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It’s Not the Plane; It’s the Pilot: A Review of “Top Gun: Maverick”

Standing before a handful of elite F/A 18E/F pilots, Captain Pete “Maverick” Mitchell tells them the hard truth: pulling off this mission will take a miracle. More than one. Looking only at the plot of Top Gun: Maverick,  a moviegoer would be forgiven for assuming the same about this film. And he would be dead wrong, because Top Gun: Maverick is the only movie you have to see this year. On paper, it sounds like a hundred nostalgia-fueled Hollywood cash grabs: an aging Maverick is called into NAS North Island…

A Break from the Doom and Gloom about Free Speech

I worry a lot about the current state of free speech. It’s literally my job to worry about it, because I teach a class on the topic of free speech. But after reading through my students’ final exams, I’m feeling a lot better. If you’re also a worrier, maybe you’ll feel better if I share the good news. Three days before the exam, I gave the students the final essay question in advance, and it was nothing if not topical: In April 2022, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”)…

In Defense of Victory

It seems to me that, culturally, we have a misconstrued understanding of the meaning of “victory”. We oscillate between two extremes. At one extreme, we have an obsession with “winning” as an end to be attained at all costs. Lie, cheat, steal; all fine in the pursuit of a championship or a title. At the other, we have the “everyone’s a winner” mentality with all of its various manifestations. Of course, both of these understandings of winning are false and are dangerous to mind, body, and soul, but they both…

Freedom in the Upper School

What does freedom look like in The Heights Upper School? Having arrived early to the Easter Vigil, I found myself pondering this in a dark church.  The thought occurred to me as I looked up through the darkness: the freest man in the world is pinned to that cross.  What does that mean for us?  What does it mean for our children and their education? While freedom defines The Heights, it manifests differently in each division of our beloved School.  In the Lower School it’s especially obvious in its visible,…

Ode to My Mother-In-Law

Happy Mother’s Day to all the mothers! And to you especially, mom; I know I wasn’t the easiest kid to raise. Today though, I would like to also praise someone who isn’t known for being appreciated: … the mother-in-law.  My mother-in-law in particular is the reason I wanted to give a shout-out to you all… Elisa is a mother of four daughters and made her career as a teacher, and eventually became head of the high school at which she taught. And although she was never my teacher, she has…

Dressing Like a Gentleman

Most of my teaching is, more or less, made up of repackaged lessons taught to me when I was a student at The Heights. This is especially true of lessons on character and virtue and other things of the sort; I think I learned enough about Roman history and poetic allegory in college to teach them well, but about temperance or magnanimity? Those are things I learned only at The Heights.  In the Lower School, one of the ways we teach these sorts of virtues is by emphasizing that the…

Spring Cleaning for Teachers

Since Easter came later this year, my wife and I had already begun Spring Cleaning before break even arrived. By this time in the season, I’m sure we’ve all been switching to warm-weather clothes, figuring out what needs to be handed down and what thrown away, trimming bushes, cleaning up outdoor spaces, (re-)organizing garages, workshops, laundry rooms, or sheds. This annual tradition also gave me time and space outside of the classroom to think about my own teaching. We have about six weeks before summer hits. So I’m suggesting some…

Hemingway’s Good Friday

Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) plunged into World War I, the Greco-Turkish War, the Spanish Civil War, and World War II with the confidence of a skilled matador twirling his cape over a furious 1200-pound bull. He was a journalist in all but The Great War, in which he was an ambulance driver who sustained serious injuries at the front. Survival was thrilling (so were the drinks afterwards), and then he got to write about its gory, mud-flecked glory. Well, mostly the mud and the gore. Glory wasn’t really Hemingway’s thing.  As…

Shortcuts

I recently listened to a podcast from a Mathematician named Marcus du Sautoy in which he talks about how, although we hear so often growing up not to take shortcuts, we should indeed take many shortcuts, and we do it all the time. And he has a point. Although I could multiply 456.76 and 341.08 by hand, it is much easier to do with a calculator, and if there is one nearby, I will always grab it. So, why is it so often taught at home and school to not…