Education Scholar Richard D. Kahlenberg

This Is What a Newspaper Addiction Looks Like

Richard D. Kahlenberg is a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, where he writes about education, equal opportunity, and civil rights. Before participating in a panel on making higher education more inclusive, he talked about his newspaper habit, his hatred of hypocrisy, and why he’d like to be a professor in his next life in the Zócalo green room.

Q:

If you had an extra hour in the day, what would you do with it?


A:

This is a boring answer, but I’d probably read more. I’m obsessed with reading the newspaper. I have big stacks.


Q:

What newspapers do you subscribe to?


A:

I read the Washington Post at breakfast, read The New York Times online, and then I read the Wall Street Journal at lunch. See: I don’t have much of a social life.


Q:

What do you love to hate?


A:

Related to our topic today, I hate the folks who appear to be taking the high road and in fact are treating people poorly. I mean people who are very proud of making an institution racially diverse but then lock out poor kids of all races. That kind of hypocrisy bothers me.


Q:

How do you like your steak?


A:

Medium.


Q:

What’s your favorite Harvard Law School book—besides your own, Broken Contract: A Memoir of Harvard Law School?


A:

I liked One L by Scott Turow. Mine was very different: He talked about the first year of law school, which is grueling, and I talked about the second and third years, when so many of us wanted to go into public interest law and ended up at big corporate firms.


Q:

What’s the last great book you read?


A:

A number of years ago I read J. Anthony Lukas’ Common Ground. That’s the last great book I read. It’s about the Boston busing for school desegregation and the conflict between working-class whites and working-class blacks, two groups that should be allies but were kind of fighting over the crumbs.


Q:

What was your worst subject in school?


A:

Calculus.


Q:

What do you wake up to?


A:

I usually wake up to my wife saying, “It’s time to get up.”


Q:

What profession would you practice in your next life?


A:

Oh I think I’d like to be a professor, get a Ph.D., really dive into a particular topic.


Q:

What’s the ugliest tie you own?


A:

I have one that has scales that are meant to represent the law that I no longer wear.