Alex gu – The Oracle https://gunnoracle.com Official Student Newspaper of Henry M. Gunn High School Mon, 12 Feb 2024 21:26:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Stanford’s proximity influences Gunn educational landscape https://gunnoracle.com/26432/uncategorized/stanfords-proximity-influences-gunn-educational-landscape/ https://gunnoracle.com/26432/uncategorized/stanfords-proximity-influences-gunn-educational-landscape/#respond Mon, 12 Feb 2024 21:20:15 +0000 https://gunnoracle.com/?p=26432 Debates over free speech, inclusion and academic integrity have wracked university campuses over the past few months. This turbulence provides a space to examine the complex interplay between secondary and higher education: Stanford University, one of the institutions embroiled in these conflicts, has maintained strong ties with PAUSD since the district’s founding in 1893. In fact, many PAUSD schools — including Gunn and Paly — are built on land that was previously Stanford’s.

This longstanding relationship has fostered educational and cultural exchanges. Stanford professors pilot curricula in PAUSD schools, PAUSD students attend Stanford summer programs and many Stanford faculty members double as PAUSD parents.

According to Social Studies Instructional Lead Jeff Patrick, however, Stanford’s influence is strongest in the realm of teacher education. Many PAUSD teachers are trained through Stanford’s 12-month, full-time Stanford Teacher Education Program.

“The program exposes them to some of the resources that Stanford has, as well as some other approaches to teaching,” Patrick said.

Gunn departments also draw on Stanford’s resources for lesson plans. Originally founded at Stanford, the Digital Inquiry Group — previously known as the Stanford History Education Group — provides supplemental lesson plans for Gunn social studies classes. YouCubed, an organization founded by Stanford’s Dr. Jo Boaler, provides the curriculum for Gunn’s Introduction to Data Science course.

According to Gunn alumna and current Stanford freshman Olivia Pham, Stanford’s and Gunn’s educational approaches share striking similarities beyond curricula.

“There’s a strong emphasis on not just understanding concepts, but being able to apply them in slightly different ways you’ve never seen before,” she said. “While friends here have told me that math here at Stanford is much more rigorous than at their a pretty smooth transition between Gunn and Stanford.”

In that way, Stanford influences Palo Alto’s culture of — and value for — educational excellence. Gunn alumnus and current Stanford freshman Jules Lustig noted that Gunn and Stanford have the same “grind culture”: an atmosphere of constant drive, strict discipline and high standards.

During Gunn alumnus and current Stanford sophomore Alex Gu’s time with Gunn Math Circle, he took part in the Stanford Math Tournament, a nationwide high-school competition hosted by the Stanford University Math Organization. Student involvement extends beyond STEM, however: Current Gunn sophomore Emerson Chang took part in the Stanford Humanities Circle and found herself interested by the discussion-based, grade-free nature of the program.

“Stanford provides Gunn students with many educational opportunities outside of high school, which allows them to explore their personal interests in unique ways,” Chang said.

Gunn alumnus and current Stanford freshman Jude Hardan hopes for further cooperation between Gunn and Stanford.

“Having such a prestigious academic institution close to Gunn and not using it for collaborations to enhance the educational experience is not the best use of resources for students,” he said.

Lustig echoed this sentiment, adding that he’d like to see a Stanford-Gunn course centered around eliminating students’ fear of failure and instead inculcating love for a subject or field.

“It would be really cool to facilitate some sort of program out of class,” Lustig said. “Something that involves getting away from the numerical grade that is not a measure of intelligence and not a measure of how successful you are in any way.”

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Students find creative outlet for arts through passion, design: Alex Gu https://gunnoracle.com/18509/features/students-find-creative-outlet-for-arts-through-passion-design-alex-gu/ https://gunnoracle.com/18509/features/students-find-creative-outlet-for-arts-through-passion-design-alex-gu/#respond Fri, 01 Nov 2019 19:12:52 +0000 https://gunnoracle.com/?p=18509

The dexterity of art is one not many are able to conquer, but those who do are able to truly turn a piece of paper into a masterpiece. With charcoal as his weapon of choice, sophomore Alex Gu has been drawing since he was very young, allowing him to better his craft one day at a time, every day working towards his artistic goals. Through his journey as an charcoalist, his passion for art has been able to flourish as he has matured.

Beginning at a young age, his zeal has grown through his dedication, consistency and enthusiasm. “I started drawing when I was five years old,” he said. “My mom sent me to an art teacher and I’m still his student today.” Gu’s hyperrealistic art is displayed on his Instagram account @_artgu_. Gu says his sources for inspiration can be anything and everything he sees around him. Because of that, he must always make sure to keep an attentive eye out wherever he goes. “I draw my inspiration from my observations of the behavior of people around me,” Gu said.

Art has surrounded Gu throughout his life, and he enters his art in a variety of competitions. “I’m most proud of a piece I did in the spring that won first place in a competition in Los Angeles,” Gu said. “The piece took me 30 hours, and I spent most of my spring break working on [it].” The prompt for the competition instructed competitors to portray some jobs they saw Chinese Americans working in. With his dedication and showcasing of many occupations, Gu’s piece was able to impress the judges and win the competition.

Gu struggles with fitting art into his everyday schedule. “The hardest part is definitely balancing art and schoolwork,” Gu said. “I spend close to 12 hours a week on art, which can rise to 20 hours a week before the deadline for big competitions such as Young Arts [competition] or [the] Scholastic [Art and Writing Awards].” But because he has been drawing since he was five years old, along the way, he has learned how to deal with that burden. “I have learned to plan my time for all of my extracurriculars and schoolwork,” he said.

Gu has discovered that the key to persevering in his art is having intrinsic motivation. “You should make art you enjoy, so you’re motivated to keep onpracticing,” he said.

Gu treats art as a form of expression, sending a message to the audience. “Art is a way for me to add my opinion to the table and express my ideas,” Gu said.

Looking to his future and how art plays into it, Gu is unsure of any wishes to pursue it. “I’m going to create an art portfolio to apply for college, but it is unlikely I will continue art in college,” he said. “After college, I doubt I’ll have time for art, which is why I try to make the most of the free time I havein the present.”

At the end of the day, art pays off for those who are committed to it. To Gu, it is a window to the human psyche, a way to express oneself creatively and, most importantly, a way to bring people together. “I’ve met a lot of my close friends through my art teacher,” Gu said. “Art is just who I am.”

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