DiscoverPoint of Learning"Of surpassing worth" —Marcus Foster (1923-1973)
"Of surpassing worth" —Marcus Foster (1923-1973)

"Of surpassing worth" —Marcus Foster (1923-1973)

Update: 2023-12-04
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The heart of this special episode is the Back-to-School Address to Oakland, California faculty and staff by Superintendent Dr. Marcus A. Foster, given in the fall of 1973. You will hear a singular voice in U.S. education urging teachers, administrators, and support staff to keep students at the center of their work—while also honoring the complexity of the challenge. Foster’s words are poignant not only because they still ring true today, but because they were offered just weeks before he was assassinated: this is one of the last public speeches by a visionary educator who worked his way up from teaching science in a four-room, wood-frame school through the ranks of building and district leadership. I have access to this rare recording as a gift from the estate of my late aunt, Dr. Gail Roth Meister, who worked for the Oakland district at the start of her five-decade career in education, and with kind permission from the family of Dr. Foster to share it with a wider audience.

For the last segment of the episode, I am joined by Dr. John P. Spencer, author of the definitive biography In the Crossfire: Marcus Foster and the Troubled History of American School Reform (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012) to reflect on key themes from the speech and discuss Foster’s important place in the history of U.S. education. (Photo: Marcus Foster Education Institute)
















































































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Dr. Foster reinforcing the theme of PEOPLE HELPING PEOPLE in an elementary school classroom. He may have had a loving word with the boy standing on the left after the picture was taken. (Photo: Marcus Foster Education Institute)


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TRANSCRIPTS

In addition to the standard transcript of the full episode, a PDF of Foster’s speech alone is available for download. (I’d base some professional development conversations on it if I were running a school these days!)
































READ THE EPISODE TRANSCRIPT






DOWNLOAD SPEECH ONLY (PDF)






















































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Dr. Foster in front of Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary in Oakland, California during the school’s construction in 1970. (Photo: The Oakland Tribune Collection, Oakland Museum of California)


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IN MEMORIAM

This episode celebrates the legacy of Marcus Foster, but I also wish to dedicate it to my aunt Gail Roth Meister, who taught me so much. Within the first minute of his address, Dr. Foster refers to the “outstanding summer program” that the district was able to mount with the assistance of SB 90, the California State Senate Bill that provided funding. Among those contributing to that summer program was my aunt Gail, consulting with the Oakland schools at the start of her career. Fortunately for all of us, a copy of the audio of Dr. Foster’s 1973 speech stayed with her through the five decades of education consulting she was just beginning. A few years after her work in Oakland, Aunt Gail earned her Ph.D. in Educational Policy Analysis from Stanford. In 1986 she moved to New Jersey with my uncle, the Rev. J. W. Gregg Meister, and my cousin Miriam. As a consultant skilled in coaching, facilitation, qualitative research, program design, and evaluation, she often worked with schools in the Philadelphia area, where Dr. Foster had spent most of his career. Like Dr. Foster, she was a brilliant educator who is deeply missed.
















































































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Dr. Gail Roth Meister, 1947-2022. (Photo: J. W. Gregg Meister)


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EPISODE NOTES

Today’s episode includes a post-speech segment with historian John P. Spencer, author of In the Crossfire: Marcus Foster and the Troubled History of American School Reform (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2012). Chair of the Education Department at Ursinus College, Dr. Spencer specializes in the history of education, school reform, urban education, and the scholarship of teaching and learning.
















































































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Dr. John P. Spencer (Photo: Ursinus College)


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Thanks to Professor Spencer, I learned that one of Marcus Foster’s favorite songs in his youth was the Billy Strayhorn composition “Take the A-Train.” This fact was not published in his book, but he kindly consulted his notes from the many oral history interviews he conducted as part of his research on Foster’s life when I asked him about possible directions for underscore and transition music in the episode. My brother John Horn (co-star of the My Brothers, Teachers episode from 2017) was generous enough to record a half-dozen takes of the jazz standard on his keyboard despite a very busy work week. Here he is whaling on another of his axes:
















































































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John Horn (Image: Glenn Murr

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"Of surpassing worth" —Marcus Foster (1923-1973)

"Of surpassing worth" —Marcus Foster (1923-1973)

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