The Capital

Lin the 50th student to hold seat on board

Severna Park High junior elected to serve on county panel

- By Megan Loock

Eric Lin, a junior from Severna Park High School, will sit as the 50th student member of the Anne Arundel County Board of Education starting in July.

Lin’s election was announced this month following a debate in late April with the other two finalists, Indu Bodala, of Glen Burnie High School, and Taryn Reinhart, of Annapolis High School.

At the debate, the Severna Park resident identified five priorities that he wants to collaborat­e with other board members to achieve: modernizin­g the county dress code; reevaluati­ng the World Classical Languages curriculum; codifying a policy that prohibits homework being assigned on dates where major standardiz­ed testing is scheduled; establishi­ng a free school lunch/breakfast policy and attendance policies that are geared toward promoting student mental health.

Lin will be sworn in at 8 a.m. June 29 in the Board of Education headquarte­rs. His first meeting will be on July 12. The livestream of Lin’s swearing-in ceremony will be available on AACPS-TV and the AACPS YouTube page.

During his term, Lin hopes to reform the curriculum requiremen­ts for World Classical Languages that he believes are “failing students.” The current curriculum is “outdated and impractica­l” because it does not focus on students learning to hold interperso­nal conversati­ons.

“Talking with a lot of teachers that I’ve had, it seems like we’re really skipping over learning the basics like grammar and you know, those conversati­onal phrases like very basic vocabulary, tenses, , past tense, present tense. Those are the things that we should be focusing on, especially in the beginner levels,” he said.

The 17-year-old plans to sit down with the Department of Curriculum and Instructio­n and “overhaul” the curriculum using feedback from student and teacher surveys.

Lin also wants to address ways the board can prioritize student mental health. One way, he said, would be to establish a policy that no homework be given on the weekend during SAT/ACT test dates and no work assigned during breaks.

“After taking that three-and-a-half-hourlong test, you’re pretty burned out and so not having to go home after school from that and do homework and prepare for the day after would be really nice,” he said. “This goes for the night before the exam as well, not assigning homework the night before those tests so that students can just take a break and be able to get a good night’s rest [and] just relax without having to worry about doing homework is something that I’d like to prioritize.”

Lin said he is prepared to work with and

listen to all county stakeholde­rs to make decisions on educationa­l practices that will benefit students. He has experience engaging with the Board of Education through his involvemen­t as the secretary of communicat­ions for the Chesapeake Regional Associatio­n of Student Councils. He also sat on County Executive Steuart Pittman’s Youth Advisory Committee and participat­ed in the Maryland Associatio­n of Student Councils last fall.

‘Not a student representa­tive’

Lin was preceded by 49 student board members, many of whom have sought reforms as voting members. Next year will mark 50 years since the position was establishe­d. The position dates to 1974 when former Anne Arundel state Sen. Robert Pascal, a Republican, introduced a bill allowing the Board of Education to add a student member. The member was selected by the Chesapeake Regional Associatio­n of Student Councils and had no voting rights.

Before the bill was enacted, it was difficult to participat­e in the board’s deliberati­ons, said Jeffery Robinson, the first student board member, who was elected in June 1974.

“Not only did they require you to have a specific purpose to go down and talk with the board, but you also had to take time off to go down to the board during the school day,” Robinson said. “I won’t say that it wasn’t allowed, but I would also suggest that student participat­ion was very limited in those cases.”

Despite not having the ability to vote on board matters, he said that he was “enticed with the opportunit­y to participat­e on nearly an equal level with the other board members.” At the time, student activism was commonly associated with students rebelling against the system to advocate for change, but county students wanted to work within the system to advocate for change, he said.

Anthony Arend was the president of the Chesapeake Regional Associatio­n of Student Councils at the time Robinson was elected. Arend wanted students to have the right to vote on board matters and he 16-year-old Arundel High School student was the driving force behind making it happen. .

“In the course of a few years, I would say in Anne Arundel County and in the state of Maryland there was a transforma­tion in what student activism meant,” Arend said. “It didn’t mean ‘challengin­g the man.’ It didn’t mean fighting against the administra­tion; it meant putting on a suit and tie, going to the board meeting, behaving like adults and working with the system.”

During the 1974 campaign season, Arend attended a tea and met House of Delegates candidate Michael Wagner. After their introducti­on, Arend asked Wagner if he’d sponsor a bill giving the student representa­tive voting rights Wagner said yes.

After the Democrat was elected in 1975, he co-sponsored House Bill 1239 with Republican Del. Robert Neall.

The bill “flew” through both the House and the Senate, Arend said in an interview with AACPS’ ‘Teen Talk’ host Camryn Chehreh. However, the legislatio­n hit a roadblock after five of six Board of Education members argued the bill violated a Maryland law that someone cannot serve on the board if they are under the authority of the board.

An article that appeared in the Capital Gazette on April 14, 1975 reported that Assistant Attorney General George A. Nilson came to the conclusion that granting a student member full voting rights was legal based on past legal opinions that involved similar movements in neighborin­g counties. Following the decision, Arend and his team still had to persuade former Gov. Marvin Mandel to not veto the bill.

At a bill hearing, Mandel asked Robinson if a student representa­tive having a vote would have made a difference in his participat­ion on the board. Robinson admitted his vote wouldn’t have had much influence, but he would have been more outspoken on certain issues if he had the power.

“I probably would have been more outspoken than I was just because the reality is that when you are treated as an equal, you probably also participat­e at a much higher level of quality in your debate and conversati­on,” he said.

On the morning of May 15, 1975, Mandel signed the bill into law.

The following year, Arend ran for the student seat and won.

Five decades later, Robinson still feels the student vote is an important part of the job.

“That was my response to [Mandel], and that’s what I still feel today,” Robinson said. “The equality of the vote gives the student member a much stronger interest in providing input into the process.”

 ?? JEFFREY F. BILL/CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Eric Lin, from Severna Park High School, will be the 50th student member of the Board of Education.
JEFFREY F. BILL/CAPITAL GAZETTE Eric Lin, from Severna Park High School, will be the 50th student member of the Board of Education.

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