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A local public school committee considered a proposal yesterday that
would require Cambridge Rindge and Latin School freshmen and sophomores
to participate in an extracurricular or community service activity
before graduating—a move that some committee members said might be
outside of its bounds.
The committee held off on a vote of the matter after members
raised concerns that the motion would deter possible candidates from
applying to the high school’s principalship.
The high school, which is located a couple of blocks away from
the Yard and enrolled 10 of its alumni in the College last fall, is
searching for a new principal.
Committee member Joseph G. Grassi, who put the motion before
the Cambridge Public Schools Committee, said that extracurricular
involvement and academic success are linked.
“This is a way that we can better connect students with
adults,” Grassi said. “Students that participate in extracurricular
activities tend to do better in academics. That’s the intention of this
policy.”
While the policy was lauded by some committee members, Thomas
Fowler-Finn, the Cambridge Public Schools superintendent, urged the
committee to hold off on a vote.
He said that if it passed this motion, the committee would be
making an important change to the school’s curriculum without the
principal’s consent.
“It is not a good thing for people who are interested in
running the school to know that the school committee puts motions on
the agenda to change requirements,” he said. “I think it’s not a good
way to bring forward a major change in graduation requirements and a
major change in the everyday lives of high school students.”
Other school committee members said that the proposal would
encourage students to participate in extracurricular activities for the
wrong reasons.
“I’m very concerned about making community service a
requirement,” said committee member Luc Schuster. “It makes students
not want to do these things.”
Fowler-Finn also noted that more time to mull over the proposal would aid the incoming principal’s transition.
“Give the [new] high school principal time to go through this
and consider this,” he said. “There is going to be a delay but I think
that the delay is important.”
The committee also discussed the issues of a system-wide
technology upgrade and further nutritional improvements in the public
schools.
—Staff writer Laura A. Moore can be reached at lamoore@fas.harvard.edu.
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