Senior Projects

Jay Matthews:

When Wakefield High School first required senior projects 12 years ago, students suspected it was a plot to drain the last precious drops of joy from their teenage years. “We were pretty disgruntled,” Shelby Sours, who was student government president, said at the time. “We felt abused and neglected.”
This school year, Wendy Ramirez and many classmates were similarly resentful. They could not believe such a wrong-headed effort to make their lives miserable had survived so long. But after finishing her report on forensic science, Ramirez had a change of heart. Now she sees her teachers as farsighted. “It’s an experience that I will never forget that will help me so much in my future,” she said.
That’s mushy and nice, but it doesn’t explain something odd. The program’s success at the Arlington County school shows senior projects are a good idea. So why are they so rare in area public schools?