person:masha gessen

  • How I Would Cover the College-Admissions Scandal as a Foreign Correspondent | The New Yorker
    https://www.newyorker.com/news/our-columnists/how-i-would-cover-the-college-admissions-scandal-as-a-foreign-corresponde

    The college-admissions scandal—in which fifty people have been indicted for scheming to get the children of wealthy parents into top schools—makes for perfect cocktail chatter. It involves a couple of celebrities among those who, prosecutors allege, bribed and cheated their kids’ way into college. It includes bizarre details, like the Photoshopping of photographs of said children’s faces onto the bodies of outstanding young athletes. It bears savoring and retelling, because it says something intuitively obvious but barely articulated about American society: its entire education system is a scam, perpetrated by a few upon the many.

    It’s not just that higher education is literally prohibitively expensive (and at the end of it most college graduates still don’t know how to use the word “literally” correctly, as I am here). It’s not just that admission to an élite college—more than the education a student receives there—provides the foundation of future wealth by creating or, more often, reinforcing social connections. It’s not just that every college in the country, including public schools, makes decisions about infrastructure, curriculum development, hiring, and its very existence on the basis of fund-raising and money-making logic. It’s not just that the process of getting into college grows more stressful—and, consequently, more expensive—with every passing year. It’s not just that the process itself is fundamentally rigged and everyone knows this. It’s all of it.

    There is an adage of journalism that holds that every story should be written as if by a foreign correspondent. I generally like this idea: coverage of many issues could benefit from a naïve but informed view. I now find myself imagining applying it to the college-scandal story.

    I would, of course, begin by explaining that fifty people in six states are accused of conspiring to game the college-admissions system. They spent hundreds of thousands of dollars each to have other people take standardized tests in place of their children, to insure that the administration of the test itself would be fixed, and to bribe coaches and falsify their children’s athletic records. Here, the story would get complicated. A reader in any country can understand the concept of a standardized test—in some countries, in fact, standardized tests have been a tool to fight corruption in admissions. But what does athletic ability have to do with college, especially a college considered academically challenging?

    Soon, I would find myself explaining the exotic customs of American college admissions. As the parent of two young adults—one recently went through the application process and the other is in its beginning stages—I have accumulated some experience explaining the system to my friends in other countries. (A Canadian academic’s recent incredulous response: “In Canada, people just go to university!”) I would have to explain the concept of legacy admissions: the positively pre-modern concept that the right to an élite education is heritable. I would have to explain that colleges depend heavily on financial donors, whom they cultivate through generations. I would have to explain the growing part of softer criteria like extracurriculars—the race to be not only better-educated than your peers but also better at being a good person in the world—as if education and an initiation into adult civic life were not what college itself is for. I would have to note that it’s essential for parents to be able to afford to pay for their children’s extracurriculars and sponsor their volunteerism.

    I would have to explain all that before I even got to the standardized tests. Then I would note that an SAT/ACT tutor in New York City charges between three hundred and four hundred and fifty dollars an hour. I would note that, to make parents feel better about parting with that sort of money, many programs guarantee a precise bump in test scores for their students: about a hundred and eighty points, out of a possible total of sixteen hundred, for the SAT; about four, out of thirty-six, for the ACT. I would note that gaming the test legally is such a well-established practice that children whose parents can’t afford thousands of dollars in test-prep fees will score more than ten per cent lower than those who get tutored.

    Granted, the test results aren’t everything. Every college will tell you that it takes a “holistic approach” to admissions. There are essays, for which there is also coaching, and editing, and a formula; the hourly rate for these services can exceed that of the test tutors. There is also additional college counselling, because a guidance counsellor even at the best public school can’t give an aspiring college student the kind of individual attention, or the kinds of connection, that money can buy. And then there are the connections that money buys indirectly: the parents’ friends who teach, or who work in admissions, or who have generous tips on what colleges are looking for in an essay or an applicant’s list of extracurriculars. One of those things is interest in the particular college—an immeasurable quality, to be sure, but colleges like to see that an applicant has visited the campus. Yes, in most of the world, young people go to university in the city where they grew up, but in the United States, I would explain, most young people aspire to “go away” to college, and that means that even a pre-application tour is a costly and time-consuming proposition. I might mention that the dormitory system, a major source of revenue for the colleges, is also a giant expense for the families, but, these days, even colleges that used to be known as commuter schools require first- and often second-year students to live in the dorms, even if their families live in the same city. This is but an incomplete list of reasons that many low-income students don’t even try to apply to selective colleges. The wealthy compete with the even wealthier.

    I would explain that many American colleges have made a concerted effort to admit students from more varied backgrounds, but have failed even to keep up with the changing demographics of the country. The top colleges and universities continue, overwhelmingly, to educate the wealthy and white. The proportional representation of African-Americans and Latinos in the population of top colleges has been dropping, with a few exceptions, which are, in turn, determined largely by wealth: only the wealthiest colleges can admit a lot of students whose parents can’t afford tuition. And if they want to keep these students, they have to invest in revamping their curricula and training faculty and allocating additional teaching and counselling resources to help students for whom the culture of élite colleges is alien and alienating.

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    Explaining why these additional resources would be necessary would in turn require an explanation of how education is funded in this country, how school districts are drawn, how middle-class parents invest in a house in the right neighborhood, where public schools will give their kids a chance at a decent college. The best public primary schools, I would explain, enable graduates to compete with kids who went to expensive private schools. For the socially and economically hopeful, I would explain, raising a child in America is an eighteen-year process of investing in the college-admissions system.
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    All this, I would hope, would serve to elucidate how a corruption scheme like the college-admissions conspiracy could come to be. But it would also raise the question: Why are these ridiculous crooks the only people who might be punished for perpetuating—by gaming—a bizarre, Byzantine, and profoundly unmeritocratic education system? Why is such a clearly and unabashedly immoral system legal at all?

    Masha Gessen, a staff writer at The New Yorker, is the author of ten books, including, most recently, “The Future Is History: How Totalitarianism Reclaimed Russia,” which won the National Book Award in 2017.

  • Aux #États-Unis, les citoyens naturalisés risquent désormais de perdre leur nationalité | Courrier international
    https://www.courrierinternational.com/article/aux-etats-unis-les-citoyens-naturalises-risquent-desormais-de

    Cette procédure de dénaturalisation est historiquement “extrêmement rare”, explique Masha Gessen, journaliste russo-américaine et auteure de l’article : 

    Et pour cause : le temps qu’une personne obtienne sa #naturalisation, elle a vécu dans le pays depuis plusieurs années et a franchi les différents obstacles pour obtenir le droit de séjour, la résidence permanente et, finalement, la #citoyenneté”.

    Avec cette nouvelle équipe, les citoyens naturalisés américains n’ont plus la garantie de le rester pour toujours. “Nous sommes tous maintenant des citoyens de seconde classe”, déplore la journaliste.

    La seule création de ce service annule la naturalisation de plus de vingt millions de citoyens en niant leur présomption de droit à la résidence permanente.”

    Selon Masha Gessen, “c’est le raisonnement sous-jacent de cette nouvelle initiative qui la rend si contestable : l’idée que les États-Unis sont envahis par des #immigrés malveillants et nuisibles qui trouvent des moyens de s’installer ici.”

  • Foreign Policy’s 2017 Global Thinkers


    http://link.foreignpolicy.com/view/52543e66c16bcfa46f6ced166trq0.66dv/4f65fef9

    liste complète

    KAMALA HARRIS
    MOON JAE-IN
    HASAN MINHAJ
    CHELSEA MANNING
    STEPHEN BANNON
    HAIDER AL-ABADI
    PEDRO KUMAMOTO
    JODI KANTOR, MEGAN TWOHEY, AND RONAN FARROW
    ROYA SADAT
    JEREMY CORBYN
    MARK CUBAN
    MICHAEL ANTON
    BASUKI TJAHAJA PURNAMA (AHOK)
    ADAMA BARROW
    MANAL AL-SHARIF, NOURA AL-GHANEM, FAWZIAH AL-BAKR and MONERA AL-NAHEDH
    AI WEIWEI
    LEILA DE LIMA
    STEVE ADLER
    JO ANN JENKINS
    EMMANUEL MACRON
    CARMEN YULÍN CRUZ
    HO DANG HOA
    YADIN KAUFMANN
    SALLY YATES
    MA BAOLI (GENG LE)
    HAMDI ULUKAYA
    THULI MADONSELA
    RODRIGO LONDOÑO (TIMOCHENKO)
    MARGRETHE VESTAGER
    GUY VERHOFSTADT
    ELENA MILASHINA
    SETH MOULTON
    JASON MATHENY
    CHRYSTIA FREELAND
    ANDREI LANKOV
    EVELYN WANG
    THE WOMEN OF THE #METOO MOVEMENT
    NIKKI HALEY
    HAMED SINNO
    DAVID LIU AND FENG ZHANG
    MASHA GESSEN
    SÉRGIO MORO
    ANTHONY ATALA
    ALEXANDER GAULAND
    ALICE MARWICK AND PHILIP N. HOWARD
    VIAN DAKHIL
    RONALD DEIBERT
    MARÍA EUGENIA VIDAL

  • The Dying Russians
    Masha Gessen
    http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2014/sep/02/dying-russians

    Why are Russians dying in numbers, and at ages, and of causes never seen in any other country that is not, by any standard definition, at war?

    In the seventeen years between 1992 and 2009, the Russian population declined by almost seven million people, or nearly 5 percent—a rate of loss unheard of in Europe since World War II. Moreover, much of this appears to be caused by rising mortality. By the mid-1990s, the average St. Petersburg man lived for seven fewer years than he did at the end of the Communist period; in Moscow, the dip was even greater, with death coming nearly eight years sooner.
    ...
    “overall life expectancy at age fifteen in the Russian Federation appears in fact to be lower than for some of the countries the UN designates to be least developed (as opposed to less developed), among these, Bangladesh, Cambodia, and Yemen.” Male life expectancy at age fifteen in Russia compares unfavorably to that in Ethiopia, Gambia, and Somalia.
    ...
    The most obvious explanation for Russia’s high mortality—drinking—is also the most puzzling on closer examination. Russians drink heavily, but not as heavily as Czechs, Slovaks, and Hungarians—all countries that have seen an appreciable improvement in life expectancy since breaking off from the Soviet Bloc.
    ...
    Parsons discusses these studies in some detail, and with good reason: it begins to suggest the true culprit. She theorizes that drinking is, for what its worth, an instrument of adapting to the harsh reality and sense of worthlessness that would otherwise make one want to curl up and die.
    ...
    What happened to Russians over the course of the Soviet century that has rendered them incapable of hope? In The Origins of Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt argues that totalitarian rule is truly possible only in countries that are large enough to be able to afford depopulation. The Soviet Union proved itself to be just such a country on at least three occasions in the twentieth century—teaching its citizens in the process that their lives are worthless. Is it possible that this knowledge has been passed from generation to generation enough times that most Russians are now born with it and this is why they are born with a Bangladesh-level life expectancy? Is it also possible that other post-Soviet states, by breaking off from Moscow, have reclaimed some of their ability to hope, and this is why even Russia’s closest cultural and geographic cousins, such as Belarus and Ukraine, aren’t dying off as fast? If so, Russia is dying of a broken heart—also known as cardiovascular disease.

    #Russie #alcoolisme