Helping the Concord Review honor and promote “varsity academics®”

Will Fitzhugh lives and works with a powerful, provocative philosophy: He believes “that the pursuit of academic excellence in secondary schools should be given the same attention as the pursuit of excellence in sports and other extracurricular activities…Varsity athletics and athletes are celebrated everywhere. We celebrate Varsity Academics®.” (Fitzhugh’s emphasis) I’d like to help spread his ideas and work.

Since 1988, former public school teacher Fitzhugh has published The Concord Review. (tcr.org) This quarterly magazine contains one thing: outstanding research papers in history, written by high school students. According to Fitzhugh, “The magazine has published 923 such essays, averaging 5,500 words including endnotes and bibliography.”

So today, I am offering the first five high schools that contact me a small amount of money to work with Fitzhugh. Here’s how.

You agree to pay half of the $40 one-year subscription rate of The Concord Review, and I’ll pay the other half. This is open to schools, parents community groups – if you pay half, I’ll pay half.

Fitzhugh believes, and I agree, that writing a research paper is not just for those planning to be professors Reading and assessing sometimes conflicting opinions and versions of events helps young people learn how to gather and evaluate evidence and reach informed opinions. Those are vital skills in a democracy.

The current issue includes essays on Theodore Roosevelt, the Battle of Gettysburg, Sinn Fein, election battles between Henry Cabot Lodge and John F. Kennedy, and several others. Students have written on a vast array of subjects, such as the history of the “Ferris Wheel,” whether Abigail Adams really was a feminist, legacy of medical practices in the Civil War, and efforts to suppress The Wizard of Oz.

Minnesota and Wisconsin high school students have published essays in the TCR. The current issue contains essays written by students in California, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, as well as Canada and Korea.

High school Students from the US and other countries have written these essays as part of Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, independent study and other challenging classes. TCR essays have helped students be admitted to places like Harvard, Yale, MIT, Stanford, Princeton, Macalester, Stanford, etc.

The New York Times and Wall Street Journal have praised the magazine. His work has been commended by the late American Federation of Teachers president Al Shanker, historians David McCullough and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr and in letters from hundreds of students, teachers and parents.

Fitzhugh now in his 70’s, has made this his life’s work. What a wonderful contribution to young people, and this country.

So many groups promote high school sports and varsity athletics. And sports can be very valuable. But how about promoting what Fitzhugh calls “Varsity Academics®”? Will you, or a group you know, please help?