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Will Fitzhugh
History Scholar
September 22, 2008
As published in The Concord Review
College scholarships for specific abilities and achievements are not
news. There are football scholarships and volleyball scholarships and
music scholarships and cheerleading scholarships, and so on—there is a
long list of sources of money to attract and reward high school students
who have talent and accomplishments if those are not academic.
Consider an example: there is a high school student in Georgia, in an IB
program, who spent a year and a half working on an independent study of
the Soviet-Afghan War in the 1980s. This paper, a bit more than 15,000
words long, with endnotes and bibliography, was published in the Fall
2008 issue of The Concord Review, the only journal in the world
for the academic research papers of secondary students, and it is a
strong candidate for the Ralph Waldo Emerson Prize. If he were an
outstanding baseball player, a number of college baseball coaches would
have heard about him, and would be doing what they could to persuade him
to accept an athletic (baseball) scholarship to their colleges.
But suppose he were not a HS athlete, but only a HS history students of
extraordinary academic promise at the high school level. Would college
professors of history know about and take an interest in his work? No.
Would there be college history scholarships competing for him? No. Would
his teacher, who worked with him on his independent study, attract
attention from his peers at the college and university level? No.
I hope I am wrong, but based on what I have found out so far, there are
no college scholarships available specifically for outstanding secondary
students of history. There is abundant moaning and gnashing of teeth by
edupundits and professors about the widespread ignorance of history
among our young people, but when someone shows unusually strong
knowledge of history at the Lower Education Level, no one pays any
attention at the Higher Education Level.
In 21 years of working to publish 824 history research papers by
secondary students of history from 44 states and 34 other countries in
The Concord Review, I have not learned of a single instance of an author
being offered a college scholarship based on their academic work in
history.
When we lament that our adolescents seem more interested in sports than
in academics, we might consider how differently we celebrate and reward
those activities. High school coaches who are well known to and almost
treated as peers by their college counterparts, receive no attention at
all for their work as teachers, no matter how unusually productive that
work may happen to be. Higher Education simply does not care about the
academic work being done by teachers and students at the Lower Education
level.
Behavioral psychology argues that by ignoring some behavior you will
tend to get less of it, and by paying attention to and rewarding other
behavior you are likely to find that there is more of it.
I know that students are being recruited for college scholarships in
cheerleading, and I would dearly love to hear from anyone who can tell
me of students being recruited for their specific academic work in a
high school subject, like history, literature, physics, Chinese,
chemistry and so on.
I realize there are scholarships for disadvantaged students, for
students of high general intellectual ability, and the like, but where
are the scholarships for specific HS academic achievement? After all,
athletic and dance scholarships are not awarded on the basis of general
tests of physical fitness, but because of achievement in the actual
performance of particular athletic or artistic activities.
It is said that you get what you pay for, and it seems likely that you
get more of what you value and reward in academics as well. If we
continue to overlook and ignore the academic achievement of our
secondary-level scholars of history and other subjects, that does not
mean that some students will no longer work hard in their areas of
academic interest. There may be fewer of them, and fewer teachers who
see the point of putting in the extra coaching time with exceptionally
diligent students, but if we continue down this road, at least folks in
Higher Education ought to be aware that they are working just as hard to
discourage good academic work at the secondary level as anyone, and they
should stop complaining about the attitudes toward scholarship of the
students in their classrooms, which, after all, are in part a result of
their own neglect of, and indifference to, exemplary academic work at
the secondary (aka "pre-college”) level. |