| Carnegie Corporation of New York Vol. 3/No. 1 Fall 2004 |
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Literacy Coaches: An Evolving Role Philanthropy in Russia: New Money Under Pressure The International
Reporting Project: Also in this issue: The PASS Act Would Fund Literacy Coaching and other Literacy Efforts Past Issues: Request a free subscription to the print edition |
America
Unbound:
Martin Leibowitz, vice chairman of Carnegie Corporation
of New York’s board of trustees, is currently a managing director
in the research department of Morgan Stanley; prior to that, for nine
years he was vice chairman and chief investment officer of TIAA-CREF,
overseeing more than $300 billion in investments. The author of several
previous books and more than 130 articles, Leibowitz has now written Franchise
Value: A Modern Approach to Security Analysis, which provides investment
practitioners with a comprehensive guide to price/earnings ratios and
equity valuations. The franchise value (FV) approach, explains Leibowitz,
springs from work he and an associate, Stanley Kogelman, undertook in
the late 1980s at Salomon Brothers. Discussing the development of FV,
Leibowitz writes, “We had been asked to develop a valuation model
to advance our understanding of a foreign equity market…One of the
key questions was how much an investor should be willing to pay for the
market’s exceptional rate of growth. Since it was well known that
not all forms of earnings growth contribute to a firm’s value, Stan
and I tried to probe more deeply into the value-additive component of
growth, which we chose to characterize by the term ‘franchise value.’”
One reviewer said the book was “A bold investigation into the basis
for common stock valuation that will challenge conventional thinking about
such basic ideas as earnings Along with the late Sidney Homer, who was the founder and general partner in charge of Salomon Brothers’ bond market research department, Leibowitz is also the co-author of Inside the Yield Book, first published in 1972 and reissued this year. This updated edition of the classic volume, which has been in print for over 30 years, “explains and makes sense of essential mathematical relationships that are basic to an understanding of bonds, annuities, loans…any securities or investments that involve compound interest and the determination of present value for future cash flows.” Frank J. Fabozzi, Editor of the Journal of Portfolio Management and Frederick Frank Adjunct Professor of Finance at Yale University’s School of Management has written of Inside the Yield, “This book transformed the markets’ understanding of bonds. The new material in this expanded edition extend those insights to equities and other investments…”
Islam in Russia: Hunter is also the author of Modernization and Democratization
in the Muslim World: Obstacles and Remedies (Center for Strategic
and International Studies, April 2004), which provides a wide-ranging
and objective overview of the Muslim world, incorporating politics, history,
economics and development issues, while also exploring the “Muslim
world’s modernization and democracy gap.” Learning to Live Together:
Preventing Hatred In Learning to Live Together, David Hamburg, president emeritus of Carnegie Corporation of New York and his wife, Beatrix Hamburg, a visiting scholar in the Department of Psychology at Cornell University’s Weill Medical College, apply their experience in the field of conflict resolution and human development to examine how children can be taught cooperation and tolerance rather than hatred and prejudice. The authors argue that despite the historical pervasiveness of warfare, it is preventable, and the immense destructive power of modern weaponry makes conflict avoidance a necessity. In attempting to avert violent group conflicts, scholars have focused on political and economic means of deterrence, as Hamburg did in his 2002 book No More Killing Fields. Now, in Learning to Live Together, the Hamburgs examine the potential of education to prevent hostility and violence on all levels: in families, in communities, among diverse ethnic and religious groups, and among nations, postulating that, if hatred can be taught, so too can tolerance and cooperation. They note, however, that prejudice is to some degree inherent in group psychology, and hence “education everywhere has been ethnocentric—and all too often virulently prejudicial.” As a remedy, the authors—in this profoundly hopeful book—advocate an expansion of “peace education,” a form of conflict-resolution instruction that addresses large-scale group conflicts. They explain how, with the help of universities, international organizations, and foundations, both industrialized and developing nations can realize the potential of peace education to teach intergroup cooperation.
The Promotion of Social
Awareness: Powerful The social behavior that children learn in elementary and middle school can vitally affect their futures, yet teachers everywhere rarely include social skills education in their lesson plans. How can educators promote positive, healthy social interactions while still teaching basic academic skills? Since the early 1970s, the Group for the Study of Interpersonal Development, an informal coalition of researchers, has investigated this question in schools from Boston to Iceland. Robert L. Selman, professor of education and human development at Harvard Graduate School and professor of psychology at Harvard Medical School, documents their 30 years of creative research in The Promotion of Social Awareness which was written, in part, with Corporation support under its focus in prior years on early childhood development. The original foundations of Selman’s research were the theories of moral development established by the psychologists Jean Piaget and Lawrence Kohlberg, which postulate that moral development comes primarily through recognizing different points of view and having positive social relationships. Selman and his colleagues began researching these theories by presenting at-risk children in Boston-area public schools with brief stories that made them consider moral or social dilemmas. This allowed the researchers to expand their predecessors’ theories by identifying different stages of social skills development. Their work also showed that literature can be very effective in making children consider different points of view. Selman and his colleagues next addressed a practical problem: integrating their theories into the curriculum. Together with the Voices of Love and Freedom, a group that tries to advance cultural and social awareness in elementary schools, they developed a program to combine literacy education with social and conflict-resolution skills. The Promotion of Social Awareness describes this program using extensive examples from the classroom, and offers insightful conclusions about both the potential and the difficulty of bringing developmental theory to our public schools.
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