition 

The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) itself opposes the bid to unionize. “The one-size-fits-all approach that often is associated with unions would be a challenge here because there are so many different programs,” said GSAS dean for administration and finance Allen Aloise, Ph.D. ’04 (to whom this story's questions concerning unionization, initially addressed to GSAS dean Xiao-Li Meng, were referred). “We think our graduate students are very well supported and have a strong set of resources and benefits available to them,” he added, cautioning students to think critically about the union’s ability to deliver on its promises. President Drew Faust also has been outspoken against student unionization, saying that “it changes a mentoring relationship between faculty and students into a labor relationship,” echoing the arguments other universities have used. 

In October, the administration created a stir when it distributed guidelines for faculty and staff members to use in discussing student unionization. The guide, Aloise said was intended to promote open dialogue about the union. But many students—and observers in the media—perceived it to be one-sided. It instructed faculty not to threaten or interrogate students who supported the union, and to “explain the disadvantages of union membership” and “correct inaccurate or misleading union statements and campaign materials.” In response to the guidelines, HGSU-UAW has asked professors to sign a neutrality statement. “The question of whether graduate students or any workers join a union should be left up to them,” Klug said. “It’s disappointing to me to see the University was trying to influence that process.”

Student Organizing in National Context… 

Organizers link the battle over graduate student unionization to a national crisis in higher education—including student indebtedness and universities’ reliance on contingent faculty and students for teaching. In its earlier decisions on graduate student workers, the NLRB has sided with the reasoning of universities. In a 2004 decision involving grad students at Brown, the board wrote that teaching appointments are part of students’ academic programs, and thus they do not have employee status that would entitle them to collective-bargaining rights. Last year, the NLRB agreed to reconsider that position in separate cases involving unionization bids from students at Columbia and the New School. Today’s board is considered friendlier to labor than it was under President George W. Bush a decade ago, and is widely thought likely to reverse its 2004 decision. The board invited amicus briefs on the case last month.

New York University is the only private institution in the United States to voluntarily recognize a graduate-student labor union. Graduate-student unions at public institutions, which are governed by state labor laws, not the NLRB, are more numerous: 31 are recognized, according to the Coalition of Graduate Employee Unions. 

HGSU-UAW members say that their academic relationship with the University is not mutually exclusive of a labor relationship—and that in reality, they already have one. “I have a great relationship with my professors. At the same time, I can be doing work for them....There’s no contradiction between being a student and being a worker,” Klug said. “I don’t think the administration’s position that [union membership] would somehow fundamentally alter that relationship is right.”

A 2013 Cornell paper aiming to test the effects graduate student unionization did not find evidence that unions undermine the student-faculty relationship or diminish academic freedom. It concludes that “potential harm to faculty-student relationships and academic freedom should not continue to serve as bases for the denial of collective bargaining rights to graduate student employees.”

…and at Harvard

Given the distribution of student unions to date, research on their effects draws only on data from public schools, which may not be readily comparable to the experience at Harvard. Conditions for grad students at Harvard differ in many respects from those at public institutions, Aloise pointed out. The University provides Ph.D. candidates a full tuition subsidy and health insurance for five years, worth more than $46,000 during the 2015-16 academic year. Students’ living stipends for the academic year and summer—typically totaling about $35,000 for students in the sciences and $32,000 in the humanities and social sciences—are more generous than those offered at most universities. Stipends will increase by 3 percent this fall, consistent with their rate of increase for the last five years. Grad students also are entitled to paid time off after the birth of a child, equal to six weeks’ pay for a regular teaching load, or $3,132. The University introduced the benefit in 2013, after students voiced their need for it, Aloise said. Last year, GSAS paid new parents $155,000 through the program in all.

HGSU-UAW member Khalil believes Harvard's accommodations for parents lag what they could be. In December, she co-authored an op-ed in The Harvard Crimson about the challenges of raising children as a graduate student. The cost of day care alone for one child in Cambridge consumes the majority of a grad student’s stipend—if she can find a spot in one of Harvard’s oversubscribed daycare facilities. “It was harder for me to find childcare for my son than it was for me to get into Harvard,” she said. The University ended a pilot program that had provided childcare subsidies to grad students in 2010, but Aloise said the administration is aware of the challenge and is weighing potential solutions: “It’s being very actively looked at.” 

Aloise noted that graduate students receive University health insurance for their first five years (the average time to complete a doctoral degree). In fact, typical time to completion varies across departments. “The average time to degree in history—and it’s printed on the department website—is seven years,” Klug said. Meanwhile, dental and vision insurance aren’t subsidized for graduate students, as they are for faculty and staff members. The University offers dental insurance that grad students may optionally purchase for $469 per year for an individual, or about $39 monthly. By comparison, the dental plan offered to members of the Harvard Union of Technical and Clerical Workers, which includes librarians and information technology workers, costs $16.52 per month pre-tax. For non-union faculty and staff, the rate is $18.04. GSAS, Aloise said, is actively exploring ways to assist students with the cost of dental care.

Last month, GSAS announced that, beginning this fall, it would offer bus and subway passes to students at a 50 percent discount, duplicating the benefit that is provided to faculty and staff members. Grad students currently receive an 11 percent discount. HGSU-UAW welcomed the change on its Facebook page as a response to its organizing. When asked whether the union’s organizing has prompted the improvements in benefits, Aloise said, “It hasn't.” GSAS, he said, has long had a record of improving its policies in response to students’ needs.

But student activists continue to view union organizing as an important way to influence Harvard, and more broadly to change the relationship between universities and the students whose work they rely on. “For me, a lot of it had to do with being part of what’s really a national effort on behalf of a number of different schools to do this,” Klug said. “It’s a really important way to not just work on our own behalf as workers, but also to work for a vision of a better university.”  

Harvard Graduate Students Move to Unionize
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Lowell House Renewal to Last Two Years

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Lowell residents will live in swing housing from the fall of 2017 through the spring of 2019. 

Photograph by Harvard Magazine/JC


Photograph by Harvard Magazine/JC

News Lowell House Renewal to Last Two Years

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When it reopens in 2019, a renovated Lowell House will feature an updated dance studio, a student lounge, and more student common spaces. Until then, the Lowell community will live in swing housing for two years—twice as long as construction on other Houses has taken—House master Diana Eck and co-master Dorothy Austin announced last week. 

“It was a bit of a shock,” Eck admitted, when she learned the renewal would take twice as long as anticipated. Lowell’s structure, with two enclosed courtyards and many level changes, make it the “largest and most complex renewal project thus far,” she wrote in an e-mail to House members. Lowell will be the fifth House to be renovated, after Quincy, Leverett, Dunster, and Winthrop (where work is set to begin this fall).  

Lowell residents will live in the former Inn at Harvard and apartments in Harvard Square from the fall of 2017 through the spring of 2019, making it especially challenging to create a sense of House community. But Eck is optimistic: she and Austin will continue all of Lowell’s traditions, including teas at the master’s temporary residence at 8 Prescott Street and House talent shows. The experience of living in swing housing, she said, would spur “a spiritual renewal of the zeitgeist of the House,” forcing its members to work harder to maintain the House’s character.

In addition to modernizing common spaces and amenities, Lowell will be made fully accessible, as Massachusetts law requires, changing the organization of the House from vertical entryways to horizontal hallways. As in other Houses, hallway bathrooms will replace in-suite bathrooms to create space for more common rooms, though many students oppose this change. Eck has said that she will invite feedback from students about renewal plans this semester.

Just as important as the House’s planned new spaces, Eck explained, are those that will remain the same. Lowell’s distinctive dining room, junior common room, and library will be preserved to maintain the House’s historic architecture. The result, she said, will be a House that remains close to old traditions—but one “fit for twenty-first-century living.” 

Lowell House Renewal to Last Two Years
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Graduate School Doubles Paid Time Off for Student Parents

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The annnouncement comes amid a movement to form a graduate student labor union. 


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GSAS doubles parent benefit
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Beginning this fall, graduate students welcoming a new child will have access to 12 paid weeks away from teaching or research, double the current six-week benefit, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS) announced last week.

“I’m very happy that we’ve been able to do this,” said GSAS dean for student affairs Garth McCavana, Ph.D. ’90. “I was a student parent myself when I did my Ph.D. here, and it was certainly a struggle. We have come a long way and we’re going to continue to support student parents as much as we can.” He said GSAS made the change in light of conversations with students about their needs.    

To date, the University has paid 51 grad students more than $150,000 in all through the program in 2015-16, McCavana said. The stipend will double from $3,100 to about $6,200, or 12 weeks’ pay at a regular teaching load. Students have the option of accepting the stipend in lieu of their teaching pay, or receiving it on top of their regular pay, if they choose not to take time away from teaching. 

GSAS first introduced the program in the fall of 2013, following discussions with Harvard Graduate Women in Science and Engineering (HGWISE), which had asked for a parental benefit. About 60 to 65 of GSAS’s 4,000 students are eligible for the program each year, McCavana estimated. 

The announcement comes amid a movement to form a graduate student labor union, which the University opposes. Last month, GSAS announced that it would increase its bus and subway pass subsidy for students to 50 percent, up from 11 percent now. 

“I think [the change] indicated a willingness of the graduate school to listen to and respond to the need of students,” said David Romney, co-chair of the GSAS Student-Parents Organization. Romney received the stipend after the birth of his daughter in 2014.   

Other areas of need for grad-student parents, he said, include the costs for childcare, housing, and health-insurance coverage for dependents. Because student parents typically live in family units rather than with multiple roommates, he said, housing costs can pose a significant burden—a difficulty that could be addressed if the University offered family housing below market rate, as other universities do. Another problem noted is that grad students’ health insurance does not cover dependent spouses or children. Students may optionally insure a spouse or child through University Health Services for an annual premium payment of $5,472 or $2,868, respectively. (Graduate students’ living stipends typically amount to $32,000 annually in the humanities and social sciences, and $35,000 in the sciences.)

Kirsten Wesselhoeft, a doctoral candidate within the Committee on the Study of Religion, received the stipend after the birth of her daughter last March, but took only one week away from teaching. “I think realistically, the way most grad students in the humanities and social sciences are employed, as teaching fellows, does not allow you to take a substantive amount of time off and still be supported,” she said. Students can take time off of teaching if they find a replacement to teach their sections, but, she said, “in practice, that’s extremely difficult to arrange.” Wesselhoeft typically teaches the equivalent of three to four weekly sections per semester to support her family, though GSAS’s parent stipend covers pay for two sections, which is considered a regular teaching load.

Like other students, Wesselhoeft stressed that the cost of childcare, which is not subsidized for grad students, can be prohibitive. Still, she said, “Although I think the University could and should do a lot more, I’ve had a really great experience as a graduate-student parent...It’s clear the University recognizes the needs of working parents in faculty and staff roles, and I hope that recognition is more fully extended to graduate student workers as well.”

Romney, who is also involved in the campaign to unionize graduate students, stressed the importance of organizing in improving students’ working conditions. “I believe the administration is doing a good job, but you can’t know all the needs of students without having some means of organizing those needs,” he said. “The Student-Parents Organization, as well as a union, can play an important role there.” 

Graduate School Doubles Paid Time Off for Student Parents
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Michelle A. Williams Appointed Harvard Public Health Dean

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A faculty member and alumna becomes a leader in Longwood.

Michelle A. Williams, public health dean-designate 
Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications


Michelle A. Williams, public health dean-designate 
Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications

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New Harvard public health dean
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Michelle A. Williams has been appointed dean of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (SPH), filling the vacancy created when Julio Frenk departed last summer to assume the presidency of the University of Miami. Williams will be familiar to many members of the SPH community: she is the school’s Kay Family professor of public health and professor of global health and population, and chair of the department of epidemiology; and she is a graduate who earned her S.M. in population science in 1988 and her Sc.D. in epidemiology in 1991. She will become dean in July, succeeding Gregory professor in cancer prevention and dean for academic affairs David Hunter, who has served as acting dean since last August.

The appointment comes at an important time for Harvard’s Longwood Medical Area: both SPH, until today, and Harvard Medical School have been in the process of transitions to new leadership. Both are, obviously, pursuing ambitious capital-campaign objectives (read about SPH’s campaign here and here—and about the $350-million unrestricted-endowment gift that essentially transformed its finances; read about the medical campaign here). In the wake of reduced federal support for sponsored research, the medical school, particularly, has been running at a deficit, but both schools are heavily dependent on research grants (the source of 67 percent of SPH’s operating revenue in fiscal year 2015—by far the largest proportion among all of Harvard’s faculties). And although their disciplines differ, the two schools’ faculties collaborate extensively (see below about some of Williams’s interfaculty activities).

In shaping its campaign priorities, the school defined four programmatic objectives:

  • Old and new pandemics (ranging from underwriting basic research on malaria, to exploring innovative institutions and control measures, to understanding emerging diseases like the recent Ebola crisis in western Africa)
  • Harmful physical and social environments (from air and water pollution to gun violence, tobacco use, and diet-related problems)
  • Poverty and humanitarian crises (from war-caused population displacements to natural catastrophes, and including efforts to advance health as a human right)
  • Failing health systems (and the related challenges of healthcare affordability, accessibility, and efficiency)

Frenk, former minister of health for Mexico and an architect of that country’s move toward universal health coverage, brought particular expertise to the last of those priorities. Williams’s work suggests hands-on exposure to and engagement with elements of the first three priorities.

Her research has focused on maternal and infant mortality and health. According to the description on her faculty profile, “I have spent the last two decades focused on integrating epidemiological, biological and molecular approaches into rigorously designed clinical epidemiology research projects that have led to greater understandings of the etiology and pathophysiology of placental abruption, gestational diabetes, and preeclampsia.” That research has spanned North America, sub-Saharan Africa, Asia, and South America—useful experience for the leader of an especially international school. She is also an affiliate of the Medical School’s division of sleep medicine, as an outgrowth of her work on perinatal outcomes. She appears here talking about stress and health. And she is faculty director for the Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center’s program on health-disparities research and for the population health-research program.

A 1984 graduate of Princeton, where she studied biology, Williams earned her M.S. at Tufts in 1986, in civil engineering and public health. She did a postdoc at the University of Washington School of Public Health and Community Medicine, and joined the faculty there in 1992. She was recruited back to Cambridge in 2011 to become chair of epidemiology.

With today’s appointment, she becomes the first African-American leader of one of Harvard’s faculties. (There have been multiple women deans. For example, President Faust was founding dean of the Radcliffe Institute, and her successors have been women. The Graduate School of Education has been led by Patricia A. Graham and Kathleen McCartney, and the Law School’s dean, Martha Minow, was preceded by Elena Kagan, now a U.S. Supreme Court justice. Evelynn M. Hammonds served as dean of Harvard College—one level down from leading a faculty per se.)

The University announcement cited Williams for the “creative integration of epidemiological, biological, and molecular approaches” in her public-health research, and for award-winning work with students. She received SPH’s Outstanding Mentor Award last year.

In the announcement, President Drew Faust said:

Michelle Williams is an eminent epidemiologist, an outstanding teacher and mentor, and an energizing leader and institutional citizen, impassioned about the power of public health to change people’s lives for the better.

She is a skilled builder of bridges—between the theoretical and the practical, the domestic and the international, the different disciplines that drive the school’s academic endeavors, and the different communities that shape its identity and aspirations. I know she will approach her new role with the intelligence, dedication, integrity, and humane spirit that she brings to all she does.

Williams said:

I am honored and excited by the opportunity to lead the Harvard Chan School, and grateful to President Faust for inviting me to serve in this role at such a crucial moment for public health in the United States and around the world. As an alumna and faculty member, I have witnessed the transformative impact that this institution can have in education, research, and discovery related to the health of communities in need. We have an imperative to lead and to serve, and I am looking forward to working even more closely with the school’s faculty, students, staff, and alumni to build on the school’s achievements under Julio Frenk’s remarkable leadership and to advance our collective commitment to understanding and confronting public health challenges worldwide.

Acting dean Hunter said:

Michelle has been a valued colleague since she returned to Harvard five years ago. Along with many others, I’ve come to admire her for her collaborative research, her mentorship of students and faculty colleagues, her work to strengthen her department, her contributions to shaping the new Ph.D. program in population sciences, and her important focus on health disparities through the Harvard Catalyst [the Clinical and Translational Science Center linked above]. I’m confident our school will be in excellent hands.

Read the University announcement here.

 

Michelle Williams appointed Harvard public health dean
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Kennedy School, Under Construction

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Building capacity, literally, at the public-policy campus

Construction work in progress at the Harvard Kennedy School

Photograph by Jim Harrison


Photograph by Jim Harrison

Looking across the Kennedy School courtyard from Taubman toward Littauer

Looking across the Kennedy School courtyard from Taubman toward Littauer

Photograph by Jim Harrison


Looking across the Kennedy School courtyard from Taubman toward Littauer

Photograph by Jim Harrison

Looking toward Taubman from Littauer

Looking toward Taubman from Littauer

Photograph by Jim Harrison


Looking toward Taubman from Littauer

Photograph by Jim Harrison

Looking west toward the Charles Hotel complex

Looking west toward the Charles Hotel complex

Photograph by Jim Harrison


Looking west toward the Charles Hotel complex

Photograph by Jim Harrison

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The Harvard Kennedy School aims to build students’ capacity for better public policy, wise democratic governance, international amity, and more. Now it is addressing its own capacity issues (as described here). In January, as seen across Eliot Street from the northeast (first image above), work was well under way to raise the level of the interior courtyard, install utility space in a new below-grade level, and erect a four-story “south building.” The project will bridge the Eliot Street opening between the Belfer (left) and Taubman (right) buildings with a new “gateway” structure that includes faculty offices and other spaces. The second and third images show views diagonally across the courtyard from Taubman toward Littauer, and vice versa. Turning west, across the courtyard toward the Charles Hotel complex (final image), affords a look at the current open space between buildings; the gap is to be filled with a new, connective academic building, including classrooms.

Harvard Kennedy School campus construction
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Debating Diversity

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Debating diversity and inclusion

The Harvard community confronts the challenges of inclusion. 

Mather House co-master Michael Rosen­garten and master Christie McDonald

Mather House co-master Michael Rosen­garten and master Christie McDonald

Photograph courtesy of Christie McDonald and Michael Rosengarten


Mather House co-master Michael Rosen­garten and master Christie McDonald

Photograph courtesy of Christie McDonald and Michael Rosengarten

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Toward a more inclusive Harvard
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Amid widely publicized student protests on campuses around the countryin the last year and a half, many of them animated by concerns about racial and class inequities, Harvard has had its own—sometimes quieter—upwelling of activism. The cadence of campus protests has gained particular urgency in the last two academic years, following the widely publicized deaths of African-American men and women at the hands of police.Particularly last semester, a new wave of activism, and the University’s responses to it, have invited members of the Harvard community on all sides of the issues to confront the challenges of inclusion.

Campus conversation on racism peaked last November, when the portraits of African-American professors at Harvard Law School (HLS) were found defaced with black tape. The same day, College dean Rakesh Khurana distributed to undergraduates the results of an 18-month study on diversity at the College. The day before, President Drew Faust had joined students at a rally in solidarity with racial-justice activists at Yale and the University of Missouri.

 

Leaders of the Houses

In December, the heads of all 12 undergraduate Houses decided unanimously to abandon the title “House master” (imported in the 1930s from the Oxbridge residential systems), in favor of a new term more in line with their role in the twenty-first century; the University is expected to announce a new title this semester. Said Michael Rosengarten, co-master of Mather House, “[The title] had an association with slavery in the South, and you just can’t divorce them.…We have a long history relating to Oxford and Cambridge, but times change, and we have to make sure the University isn’t so inflexible that it can’t change.”

He and Mather House master Christie McDonald, Smith professor of French language and literature and professor of comparative literature, had, as a joke, briefly changed their own titles to “chief executive officers” on the House website a few weeks ahead of the college-wide decision. “It was a non-gendered name that described most of what we do,” Rosengarten said, alluding to the feeling among some that “master” is biased with respect to gender as well as race.

Students and journalists have tended to interpret the masters’ December decision as a reaction to current conversations about race. A few weeks ahead of the change, a group of students had met with Faust to discuss their demands to make Harvard more hospitable to students of color, including changing the House master title. Other undergraduates felt the change was an abrupt and trivial concession to activist demands. Any “connection between the academic title of master and slavery is grounded neither in history nor in reality.…Rather than legitimizing these games of word association,” The Harvard Crimson editorialized, “Harvard and its administrators ought to spend time addressing actual issues of inclusivity on campus. ”

House masters insist this wasn’t how their decision was made. The change “only seems ridiculous if you believe that we didn’t understand the etymology. We know the etymology. It isn’t that we didn’t get it,” said Anne Harrington, master of Pforzheimer House and Ford professor of the history of science. “I don’t think you could find a single House master who is comfortable using that title anymore. We all go by our first names. [The title] rings in twenty-first-century ears as imperious and suggestive of a kind of arbitrary power.”

“It’s important to understand that the impetus to change the title of ‘House master’ definitely was not just a reaction to current events,” McDonald said. “House leaders have been thinking about this for a long time.” The change has been delayed not by disagreement about the need for a new title, but by uncertainty about what that should be, said Khurana (who is himself master of Cabot House).

Similar changes are under way at peer schools: Princeton announced that it would drop the title “master of the residential college” two weeks before Harvard’s announcement, and administrators at Yale, where a long and public debate over “master” has raged, are considering doing the same. (Yale also is expected to announce whether it will strike the name of fervently pro-slavery alumnus John C. Calhoun from one of its residential colleges. In January, portraits of Calhoun were removed from the college.)

Do such symbolic matters truly influence undergraduates’ experiences? Those who called for the change insist that they do. “Our job is to not have any impediments to doing our job,” Harrington said. “We’re trying to wrap our arms around 400-plus students and create a community for them....We don’t want barriers to that relationship.” Anthony Jack, a tutor in Mather who is African American, recalled a moment when the title evoked an uncomfortable historical connotation. “I was asked to come to Amherst for an event, and I wrote back, ‘I would love to, but let me ask my House master for permission to leave,’” he explained. “When you transport something from one context to another, it doesn’t allow it to be devoid of the context of the new setting.”

 

The Law School’s roots

At graduate schools, too, students have protested matters both symbolic and fundamental. The vandalism of black professors’ portraits in November (University police have closed the investigation without finding a suspect) lent momentum to Reclaim Harvard Law School, a coalition of students and staff members advocating for racial-justice reforms, including removal from the school’s shield of the crest of the slave-owning Royall family, whose wealth endowed HLS’s first faculty chair. That demand had already been made by the HLS student group Royall Must Fall, but failed to gain traction until after the vandalism, when Dean Martha Minow called racism a “serious problem” at the school and created a committee to consider dropping the crest. (Faust, for her part, told the Crimson in January that she does not favor hastily abandoning building names and symbols of Harvard’s past, though she remains undecided about the HLS shield.) These demands, and protesters’ broader challenges to University policy, pose “a profound challenge to those who have never seriously contemplated how inclusion might or should change institutional practices,” wrote Paul professor of constitutional law and professor of history Tomiko Brown-Nagin in a Slate op-ed.

Some students have criticized Minow for what they see as her unwillingness to address their other demands, including the creation of a program in critical race theory (which examines the role of racism in law and society); curricular reforms that would “ensure the integration of marginalized narratives and a serious study into the implications of racism, white supremacy, and imperialism in creating and perpetuating legal analysis and thought”; and significantly expanded financial aid. “Some students and staff have presented a list of demands. We are, however, a community of many voices and hopes, and we have an obligation to provide and protect the opportunity for all to participate, speak, and be heard,” Minow wrote in an e-mail to the HLS community in December. “Real institutional change requires the engagement of many members of our large and diverse community.”

Perhaps because of the racially fraught legacy of law in the United States, tensions at the school appear to run especially high. Michele Hall, a second-year student, said that students of color are routinely exposed to racism in the classroom. “It’s hostile every day to go into class and talk about laws that affect populations of color….Every time issues of profiling come up, black students say, yes, they’ve been profiled on campus, and white students are shocked,” she continued. “Our daily experience is colored by these types of incidents, big and small.”

Other members of the community describe what they view as a climate of intolerance toward dissenting views. Third-year student William Barthow, who created Responsible Speech at HLS, a website where students have expressed disagreement with the protesters, believes many students who oppose activist demands are intimidated into silence. “There’s a contingent that disagrees with the protesters but is afraid to voice that view publicly because of the social backlash of doing so,” he said. Barthow and 36 other students signed a letter in December urging Reclaim Harvard Law School to remove from its demands certain items that the signers believe threaten academic freedom—such as the proposed first-year course on racial inequality in the law, which, they write, “would be taught in a highly partisan manner.”

Animating a diverse community

This tension has played out most visibly at Yale, where disputes about social-justice issues escalated into a discussion about whether college students and administrators were acting more as censors than facilitators of free inquiry. In Cambridge, the College’s responses have been more muted. Khurana rejects the dichotomy drawn between free speech and student calls for racial justice: “Those are sort of false binaries...one can engage in free-spirited exchange and also do that in a way that is respectful,” he said. “It requires skill and capacity-building and a genuine desire to hear from somebody else’s perspective.” Others suggest that the challenges of embracing Harvard’s increasingly diverse student body demand more expansive University strategies. “From the 1960s on, it was about quantitative diversity. Now it’s about qualitative diversity, as Tomiko Brown-Nagin has written. So the question is, how do you bring together a community of diverse people?” McDonald said.

That question was the subject of the College Working Group on Diversity and Inclusion’s report, released in November. It addressed ways to ensure that undergraduates can benefit equally from their Harvard experience, regardless of racial, economic, or other background. The study spans College life from the academic, by calling on departments to consider how their methods of inquiry or lack of diversity may exclude some groups, to the extracurricular and residential, by urging the Houses to create programming that promotes conversations about diversity.

In their freshman year, for example, students participate in mandatory Community Conversations: a series of discussions about diversity and the Harvard community. But the report notes that many House tutors stress the need for dialogue beyond the first year. It sharply criticizes the lack of regularity across Houses in their commitment to diversity: “The process of appointing resident tutors and scholars is informal and thus lacks transparency, which leads to mistrust in its integrity,” it states, later referencing allegations raised last May that Dunster House was unwelcoming to LGBT students. “The lack of clear policies, structures of accountability, and consistency across Houses puts everyone at risk and erodes trust.”

“It’s not enough to have just two days of Community Conversations and say, ‘Okay, we’ve done that,’” said Harrington, a member of the working group. “Our challenge is to make community conversation feel like a value rather than something burdensome.” Creating an inclusive environment also might mean “changing the optics of the residential Houses, so that they celebrate the traditions of individuals who aren’t necessarily just straight white men,” she added. As a way to express Harvard’s values, she stressed, such symbols matter.

Skeptics like Barthow question the extent to which University policy can affect students’ day-to-day experiences and interactions, where many grievances about racial intolerance originate. “Microaggressions”—everyday slights against marginalized groups, like the prejudiced assumptions that students of color say they experience in their social groups or in College or law school classes—occur outside the administration’s sphere of influence, he said. “I’m not sure if the right response is a top-down response...It’s a social problem, not an administrative problem.”

 

The faculty

Beyond the portraits hung on House walls, an area of wide student concern has been the composition of Harvard’s faculties, whose members they meet daily in classrooms. Student activists on many campuses have called for increasing the number of underrepresented minorities in the faculty ranks. In January, a group of Harvard Medical School and Dental School students delivered a petition calling on Faust to select a medical school dean who is committed to increasing student and faculty diversity. Yale committed $50 million last fall to increase the diversity of its faculty over five years. University of Missouri students have called on the administration to increase the share of black faculty to 10 percent by next year—up from 3 percent now. And Brown has announced an ambitious plan to double its share of underrepresented minority faculty to 18 percent by 2025.

Recent history suggests that such changes won’t come easily. Nationally, only about 6 percent of University faculty members are African American. At Harvard and elsewhere, the share of underrepresented minority professors has moved little in the last decade. “With respect to faculty diversity,” said McDonald, “we’re still working on the quantitative.”

Harvard’s latest data on total ladder faculty (a group including both tenured and tenure-track professors) show the proportion of black faculty remaining stable at 4 percent. Of 1,485 total ladder faculty, 42 are black professors, and 18 are black junior faculty. Another 4 percent of ladder faculty are Latino, representing 36 professors and 26 junior faculty. Both groups are more likely to be non-tenured than the faculty overall. The population of tenured black and Latino professors has grown steadily in the last decade: the number of black professors has increased from 26 to 42, an increase of 62 percent; Latino professors have doubled from 18 to 36. But as noted, their share of the faculty overall remains low: during the past decade, the proportion of underrepresented minority junior faculty (which includes African Americans, Latinos, Native Americans, and faculty of two or more races) has grown from 10 percent to 11 percent; the share of underrepresented minority senior faculty increased from 5 percent to 8 percent. Asian Americans, who are not considered underrepresented, account for 10 percent of senior faculty and 19 percent of junior faculty. No faculty members are Native American.

“For 11 percent of the junior faculty to be underrepresented minorities and 8 percent of professors to be underrepresented minorities—Harvard’s doing better than a lot of other places,” said Judith Singer, senior vice provost for faculty development and diversity. Nonetheless, she continued, “You see these percentages moving, but they’re moving more slowly than a lot of people would like.” Stressing that the composition of the faculty evolves appointment by appointment, over long stretches of time, she pointed out, “Last year we tenured our first Latino in psychology, our first African American in computer science.”

Part of the challenge is the dearth of underrepresented minorities in academia. African Americans account for about 6 percent of Ph.D. recipients in the United States, according to the National Science Foundation—a figure that has not changed in a decade. Latinos also make up 6 percent of recipients, up from 5 percent a decade ago. “We’re all in competition for the same people,” Singer said. At Harvard, these trends also appear to hold. Harvard College is the most diverse school in the University, she said, while graduate students look roughly the same as faculty in terms of diversity statistics. That trend reinforces itself: minority students who don’t interact with minority faculty are less likely to pursue academic careers.

To meet the demands of equity and diversity, Harvard has had to rethink every stage of its faculty recruitment process. “We’ve discovered that the way our position descriptions are worded influences who applies,” Singer explained. Her office encourages faculty search committees to write broad position descriptions and to conduct active outreach to talented minority candidates: “If you want to diversify your faculty, you cannot just sit there, post an ad, and expect people to apply.”

“In the old days,” she said, faculty hiring worked quite differently. “You called up a few of your buddies, or your former students, and said, ‘Who do you have for me this year?’” Persuading professors to abandon old systems, and to confront their implicit biases, she added, is not simple.

 ***

Harvard’s approach to date has many critics who believe the University could do more to prevent attrition of minority scholars at the source of the problem: the academic pipeline. Mather House tutor Anthony Jack, a Ph.D. candidate in sociology who studies the effects of race and class on students’ experiences at elite colleges, said Harvard should make a broader effort to diversify its ranks: embrace novel areas of research (such as his own scholarship), for example, and develop minority scholars at the college and graduate levels. “Diversify your graduate programs—I was the first black male in eight years in my department,” he said. Jack was recently named a Junior Fellow, and next fall will join the faculty of the Graduate School of Education.

Jack traced the current wave of student protest to the Black Lives Matter movement of the last few years. Critics who condemn coddled college students “miss the point of the protests,” he said, and those protests’ connections to broader inequities that extend to the gates of elite universities. The symptoms raised by the national racial-justice movement also are reflected in Harvard’s racial legacy, the experiences of students, and the diversity of the faculty. “We know the target of the criminal justice system is men and women of color. When we think about the faculty, it’s the inverse: there’s nobody—relatively—who’s African American,” Jack said. “The underlying issue is equality.”

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An Overseers' challenge slate, reengineering admissions, and General Education revised

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An Overseers’ Challenge?

On February 1, Ron Unz ’83 delivered petitions for himself and four other candidates seeking places on the ballot for the annual election of new members to Harvard’s Board of Overseers. (The list of Harvard Alumni Association nominees appears here.)

Under the theme, “Free Harvard, Fair Harvard,” the petitioners advocate “greater transparency” in admissions, a message coupled with language about “abuses” in admissions and “powerful statistical evidence” of a quota that limits admission of Asians—leading to their statement, “Racial discrimination against Asian-American students has no place at Harvard University and must end.” They also “demand the immediate elimination of all tuition for undergraduates,” citing both income from the endowment and the notion that moving from financial aid to a tuition-free model would more readily promote diversity in the student body. A detailed report on Harvard’s admissions and student-diversity policies, its finances, and the petitioners’ arguments appears here.

If the petitioners qualify for the ballot, an announcement with the full list of candidates is expected in mid February, after this issue of the magazine was printed; the outcome will be noted online at harvardmagazine.com toward the end of February, and printed in the May-June issue.

Reenvisioning Admissions

The Graduate School of Education’s Making Caring Common project (which seeks to “develop effective strategies for promoting in children kindness and a commitment to the greater good”) has addressed the cutthroat arena of college admissions. “Turning the Tide,” a report released in January, proposes reworking admissions to promote ethical engagement among applicants, reduce excessive pressure for achievement, and create a fairer process for economically disadvantaged students.

It recommends that students participate in authentic service or community engagement—lasting at least a year, and including such contributions as working to provide income for one’s family (a leveling step that recognizes diverse student circumstances). It also recommends that students go beyond individual service to collective action that addresses community challenges, exposing them to the emotional and problem-solving aspects of teamwork. The report urges institutions to state clearly their interest in the quality of applicants’ activities, not their quantity, and to put their use of standardized tests in the evaluation process into context. The recommendations arose from a meeting of admissions officers, counselors, and others; they have been endorsed by admissions officers from dozens of institutions, including Brown, Harvard, Princeton, and Yale.

General Education, Downsized

The proposed revision of the College’s General Education curriculum reached the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) for debate on February 2. Compared to the program outlined in December, this version, on which FAS members will vote later this term, further eases course requirements.

If enacted, undergraduates will take four Gen Ed courses (down from eight now), each “explicitly designed to prepare students for a life of civic and ethical engagement in a changing world.” They will fall into four broadened categories: Aesthetics, Culture, Intepretation; Histories, Societies, Individuals; Science and Technology in Society; and Ethics and Civics. Students will also have to fulfill a distribution requirement, taking a course each in arts and humanities; social science; and science and engineering—but one of these may be from their concentration (flexibilitythe December proposal did not permit). And they face a new Empirical and Mathematical Reasoning requirement. If a student were to place out of that (the course remains to be defined by a separate committee) and use a concentration course for distributional purposes, she would reduce her requirements for Gen Ed plus distribution to six term-length classes.

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Shirley Tilghman on the Corporation, Jane Yellen at Radcliffe, encouraging entrepreneurs, aiming at endowments, and more

Shirley M. Tilghman

Shirley M. Tilghman

Photograph courtesy of Shirley M. Tilghman


Shirley M. Tilghman

Photograph courtesy of Shirley M. Tilghman

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Crimson Tiger

Molecular biologist and geneticist Shirley M. Tilghman, LL.D. ’04, president emerita of Princeton, has been elected a Fellow of the Harvard Corporation. She began serving as of January 1, filling the vacancy created by the sudden death of James F. Rothenberg ’68, M.B.A. ’70, last summer. Tilghman joins fellow education leaders Lawrence S. Bacow, former chancellor of MIT and president of Tufts, and Nannerl O. Keohane, president emerita of Wellesley and Duke, on the 13-member senior governing board. She brings to the Corporation command of the life sciences and broad engagement with Princeton’s outstanding engineering program, significant changes in campus residential life, and the expansion of its performing arts offerings and facilities. Read a full report.

Encouraging Entrepreneurs

As universities foster student and affiliate start-ups (“Inside Startup U,” on Stanford, The Chronicle of Higher Education; “Universities Race to Nurture Start-Up Founders of the Future,” The New York Times), Harvard’s iLab has spawned the Innovation Launch Lab for alumni, just across Western Avenue. And now the Business School and its Arthur Rock Center for Entrepreneurship have taken the show on the road, introducing the HBS Startup Studio in Manhattan. A “gathering place” for local entrepreneurial alumni and a “workspace for New York-based teams,” it welcomed an initial nine enterprises, ranging from an online-fitness firm and a maternal nutritional-beverage company (Bundle Organics) to Tootelage, which supplies educational content for at-home learning. Applicants are required to have at least $500,000 in seed funding and fewer than seven employees.

Aiming at Endowments

Several years after U.S. senator Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) aired proposals to mandate that university endowments distribute 5 percent of their assets annually (as foundations do), and perhaps be required to spend much of that money on financial aid (see “Endowments—Under a Tax?” July-August 2008, page 65), another legislator is toying with a similar idea. Bloomberg reported in January that U.S. representative Tom Reed (R-New York) is drafting legislation directing schools with large endowments to spend 25 percent of endowment income on financial aid for lower-income students—or risk losing their tax-exempt status. Depending on how income and need were defined, Harvard, with a $4.7-billion endowment investment return in a good year like fiscal 2014, could be required to spend much more than it actually did under its existing need-blind aid policy. That might pose problems in leaner years, like fiscal 2015, suggesting an unwanted degree of volatility from the formula, not to mention problems of conforming to donors’ gift intentions. Whether the proposal advances past the talking stage, or not, the idea of tapping endowments to enhance aid spending, without boosting public appropriations, continues to pop up. For another perspective, see the news about the Overseers slate.

A “Poverty Preference”

Amid concerns about lower-income students’ participation in elite higher education, the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation, a major source of scholarships, in January published “True Merit: Ensuring Our Brightest Students Have Access to Our Best Colleges and Universities.” Citing data showing that students from families in the lowest economic quartile comprise only 3 percent of enrollment at the most selective schools, while those from the top quartile comprise 72 percent of enrollment, the authors call for a “poverty preference” to factor into admissions decisions—much as legacy and athletic preferences do. Princeton president emeritus William G. Bowen, LL.D. ’73, and colleagues previously made a similar argument for a sort of socioeconomic affirmative action in Equity and Excellence in American Higher Education (see the excerpt, “A Thumb on the Scale,” May-June 2005, page 48); the problem they identified persists, and may even have worsened.

Schwarzman Scholars Debut

The first class of Schwarzman Scholars (a new master’s program based at Tsinghua University in Beijing, modeled on the Rhodes and Marshall scholarships) includes 111 students, six of them from Harvard: Bonnie Lei’15 (a former organismic and evolutionary biology concentrator); Christian Føhrby’14 (government); John Randolph Thornton’14 (history); Jonathan Jeffrey’16 (history); Rahim Mawji’15 (applied mathematics); and Rugsit Kanan’16 (sociology and economics).


Janet Yellen
Photograph courtesy of the Federal Reserve

Radcliffe Honorand

Federal Reserve chair Janet L. Yellen will receive the Radcliffe Medal, awarded annually to “an individual who has had a transformative impact on society,” on May 27, during Commencement week. The first woman to lead the Federal Reserve will participate in a conversation with Beren professor of economics N. Gregory Mankiw. The event also features personal reflections by Yellen’s immediate predecessor, Ben S. Bernanke ’75.

Nota Bene

Arts first first.Frank GehryDs ’57, Ar.D. ’00, will become the first architect to receive the Harvard Arts Medal when he is honored on April 28, during the annual Arts First festival.

Masters move on. Moore professor of biological anthropology Richard W. Wrangham and Elizabeth A. Ross, master and co-master (as the titles have traditionally been; see page 17) of Currier House since 2008, have announced that they will relinquish those roles at the end of the academic year.

Writers’ roster. University affiliates nominated for the National Book Critics Circle awards (to be conferred March 17) include Bernbaum research professor of literature Leo Damrosch, Eternity’s Sunrise: The Imaginative World of William Blake; Charlotte Gordon ’84, Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Her Daughter Mary Shelley; Vivian Gornick, RF ’08, The Odd Woman and the City; and professor of the practice of literary criticism James Wood, The Nearest Thing to Life.

The class of 2020. The College announced in early December that 918 of 6,173 early-action applicants (14.9 percent) had been granted admission to the class of 2020. In the prior year, 977 of 5,918 applicants (16.5 percent) were admitted, continuing a trend: a larger pool of early applicants, and a smaller cohort granted early admission. A total of 39,044 students applied, up 4.7 percent from last year.

Inventors three. The National Academy of Inventors, founded in 2010 by member universities and nonprofit institutions to honor academic work that results in patents, has admitted 168 new fellows, including: Wyss professor of biologically inspired engineering Jennifer Lewis, who aims to develop an artificial kidney via 3-D printing (see Harvard Portrait, November-December 2013, page 62); Folkman professor of vascular biology Donald E. Ingber, who is also professor of bioengineering and director of the Wyss Institute (see “Mimicking Organs,” January-February, page 12, a report on his “organs on a chip”); and professor of pathology Guillermo J. Tearney, who works on noninvasive optical imaging.

Pritzker honorand.Alejandro Aravena, a former faculty member at the Graduate School of Design, has won the Pritzker Prize, conferred annually on an outstanding architect. Atypically, his firm, ELEMENTAL, based in Santiago, Chile, was recognized not for its trophy buildings, but for designing very low-cost housing units whose occupants, in many cases, finish and extend the structures on their own, as their resources permit. The work was featured in “For Santiago’s Poor, Housing with Dignity.”

Cyber studies. The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, at the Harvard Kennedy School, has received a $15-million gift from its eponymous supporters—Robert (J.D. ’58) and Renée Belfer, and their son Laurence (’88)—to launch a project on cyber security.

Proxy profile. The Corporation Committee on Shareholder Responsibility revealed in its 2015 annual report that Harvard voted in favor of shareholder proposals for corporate disclosure of political and lobbying expenditures. The committee abstained on certain proposals concerning greenhouse gases and global warming, in line with the recommendations of its advisory committee; abstained on and opposed two proposals on genetically modified nutritional ingredients; and abstained on a resolution on drug pricing, noting that “profits on effective ‘blockbuster’ drugs help fund research and development.”

Top teachers. The Fannie Cox Prize for Excellence in Science Teaching—for exemplary work in introductory courses, and accompanied by a $10,000 personal award and $40,000 in support for teaching and research—has been conferred on Rumford professor of physics and McKay professor of applied physics Jene Golovchenko and professor of astronomy John Asher Johnson. (Johnson’s work was described in a Harvard Portrait, January-February 2014, page 23.)

Miscellany.Susan Holman, M.T.S. ’91, a senior writer at the Global Health Education and Learning Incubator, has won the 2016 Grawemeyer Award in religion for Beholden: Religion, Global Health, and Human Rights. Gary Haugen ’85 and Victor Boutros, Ed.M. ’99, won the award for ideas improving world order for The Locust Effect: Why the End of Poverty Requires the End of Violence.…Yale began piloting its system of carbon charges, which are being tested on 20 campus buildings—part of its effort to reduce emission of 300,000 tons of carbon dioxide annually… Diane Quinn, formerly senior vice president of Cirque du Soleil, has joined the American Repertory Theater as executive director…. The Boston Redevelopment Authority has approved construction of Harvard Business School’s Klarman Hall, an auditorium and meeting complex (see the roundup of capital-campaign news, January-February, pages 26-28); the BRA noted a $171-million project cost.

Harvard spring 2016 news briefs
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Petition Candidates Qualify for Overseers' Ballot

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A five-member slate challenges Harvard admissions and tuition policies.


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Petitioners challenge Harvard governance
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Five petition candidates have qualified for placement on the ballot for this spring’s election of members to the Board of Overseers, the larger but less powerful of the University’s two governing boards (and the only one whose members are selected by alumni votes).

The petitioners, who have joined to promote a program they call “Free Harvard, Fair Harvard,” advocate tuition-free undergraduate education and what they call “transparency” in admissions procedures—both measures linked to a larger argument about the qualifications and characteristics of applicants that the College can and should be allowed to use in composing an entering class. (The College recently announced that it had received a record 39,044 applications for admission to the class of 2020, entering this fall; a typical undergraduate class enrolls about 1,650 students.)

As reported previously (see here for a detailed discussion of the issues and arguments), the petitioners’ program poses fundamental challenges to the University’s longstanding admissions processes and goals—including the use of race as one factor in assessing applicants. One recent indication of the institution’s position on these matters came at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ (FAS) first regular meeting of the semester, on February 2, a few weeks after the petitioners’ effort to gain access to the ballot became public. The faculty members present voted unanimously to endorse as a statement of FAS’s values the report of the Committee to Study the Importance of Student Body Diversity brought before it late last semester (it is described in the news account linked above). Among other findings, that report concluded explicitly, “The role played by racial diversity in particular in the development of this capacity for empathy cannot be overstated,” in the context of the learning the institution seeks to make available to its students.

If enacted, the petitioners’ program also would significantly change FAS’s financial model (encompassing the faculty itself, Harvard College, and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences); tuition revenue is its largest source of unrestricted funding—and therefore a significant source of the monies used to pay for financial aid.

The debate over tuition comes against a backdrop of renewed interest by some members of the U.S. Congress in exploring private universities’ endowments and spending on financial aid. (Perhaps ironically, the 56 institutions that received the most recent query—from Senator Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and Representatives Kevin Brady, R-Texas, and Peter Roskam, R-Illinois—include those which lead in need-blind admissions and in initiating fully paid, loan-free scholarships for lower-income students.)

In a conversation with The Harvard Crimson, President Drew Faust criticized the free-tuition proposal on distributional grounds: “The kind of program that is being proposed here funds a lot of students who we don’t think have need, from families who could and should afford to pay for their student’s education. We would be using an enormous amount of institutional resources to subsidize families who could easily afford to support their children in college.” At a time when the University news office has been publishing a long-planned series covering professors’ research on inequality, the petitioners’ proposal would in effect have the institution move away from need-based financial-aid assessments and awards—a sharply progressive structure in which students from the lowest-income families attend the College at no cost, while those from the highest income tier pay a full term bill.

In order to gain what they say would be a highly effective tool for attracting applicants from across the socioeconomic spectrum (the no-tuition proposal), the petitioners place less emphasis on the expense of having the University underwrite the undergraduate education for the children of families from the upper strata of the income distribution. (There would, of course, also be effects on FAS from forgoing the current stream of after-aid tuition income, used to fund the faculty’s research and other operations as well.)

With the petitioners having secured a place on the ballot, it is likely that these issues will be aired more widely during this spring’s election; ballots are mailed to eligible alumni in early April. It will be interesting to see whether more eligible voters exercise their franchise as a result; during the past five elections, according to University data, slightly more than 250,000 ballots have been distributed annually to eligible Harvard degree-holders, and an average of more than 27,000 (about 11 percent) have been returned.

The initial announcement of candidates, in  January, before the petition campaign was announced, appears here. The February 19 announcement—including the petition candidates, now qualified for the ballot, and their affiliations—appears here.

The full Overseer slate, as published by the University, thus includes two groups of candidates, as follows:

•The initial cohort, proposed by the Harvard Alumni Association’s nominating committee

Kent Walker ’83 magna cum laude
Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc.
Palo Alto, Calif.

Ketanji Brown Jackson ’92 magna cum laude, J.D. ’96 cum laude
Judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia
Washington, D.C.

Helena Buonanno Foulkes ’86 magna cum laude, M.B.A. ’92
President, CVS/pharmacy; executive vice president, CVS Health
Providence, R.I.

John J. Moon ’89 magna cum laude, A.M. ’93, Ph.D. ’94
Managing director, Morgan Stanley
New York, N.Y.

Alejandro Ramírez Magaña ’94 cum laude, M.B.A. ’01
Chief executive officer, Cinépolis
Mexico City, Mexico

Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07
Artistic director, Vail International Dance Festival; director, Aspen Institute Arts Program, DEMO at the Kennedy Center, and Independent Projects
Roxbury, Conn.

Karen Falkenstein Green ’78 magna cum laude, J.D. ’81 cum laude, ALI (Advanced Leadership Initiative) ’15
Senior partner, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr, LLP
Boston

Lindsay Chase-Lansdale ’74 magna cum laude
Associate provost for faculty and Frances Willard Professor of Human Development and Social Policy, Northwestern University
Evanston, Ill.

•The cohort of nominees by petition

Ralph Nader, LL.B. ’58
Citizen-activist and author; founder, The Center for Responsive Law and Public Citizen
Washington, D.C.

Stephen Hsu
Professor of theoretical physics and vice president for research and graduate studies, Michigan State University
Okemos, Mich.

Ron Unz ’83 magna cum laude
Software developer and chairman, UNZ.org; Publisher, The Unz Review
Palo Alto, Calif.

Stuart Taylor Jr., J.D. ’77 magna cum laude
Author, journalist, lawyer; nonresident senior fellow, Brookings Institution
Washington, D.C.

Lee C. Cheng ’93 magna cum laude
Chief legal officer, Newegg, Inc.
Santa Ana, Calif.

Petitioners challenge Harvard Board of Overseers
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From “House Master” to “Faculty Dean”

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The change follows months of debate on diversity and inclusion at the College. 

College Dean Rakesh Khurana Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications


College Dean Rakesh Khurana Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications

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Harvard House Masters Renamed Faculty Deans
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Following nearly three months of deliberation and debate within the Harvard community, the heads of the University’s 12 undergraduate Houses will be renamed “Faculty Deans,” Faculty of Arts and Sciences dean Michael Smith announced in an e-mail Wednesday.

“[The House heads] found themselves unanimous in their belief that this was an opportune time for a title change,” Smith wrote, noting that they did not typically go by the title “master,” which many considered outdated and inconsistent with their roles in the twenty-first century. He responded to criticisms that the change reflected a misunderstanding of the etymology of “master,” which some students believe was linked incorrectly to America’s history of slavery:

Some have called it a “mistake” believing that we didn’t understand the root of the word ‘master,’ or that we lacked a proper appreciation for the history of the title at Harvard and the European institutions from which Harvard leaders took inspiration, or that we were acting too quickly and without thought to student demands. None of these could be farther from the truth. Titles can and should change when such a change serves our mission. 

The new title “reflects our House leaders’ high standing in the joint academic and administrative hierarchy of the College,” Smith wrote.

“One has to realize that the meaning of words and symbols change over time,” said College dean Rakesh Khurana, the head of Cabot House, in an interview after the decision to change the title was announced. “Part of what is really important as an institution dedicated to higher learning is to engage critically and not just to take tradition and follow it blindly, but to be in conversation with it.” Other House heads have publicly echoed his view.

The Harvard Crimson’s editorial board, which opposed the decision to abandon the title when it was initially announced in December, immediately condemned the announcement. “[N]owhere whatsoever do we find any clearly stated rationale for the abolishment of a century-old tradition,” the board editorialized. “We opposed the change then, and we oppose it now.”

Read more coverage of the University’s wide-ranging debate on diversity and inclusion here

Harvard House Masters Renamed Faculty Deans
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