Supporting world class public education at the
Columbia Secondary School for Math, Science & Engineering

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Thank you for your interest in supporting Columbia Secondary School.  Please explore the opportunities listed below.  We welcome any questions or feedback.

 

Seeding Columbia Secondary School's Endowment

CSE-MSE's curriculum features a study abroad program, extensive use of technology, and significant outreach into the Upper Manhattan community.  These programs, in addition to CSS-MSE's overall commitment to providing a challenging, cutting-edge educational experience, naturally extend the school beyond its annual budget from New York City.  As a long-term solution to this challenge, CSS-MSE is establishing an endowment fund that will permanently support the enrichment programs that distinguish the school's curriculum.

  • CSS-MSE's endowment goal for 2013, the year of the first graduating class, is $10,000,000.
  • The Foundation for Excellence in Education, CSS-MSE's 501(c)3 organization, will house the endowment fund and ensure that all donations are tax-deductible and fully accountable and compliant with all charitable giving regulations.

Donors interested in contributing to CSS-MSE's sustainability by seeding the endowment fund are encouraged to contact CSS-MSE's principal, Dr. Jose Maldonado. 

Furnish a Family with a Laptop and High-Speed Internet

  The academic program at Columbia Secondary School takes full advantage of the educational potential provided by access to the internet.  Students, faculty, and parents are connected through Columbia Secondary's evolving webspace: free email is provided to all members of the school community, and faculty expect students and parents to make regular use of curricular resources posted on the school's website.   

  • While all students have access to computers and the internet during school hours, the same resources are not available to our entire student body after the school day has ended. 
  • Our hope is to raise funds sufficient to provide individual families with an inexpensive laptop and high-speed internet access in their homes so their children might reap maximum benefits from our curriculum. 

Fundraising Goal: Every $1,000 we raise will enable another family to integrate the CSS educational experience with their daily home life.  

Support Study Abroad/Field Expedition Program

CSS Students all participate in a 2-3 week mini-semester in June designed around an experiential, site-based learning experience, including an overnight camping component.  Students will choose from one of the following programs and travel together in the last weeks of the academic year:

  • Ecology and Culture of Puerto Rico
  • A study of New York City's water system in the Catskill Mountains
  • The architecture and history of New York City.

Fundraising goal: $100,000.  All donations will directly defray the costs of these programs, including transportation and lodging fees, equipment needs, and enrichment opportunities while on-site.

Help build the CSS-MSE / PS125 / KIPP-Star Green roof

Through a collaboration with Columbia University's Fu Foundation School for Engineering and Applied Science, the Columbia Secondary School has developed a plan for improving the rooftop adjacent to our gymnasium.   These facilities will be shared with (and eventually inherited by) our building partners, PS125 and KIPP Star.Plans include:

  • Plant biology greenhouse
  • Raised beds for growing regional plants and vegetables.
  • Outdoor cooking area for food-based elective courses and community dinners.

 Fundraising goal:  $20,000

Philosophy at Columbia Secondary School

A fifty minute philosophy class is required of all students at Columbia Secondary School (CSS) and is taught by all teachers, regardless of their field of specialization. The program is designed jointly by Dr. Paul Thomson, the Philosopher-in-Residence at CSS, and Dr. Deanna Kuhn, of Columbia University Teachers College. Some of Dr. Kuhn’s doctoral students assist with instruction.

While philosophy is quite commonly taught to middle and high school students in other countries, it is still rarely found in middle and high schools in the United States. That is a shame, for philosophy makes a significant contribution to writing and critical thinking skills, and it intersects in many places with other parts of the core curriculum. What is more, students are very good at doing philosophy (much to the surprise of some adults). Think how many times children ask “Why?”, that most basic of philosophical questions. While “philosophy” literally means “love of wisdom”, it is perhaps better characterized as an attempt to answer those questions that science by itself cannot answer, that can only be answered by thinking about them. To take just two examples, science by itself will not tell us whether lying is always wrong, or what was going on “before” the big bang. For that, philosophical dialogue is required (and indeed, some philosophers argue that the second question doesn’t even make sense).

In the sixth and seventh grades, our primary goal is to have students learn that there is no such thing as a right to an opinion. Holding an opinion brings with it the responsibility of having good reasons which support that opinion, as well as a responsibility to critically examine those reasons and to seriously consider alternative views. These are the skills that are necessary if we are to turn our children into good citizens. So at CSS we are not concerned that students learn the various “isms”, or the positions of famous philosophers, rather it is the ideas that are important (the “isms” and famous philosophers can be added as students progress to higher grade levels). We begin with topics drawn largely from ethics and aesthetics. Seemingly simple questions such as “Would you still act ethically if you were invisible?” spark interesting and intense debates. We also have units devoted to the “big” questions. Here is a sampling: What is love?, Is beauty a matter of fact or a matter of taste?, What is the purpose of art?, Is lying always wrong? Do animals have rights?, What are our obligations to the environment?, Why do bad things happen to good people?, and, of course, What is the meaning of life?. These topics and others are treated in detail in our primary text, Philosophy for Teens (volume 1) by Sharon Kaye, Ph.D. and Paul Thomson, Ph.D. A second volume will be used in higher grades and treats topics such as the nature of knowledge, whether machines can think, whether free will is real or simply an illusion, the difference between real science and fakery (pseudoscience), and the like. These volumes have in common a commitment to “drama pedagogy”; that is, short plays open each chapter and introduce the main topic, and students are asked in turn to write plays of their own. This means that students are actively participating in their own learning, and not simply memorizing the text.

Unfortunately, philosophy is not a subject that is supported by the Department of Education of either New York City or New York State. We will also not have enough doctoral students to cover all of the grade levels that we hope to add. As CSS continues to expand by one grade each year, our ability to mount a philosophy course at each of the seven grade levels will be difficult, if not impossible, to achieve without private support.