I consider you my friends, and I would like to share some happy memories.
Last weekend, I drove to Massachusetts, for my 55th college reunion at Wellesley College. I always drive to reunion with three dear friends who were classmates.
We stayed in one of the dorms. I had forgotten how beautiful the campus is. I still remember arriving on campus in the fall of 1956. I was a very bright but entirely unsophisticated, innocent, naive kid from the Houston public schools. I never visited the campus before I attended. I applied because my rabbi’s wife went there, and she encouraged me. I went to a Seven Sisters reception, applied, and was accepted.
I recall my first September, standing in awe as I looked at the trees ablaze in bright hues of vivid yellow, orange, and red. We never saw that in Houston.
I loved Wellesley. I loved that it was a women’s college, and I could speak up without risking being “too smart” for a girl. Boys didn’t like that. There were many classmates smarter than I, so I could enjoy the stimulation of engaging in discussions about the world without having to act like a lady.
The high point of reunion at Wellesley is the alumnae parade. Everyone is lined up with the members of their class. At the very end is the oldest class, which this year was the class of 1940. They graduated 75 years ago! All of them rode in beautiful, open cars from the 1920s and 1930s. They wave, and as they pass, we cheer loudly for them. Then comes the class of 1945; some are walking, some are in the antique convertibles or golf carts. Then the class of 1950, then 1955. More cheering, more applauding (we shout our class cheer).
Then it is our time to fall in behind the class of 1955, and it is our turn to be cheered by the younger classes. We march past 1965, 1970, 1975, 1980, 1985, 1990, 1995, 2000, 2005, and finally 2010. As we advance, the cheering grows louder. And I can’t help but notice that as the classes grow younger, they are more diverse. More women of color. By the time we reach the class of 2010, the cheering and applause are thunderous, amplified by a brass and banjo band playing old-time music.
I love the parade because it is not only fun and colorful, but it reminds you about the cycle of life. You realize that with each reunion, you get closer to the end of the procession. The oldest class surviving is only 20 years older than us!
I did something special this year. I endowed the Education Department with funding for an annual lecture series and for student internships and grants for student research. I also am leaving a bequest to fund a full professorship in the Education Department. No one has ever given them money for internships, research, or an endowed chair. This is my way of thanking Wellesley for changing my life. I will write more about this later.
I will inaugurate the lecture series on October 22, 2015. If you live anywhere in the area, please mark it in your calendar.

How wonderful you are able to do tis.
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Paying it forward. That is what educators do in a thousand ways with a spirit of generosity. Good move.
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I did something special this year. I endowed the Education Department with funding for an annual lecture series and for student internships and grants for student research. I also am leaving a bequest to fund a full professorship in the Education Department. No one has ever given them money for internships, research, or an endowed chair. This is my way of thanking Wellesley for changing my life. I will write more about this later. thank you so much for this; one of my college classmates was able to grant to the college but I don’t know if there are stipulations on how it can be spent? and one graduate a year just ahead of us was able to contribute to the scholarship funds (it was actually her sister who donated in her name). My colleague who is professor emerita at the Fitchburg U. (it used to be teachers college) is beginning to set up an “endowment” for a scholarship by starting with smaller amounts and building up (I think at Worcester State it is $15,000 and at Fitchburg it is $20,000) and she knows it will take a few years to get it up to full strength. It is to your credit that you will be so generous and it is so important for the young people who will be able to take advantage of these renewed efforts on the part of graduates who want wonderful things for the future generations in education. Thank you for all you do! I am pleased that Wellesley will have the funds especially for research and hope they make that a major goal as it is so necessary.
jeanhaverhill@aol.com
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Please make sure to let fellow alums know how to donate!
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Beautiful…
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Fantastic Diane! I will be there!
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Diane~
Amazing how important the high school & college years are in guiding us for the rest of our lives. It is critical that we have quality people and experiences in our young lives.
It was ouching to read about how a kind recommendation from your Rabbi’s wife placed you at such a wonderful school. When we guide young people, we never know how it actually impacts them…only the best guidance must be offered.
Diane, your contributions to our country and our children is more than most of can dream of or accomplish. I thank you for all you do.
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What a wonderful experience. Loved reading it.
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Best way to leave a legacy. Way to go Diane.
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Brava. Hopefully this will mean Wellesley remains uncorrupted by deformers. Worthy legacy, indeed.
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😄
😎
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Great blog … Outstanding sharing … Thank you so much …
Sent from iPhone … Roland Wallace Jr {Learner-Doer-Teacher}
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Excellent!
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Hats off!
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cracker & ann, would B so proud
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
From:”Diane Ravitch’s blog” Date:Sat, Jun 13, 2015 at 9:01 AM Subject:[New post] My College Reunion
dianeravitch posted: “I consider you my friends, and I would like to share some happy memories. Last weekend, I drove to Massachusetts, for my 55th college reunion at Wellesley College. I always drive to reunion with three dear friends who were classmates. We stayed in o”
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As a Wellesley graduate of the class of ’65, I’m always happy to see Diane’s class re-uning at the same time, always make a point to look for Diane herself, who always looks resplendent in her class color (red). Hurrah for your endowments! Thank you for your wonderful gifts to the college, and thank you for the post!
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Great idea! Education is the best way to contribute to future generations.
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Also, see if your lecture can be video taped….not only for a proper historical record but also in a form that can put into the blogoshere.
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Wow, you continue to inspire and lead by example. You
Have done so much for the profession and deserve all the respect and praise reflected in these comments. Kudos!
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” I loved that it was a women’s college, and I could speak up without risking being “too smart” for a girl.”
That is the way I felt at Mount Holyoke! There were certainly plenty of people there smarter than me, but the I felt free to say what I wanted without worrying about what the “to die for boy” sitting across the room would think. (I don’t know why I cared since he wasn’t going to notice me anyway. Ah, adolescent dreams! Thankfully, most of them don’t come true.) One of my classmates transferred to Wellesley because the MHC classes weren’t challenging enough. I thought Wellesley’s campus was beautiful, but they quietly suggested that I could make it my stretch school.
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Diane….what you might have thought was a bit of reminiscing about your reunion…I consider a secular prayer. After reading this, I just sat there in silence…in awe…in reverence of your comments. And then I read it again, slowly. If ever anyone needs to read a statement which anchors, this is certainly it.
Terry Marselle – West Hartford, CT teacher
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Diane, what a wonderful description of the alumnae parade which always makes me cry with joy. Wellesley is blessed to have you among its alumnae, and to endow a chair and fund lectures is the very best present to give our beloved college. Brava! This is really spectacular news.
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Ah, memories of our more youthful days. I visited my first college in Iowa, a 500 jr college at the time I attended, 1949 – 1951 but have never returned to the University of Michigan where I earned both bachelors and masters degrees. No PHD.
To this day I love the college atmosphere. Education: always learning, the stimulation of higher intellectual discourse.
Yes, time flies by and memories are precious.
So glad that you, Dr. Ravitch can have such reunions.
So glad too that your education has led to such profound insights and that your integrity and grit has been on the front burner for so long.
God bless.
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Diane Thanks for sharing this. Your prose brings it to life. And congratulations on your generous gifts John
Sent from my iPhone
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Dear Diane,
Your sharing of this is a fine complement for all the consideration and concern you have shown, given and given back to education in our nation. I have taught middle school history for over thirty years and I have never once doubted the importance of that work, but it also helps to know there are people like you, who are both grounded and generous, and who are willing to lead, who have not forgotten where they came from and how they were helped along the way. I try to read your blog everyday, because it helps me. Thank you!
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Diane, congratulations on your illustrious career and your generosity towards others.
You brought back my college memories as well. As a working class kid with no chance of going to a competitive college, I went to the local college, which was also all girls at the time (Marywood College in Scranton PA). Although this school was noncompetitive and accepted all the graduates of local Catholic high schools, I was still thrilled to go. The campus struck me as beautiful also and I still remember the gorgeous marble rotunda in the administration building.
I didn’t get to graduate from Marywood because my father was transferred and there was no money for me to board at the school. So I continued at Fenn College (now Cleveland State) in Cleveland Ohio from which I graduated in 1964. I remember that the kids at the private and prestigious colleges nearby would look down on us and ask, “Do you go to college or do you go to Fenn?” but we knew that we were just as capable, only without their resources. In fact, when the state of Ohio did some research on the achievement of college students, our engineering students came out on top. Many of my classmates went on to become very successful in all walks of life. Our children had the opportunity, as you did, to attend the nation’s best universities.
Thank you so much for helping other students realize the dream of attending college, as you and I did so long ago.
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Thanks for sharing this. Just wonderful.
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How very wonderful….simply wonderful! Quite a legacy, Diane!
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Here’s to Diane–best (and scariest, to mere underlings) Editor of WC News! How lucky we all are to have had such a start in our professional lives. Brava.
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Bless you, Diane. You continue to be such an inspiration! Congratulations on your latest reunion!
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Thanks for sharing this. Wellesley also changed my life.
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You are unique and what you do is extraordinary.
You have also been privileged, but you used that privilege to build on, and gave back.
We need more people like YOU, in this world of selfish and corrupt people who put themselves forth as leaders.
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