Making their voices heard
Two Mount Holyoke students turn a class writing assignment into an opportunity to change the public conversation.
In his 30 years of teaching at 果冻传媒, Preston H. Smith II has found one thing to be true of virtually all his students. 鈥淢ount Holyoke students are very passionate about the world. They have strong opinions about what is going on in the world,鈥 he said.
This spring, Smith put those strong opinions to use in his seminar on race and housing. Instead of assigning a 25-page research paper that would be read mostly by other students and graded by Smith, he gave the class a different kind of writing project: writing an op-ed. Students could take any position but had to be prepared to back up their stance with high-quality research. And they needed to write in a way that would move the general public to action.
Two of those op-eds ended up making their way into print, bringing the convictions of Mount Holyoke students into the center of meaningful community conversations.
When Smith was planning this spring鈥檚 seminar, he found himself looking for ways to bring direct action into his race and housing seminar, a 300-level course. As the former director of the Community-Based Learning program, Smith believes hands-on learning is a powerful teaching tool. 鈥淚 think project-based research gives learning a certain kind of urgency,鈥 he said.
But beyond urgency, Smith wanted the students to feel power and agency in his classroom and beyond. 鈥淲e are not only preparing students for the workforce, but more importantly, we are preparing them for citizenship,鈥 explained Smith. 鈥淲e want to help them sharpen their tools so they can be effective communicators.鈥 And being able to write for a newspaper is part of being an effective communicator.
Nora Carrier 鈥23, from Brooklyn, New York, knew exactly what she wanted to write about when Smith explained the assignment.
鈥淚 have lived in New York my whole life, and I鈥檝e always been really interested in housing because the housing market here is so unaffordable. It prioritizes really wealthy people versus the people who actually live here,鈥 Carrier said. Watching more and more New York housing transition to luxury 鈥 but empty 鈥 investment properties has made them concerned about the future of low-income neighbors.
An op-ed, short for 鈥渙pposite the editorial page,鈥 is a piece of opinion writing. It鈥檚 usually written by a contributing author, not a member of a publication鈥檚 staff. Op-eds present an argument, and they generally need to be in tune with the news cycle and keep the audience of the publication in mind, said Smith.
While an op-ed can be about anything, these pieces need to be impactful and attention-grabbing for editors to pick them out of what is often a sea of submissions. To help students get a feel for the structure of a good op-ed, Smith asked David Hern谩ndez, the faculty director of community engagement and former director of the Speaking, Arguing and Writing Program, to lead a workshop for his class. 鈥淲e went over process and structure, and he gave them some hints on how to construct a compelling lede 鈥 the opening line that grabs a reader鈥檚 attention,鈥 said Smith.
From there, students brainstormed topic ideas and workshopped early drafts with their peers. For Gabbi Perry 鈥23, from Holyoke, Massachusetts, the biggest challenge was keeping her op-ed under word count. Publications rarely run pieces over 1,000 words, so students had to keep their arguments succinct. But the importance of rent control, the topic Perry chose, is an issue she鈥檚 very passionate about.
鈥淭here were dozens of other examples I wanted to use in my op-ed to demonstrate the importance and severity of this issue, but working within the confines of short reader attention spans made me leave them out,鈥 she said. (The good news is that she鈥檚 saving those anecdotes for future pieces.)
While whittling her topic down was hard, Perry said this assignment helped her develop a skill she plans to use well into the future. 鈥淏eing able to take a position on an issue, formulate a strong argument and present it to the public is an essential part of making change on issues you care about,鈥 said Perry. She added, 鈥淭he reason I study what I do [environmental studies and politics] at 果冻传媒 College is so I can be prepared to work on these issues in the 鈥榬eal world鈥 and to have the difficult conversations needed to make change in our communities.鈥
Ultimately, Smith鈥檚 goal was simply to give his students the tools they would need to engage in the broader political conversations happening around them. 鈥淚t was just a course-based exercise,鈥 he said, adding that publishing their op-eds was never part of the original assignment. But when students started submitting their work to editors, Smith was thrilled to see them taking their arguments into the public sphere. 鈥淭hat was just the icing on the cake,鈥 he said.
Both Perry and Carrier were able to publish their op-eds in local news outlets. In early May, Perry鈥檚 in Massachusetts ran in the Daily Hampshire Gazette. In late May, 颁补谤谤颈别谤鈥檚&苍产蝉辫; 鈥 and often vacant 鈥 housing in New York ran on NYN Media. Both said that the feedback on their work has been positive. They also insist that these won鈥檛 be the only op-eds they publish, and that they鈥檙e grateful Smith chose this assignment.
Smith, meanwhile, is delighted that several of his students wanted to take their assignments beyond the course requirement. 鈥淭o me, students getting publicly involved and engaged is the point. I am really gratified that students submitting their pieces for publication came out of one of my classes,鈥 he said. And if the hearts and minds of those who read these two op-eds were changed? For a professor, that鈥檚 about as good as it can get鈥攊n Smith鈥檚 opinion, at least.