Peninsula School – A Successful Alternative

Jessica.2002

My daughter Jessica is almost done with her first Freshman semester at university. She is very happy and seems to be thriving. Over Thanksgiving, she and five school friends celebrated together by cooking meals for each other at a hotel in Washington, D.C. and playing cards when not cooking or touring the nation’s capital. All of them were California kids who now attend Eastern colleges. Washington D.C. was a convenient meeting place for those who did not go west for the break.

It interested me that four of those who gathered were Jessica’s friends from Peninsula School (Menlo Park, CA), and only one was a High School friend. Jessica attended Peninsula School from age three through 8th grade. Her group called itself the Uns (since they were in neither the Boys’ group nor the Girls’). The bonds of comradery, communication, and trust formed by the Uns from the time they were barefoot little kids making mud pies together in Nursery Blue seem to be holding firm despite the High School and college diaspora. The Uns are still cooking together, using the skills they developed through many class camping trips with Peninsula School. From reading their blogs, these are capable and interesting young adults whose progress I admire.

Peninsula School is a “progressive” or “alternative” school, meaning their focus is on development rather than grades. (Jessica calls Peninsula her “hippie school”.) In fact, Jessica did not get formal grades or take tests until she was in 8th grade and applying to High School. Nonetheless, she was regularly awarded high honors at Harker High School (she was entered into the Cum Laude Society) and is flourishing at Carnegie Mellon University where she is in the Humanities Scholars program and several CMU concert choruses.

With so many schools now teaching to the test and being obsessed with grades from the earliest grammar school years, Peninsula School is a good example of a better way. It is not a perfect choice but no school is. For example, Peninsula was as much the wrong choice for our son (who has serious learning disabilities) as it was a great choice for our daughter. Even though Peninsula was an excellent school for Jessica, it took several years for her Math knowledge to catch up to Harker’s standards. (She is taking Calculus II at CMU next semester.)

Perhaps one of the hardest parts of being a Peninsula parent for 11 years was my quiet fear that Peninsula might be too much of an academic risk. That is, I shared a concern with some other parents that our children would not do well in more conventional schools. However, if my daughter’s Peninsula School class is a representative (if small) example, Peninsula kids can compete very successfully in both standard and world-class rigorous academic environments.

Peninsula School is not the only successful alternative school. There were at least two kids in Jessica’s Harker class who came to the prep school with a very different point of view. Jessica came from Peninsula and her best friend at Harker came from Ananda Living Wisdom school. It was interesting to see how both girls succeeded in the grade-conscious pressure cooker environment of Harker School. Despite their alternative school origins, both girls did well academically and were accepted into good colleges (Carnegie Mellon and U.C. Berkeley). Better still, neither has lost her creative flair, curiosity, or independence.

I was not sure if it was just these two girls who had blossomed from non-standard seed beds until I put together a list of where Jessica’s Peninsula School classmates ended up after High School. From what I can tell, the whole class is now in college:

    • Academy of Art University (San Francisco)
    • Bard College (Annandale-on-Hudson, NY)
    • California College of the Arts (San Francisco and Oakland, CA)
    • Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, PA)
    • Colorado College (Colorado Springs, CO)
    • Foothill College (Los Altos Hills, CA) 2 going
    • Portland State (Portland, OR)
    • Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI, Troy, NY)
    • Stanford University (Stanford, CA) 2 going
    • Swarthmore College (Swarthmore, PA)
    • University of California at Berkeley (Berkeley, CA)
    • University of California at Davis (Davis, CA) 2 going
    • University of California at Santa Cruz (Santa Cruz, CA) 3 going
    • Wesleyan (Middletown, Connecticut)

Pretty good for graduates of a “hippie school”!

Update: Jessica was graduated in 2012 from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh PA, with college and university honors, Phi Beta Kappa.
More on her class: Peninsula School – Grads Doing Well (9 May 2013).

Pictured are Jessica’s 8th grade school play: The Mouse that Roared, and Jessica selling the jewelry she designed.

Jessica.2002.MousePlayPeninsulaSchool

Jessica.JewelryPeninsulaSchool.2002

Images Copyright 2002 by John Plocher

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12 Bugs of Christmas (SunCarolers)

The SunCarolers are strolling through our Menlo Park, CA campus right
now. This is a Sun tradition of over 20 years’ standing in which about
twenty employees from all divisions and levels of seniority volunteer their
voices for a traditional Christmas music program. “Traditional” harmonies
include everything from the Mediaeval Latin “Gaudete” to the Silicon Valley
favorite “The 12 Bugs of Christmas” which starts off with “For the first bug
of Christmas, my manager said to me: See if they can do it again.” and
continues on…

    1. See if they can do it again
    2. Ask them how they did it
    3. Try to reproduce it
    4. Run with the debugger
    5. Ask for a dump
    6. Reinstall the software
    7. Say they need an upgrade
    8. Find a way around it
    9. Blame it on the hardware
    10. Change the documentation
    11. Say it’s not supported
    12. Tell them it’s a feature

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Smithsonian Air and Space, Washington DC Photos

Last week, I traveled to Washington DC in order to participate in
the annual meeting of the
Anita Borg Institute
Technical Advisory Board. The first
place I visited between meetings was the
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
on the national mall.
This building seems to contains the first of everything: the actual planes
and equipment, rarely models. Since 2007 is
the 50th anniversary of
Sputnik
, the Smithsonian had a special exhibit about the U.S.-Soviet space
race, including a life size replica of Sputnik hanging from the ceiling.
(It was borrowed from the Soviet space museum.) There is even a figure of
Sally Ride, the first American Space Woman (whom I was thrilled to meet
in person at the 2006 Grace Hopper
Celebration of Women in Computing
).

You can tell I am a native Californian because I take photos of snow…

Arriving with the

first snow

Washington DC - Arriving with the first snow 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
George Washington

head with snow

Washington DC - George Washington Univ. head with snow 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Rose in

first snow

Washington DC - rose in first snow 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Washington Monument

(mall with snow)

Washington DC - Washington Monument - mall with snow 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

50 Years of the Space Age

with 1957 Sputnik

Washington DC - Smithsonian 50 Years in Space with 1957 Sputnik 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Smithsonian

rockets

Washington DC - Smithsonian rockets 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Smithsonian 1969

lunar lander

Washington DC - Smithsonian lunar lander 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
MacCready’s 1977

Gossamer Condor

Washington DC - Smithsonian MacCready's Gossamer Condor 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Lindbergh’s Spirit

of St. Louis 1927

Washington DC - Smithsonian Lindbergh's 1927 Spirit of St. Louis 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Yeager’s 1947 X-1

Glamorous Glennis

Washington DC - Smithsonian Yeager's 1947 X-1 Glamorous Glennis 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Wright Brothers’

1903 Flyer

Washington DC - Smithsonian Wright Brothers' 1903 Flyer 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2007 by Katy Dickinson

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SEED Mentor Matching Starts: 9 So Far

Yesterday, I started matching the Participants and Mentors for the SEED
Established Staff term which will run January-July 2008. I
sent out the first fifty email invitations yesterday and got two
acceptance emails immediately. We have 9 acceptances so far –
41 to go!

Everyone who is not yet matched now has the hard job of waiting patiently
for potential mentors to reply. It will take about six weeks to match all
fifty of the current SEED Participants. There will be very few matches
during the last weeks of the year since so many people are on vacation.

The matching time for each individual varies quite a bit. Some people
are matched within a day of the first SEED Mentor Request email going
out, others take the full six weeks. Each potential
Mentor may have multiple email, phone, or personal contacts with SEED
program staff. Potential Mentors are contacted serially in the priority
order given on the participant’s Mentor Wish List. Each one may take a long
time to respond and then decide. The time it takes to make a match
partially depends on the number and seniority of Participants and the
availability and seniority of the potential Mentors requested. Senior
Participants and very senior potential Mentors often take longer to match.
Senior Participants who represent the local maximum
professionally (the “go-to person” for Sun on a topic) may be
particularly difficult to match. If the Mentor and Mentee are matched
after the actual start of the term, the mentoring partnership still
lasts for six months from the match date, regardless of when the SEED
term formally ends.

I will send out email and blog updates from time to time.
The Participants are not kept informed of each step in the match process.
Potential mentors need to have space and time to consider the
possibilities of a mentoring partnership without risk of offending the
potential Mentee or interfering with future communications with them or
their manager.

More information on the SEED Engineering mentoring program is available at

http://research.sun.com/SEED/

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Visiting Washington DC with the Anita Borg Institute

I am in Washington DC for the first time in about 35 years for
the annual meeting of the
Anita Borg Institute
Technical Advisory Board, of which I have
the honor to be a member. Before and after meetings, I have been
walking around our capital city.

I am staying in a hotel in the Foggy Bottom Historic District, near
George Washington University. It feels peculiar to write that I am
staying in Foggy Bottom but then this is a city where every
car license plate bears the phrase

Taxation Without Representation
to protest the District of Columbia’s
lack of representation in Congress. That is, the local government uses
every car as a mobile political protest sign against the federal
government which is based here… peculiar indeed.

Today, the flags are at half mast for Pearl Harbor Day.
So far, I have visited the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum, the
Lincoln Memorial (a short walk from Foggy Bottom), the Viet Nam Veterans
Memorial, the Korean Veterans Memorial, the F.D. Roosevelt Memorial, the
Jefferson Memorial, the World War II Veterans Memorial, and the Washington
Monument. That is, I have walked through some key sights in half of the
National Mall. From the mound of the Washington Monument tonight, I
could see the newly-lit national Christmas tree but my feet were too
tired to walk over for a closer look.

It snowed heavily the first day I arrived and it continues cold and icy.
This morning, three of us were going to walk from the hotel to our
meeting room at the National Academy of Engineering but it started
to sleet as we came through the door, so we took a cab. It was
snowing again tonight as I walked around the Washington Monument.

It is inspiring to see the monuments of which I have only seen
photos as they were opened over the years. The Lincoln Memorial
and Viet Nam Memorial were particularly moving. The Lincoln Memorial
is almost painfully lovely with its bright white stone lit up
at night. Lincoln’s words from his Gettysburg Address and
second inaugural address are cut into the walls at either side of his
statue:

      Fondly do we hope – fervently do we pray – that this mighty
      sourge of war may speedily pass away … With malice toward none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up the nation’s wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan – to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace, among ourselves, and with all nations.

With its black stone slabs and ramp going down as into a grave, the
Viet Nam Memorial reminded me of the Jewish Memorial Temple at the Dachau
concentration camp outside of Munich. My daughter visits Washington
DC regularly now that she is in college in Pittsburgh, PA. She says
that in the sunlight, the polished surface of the Viet Nam Memorial
reflects your face back among the names of the war dead. If I have
time tomorrow, I will try to go back to see this. The Vietnam Women’s
Memorial – a tribute to the nurses of that sad war that was fought
during much of my childhood – also deserves a second look.

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SAMA – St. Andrew’s Medical Assistance

During the last two weekends, I helped SAMA –
St. Andrew’s Medical Assistance –
in their annual sale of goods from the Holy Land. SAMA supports several medical
programs in the Holy Land, including the

Ahli Arab Hospital
(the only Christian hospital in Gaza) and the
Four Homes of Mercy (based in Jerusalem).
Many of the crafts we were selling were created by Palestinian Christians.

On my two trips to Israel (in 1979 and in 2006), I purchased many crafts
like those we were selling. In fact, our olive wood nativity set at home is now richer
by three angels and two camels from the SAMA sale. Here are some photos:

SAMA Tile

SAMA - St. Andrew's Medical Assistance tile, 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Ahli Arab Hospital

SAMA - Ahli Arab Hospital 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Bishop Riah Abu-Assal

SAMA - Bishop Riah Abu-Assal 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Holy Land goods for sale

SAMA - Holy Land goods for sale 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Jerusalem tile

SAMA - Jerusalem tile 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
SAMA Donation Certificate

SAMA Donation Certificate 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Palestinian cloth crafts

SAMA - Palestinian cloth crafts 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Palestinian puppets

SAMA - Palestinian puppets 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Palestinian puppets

SAMA - Palestinian puppets 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Palestinian cloth crafts

SAMA - Palestinian cloth crafts 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Olive nativity set

SAMA - Olive wood nativity set 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Olive nativity set

SAMA - Olive wood nativity set 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Silver and Gold crosses

SAMA - Silver and Gold crosses 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Liz at the sales table

SAMA - Liz at the sales table 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Holy Land goods for sale

SAMA - Holy Land goods for sale 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson
Olive wood carvings

SAMA - Olive wood carvings 2007
photo: copyright 2007 Katy Dickinson

Images Copyright 2007 by Katy Dickinson

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Paul’s Computer Drawings

Paul D Goodman 2007 computer drawing of loon
On October 10, 2007, I posted two of my son Paul’s drawings – one from 1999 and the other from his first Palo Alto High School art class, this year. Here are three more images that Paul created on his laptop computer. Paul is 15 years old and spends time each day drawing on his laptop. Since he has a variety of learning disabilities, it is a joy to see him express himself so well artistically. Paul has also discovered SketchUp and is having a wonderful time drawing 3-D images (which are harder to show in a blog).

More:

Paul D Goodman 2007 computer drawing of boxes

Paul D Goodman 2007 computer drawing of 3 towers

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Images Copyright 2007 by Paul Dickinson Goodman
Updated 5 April 2020

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