2018 Convocation: Masters I
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"KEEP BRIGHT THE CHAIN" Fuhrman urged graduates to uphold a tradition of pursuing knowledge for the public good.
Calling on graduates of ¶¶Òőappâs programs in the Departments of and to âexpand educational opportunity for everyone, including our most marginalized and vulnerable fellow human beings,â Susan Fuhrman opened the final Convocation week of her 12-year tenure as TCâs President.
Research, suggested Fuhrman â herself a TC alumna â had brought the graduates to this point in their careers and would be their best means for furthering TCâs commitment to learning, compassion and social justice.
âAttending a research-based school is critically important because emerging research prepares you for tomorrow, not just today,â she said. âConfining professional training to just observing current good practice is profoundly shortsighted â particularly when knowledge is increasing exponentially.â
Fuhrman spoke on Monday afternoon in the Cathedral of St. John the Divine at the first of the Collegeâs three masterâs degree ceremonies. She will lead the other two masterâs ceremonies today and a hooding ceremony for doctoral students on Wednesday afternoon.
âThis generation of teachers is faced with no less a task than shoring up American democracy and the fundamental decencies, tolerance and understanding that makes it possible.â
âJelani Cobb
âThis is your time,â Fuhrman concluded. âKeep bright the chain of social justice and the pursuit of knowledge for the public good that began with the founding of ¶¶Òőapp. And as researchers, remember the physicist David Deutschâs observation that âall failures â all evils â are due to insufficient knowledge.ââ
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"STAND WITHIN THE BREACH" Cobb said schools are essential to retaining the idea of "we, the people."
Journalist and historian Jelani Cobb, one of four recipients of TCâs Medal for Distinguished Service, told graduates that they are arriving as professionals at a crucial juncture for U.S. education.
âThis generation of teachers is faced with no less a task than shoring up American democracy and the fundamental decencies, tolerance and understanding that makes it possible,â said Cobb, the Ira A. Lipman Professor of Journalism at Columbia University, and a 2018 Pulitzer Prize for his New Yorker columns describing a current federal attack on civil rights. He said his own path to success has been facilitated by public institutions and more fundamentally by âthe sense of civic commitment that led people to fund those institutions so they could carry out the life changing work they do.â
Cobb shared a moving story of boarding a commercial flight not long after the 9/11 attacks and feeling fears escalate â including his own â as a tall, unmistakably Muslim man made his way down the aisle. After a moment, he recognized the man as an old friend from the high school he attended in Queens, which enrolled students from a wide range of ethnic and cultural backgrounds.
Citing his own initial reaction to his friend, Cobb told graduates that âEducation is called upon to stand within the breach now in a way that it seldom has been. The roiling conflicts, the ease with which the most base instincts can be appealed to and hostilities exacerbated is stunning. Our schools â and our teachers â are central to this ideal of we, the people particularly in an era where we have witnessed such an exaltation of the first person singular.â
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"UNWAVERINGLY COMMITTED" Najib called herself "a product of intentional and transformative education," determined to education youth across the globe.
Student speaker Amanda Najib, receiving her masterâs in , added that âeducation is the most powerful tool we have to change this world, and once you have it, it cannot be taken from you.â
A second-generation Palestinian-American who is TCâs Meredith McGraime Scully Annual Fund Scholar, Najib described her fatherâs reaction to learning that she had been selected to speak at Convocation.
âLike any child seeking their immigrant parentsâ approval, I called my father and shouted in excitement, âBaba, I got it! Iâm going to speak at graduation,ââ she recalled. âAnd, like most immigrant fathers might, he lovingly responded âYou better not mess this up!ââ
He neednât have worried.
To sustained applause, Najib called on her fellow graduates to âmake this world tremble,â saying âI stand here, a product of intentional and transformative education, unwaveringly committed to educating youth across the globe.â â Steve Giegerich
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