Opinion

Embrace the “Weird” and Unexpected

By Shruti Sagar '18 A couple weeks ago, we had our final peer group meeting, and hidden in between a few different side conversations, I heard one of my peer groupies quietly ask how bad junior year really is. I started to talk to him about junior year a bit, and...

Happiness is Only Real When Shared

By Megan Pan '18 Since perhaps as early as the beginning of the year, I have been thinking about what to write for my last editorial. There are so many things I would want to say about my time here at Pingry that it became impossible to choose one aspect that could...

Taking a Leap into the Unknown

By Owen Wolfson '18 About a month and a half ago, I was on a PSPA panel. One of the questions asked was focused on how to further integrate students into the community, and how to make them feel fully included in Pingry life. After Mr. Conard listed off community...

February 1st: A Day in the Journal

By Jenny Coyne '18 This year I started journaling. Every night, after I finished up my WebAssign problem sets, English poetry journals, and French causettes, I would crawl into my bed and begin my nightly reflection. My journal was not littered with earth shattering...

Learning to be Flexible

By Ethan Chung '18 Throughout high school, I have often found myself struggling to find a balance between these two opposite tenets: “College is everything” and “Friendship is the most valuable thing in life.” I have sat through countless speeches delivered by my...

Listening to Unlock Pingry

By Ouarida Benatia '18 I showed up to my first day at Pingry in the September of 6th grade wearing the preppiest outfit I could think of: khaki shorts, a pastel orange shirt, and tennis shoes. I had gone to a Newark public school for my entire life up until then, and...

Breaking Brand: Looking Past Branding

By Miro Bergam (V) Last month, Headmaster Nat Conard went before the Pingry community at a morning meeting to speak about a situation in which one student addressed another student using a racial slur over social media. His other recent appearances include his speech...

Editorial: When Do We Get to Weigh In?

By Rachel Chen '18 When I heard about the tragedy at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, my first reaction was not to have one. “17 dead, 14 injured…” the car radio droned, and I remember thinking, oh. Another one. And I promptly forgot it....

Support Common Sense on Firearm Regulations

By Maddie Parrish (VI) “Everything seemed so easy. No way we would get caught.” This is a quote from the notebook of Eric Harris, one of the two perpetrators of the Columbine High School shooting in 1999 that killed 13 people. Since then, journalists have attempted to...

Editorial: The Labor of Love

By Megan Pan '18 In the past few weeks, we’ve had the chance to hear some excellent speeches about parenting. At the LeBow Competition, Jonathan Chen (V) talked about his parents’ “endless love and endless support” and urged us to “thank those who support you,” while...

Ho Encourages Us to Be the #BestOfPingry

By Felicia Ho (V) “At 17 years old, he’s won it -- the first gold medal for the United States at the 2018 Winter Olympics.” “She’s a golden girl! What a force to be reckoned with!” As the Winter Olympic Games opened in Pyeongchang, South Korea on February 9, two...

Affinity Groups: An Open Dialogue

By Ketaki Tavan (V) The first time I was ever exposed to the concept of affinity groups was during my freshman year at Pingry. These groups were presented as “safe spaces for students to learn more about their various identities and to discuss their questions,...

Murphy Discusses New Extracurricular Participation Policy

By Brooke Murphy '18 As many people have seen by now, a new “Participation Policy” has been put in place. The policy, which was emailed to parents around November 26, states that students must participate in activities that they excel in throughout their time as a...

Learn to Face the Music

By Felicia Ho (V) Shrill, piercing, and unbelievably scratchy. The first time I heard a violin, I couldn’t believe my ears. Yet, there I was at my local music shop, picking out my first violin as a fourth grader. Hundreds of violins lined the walls, waiting to be...

Sugar, Spice, and Everything Nice: Sage Dining

By Darlene Fung (V) I am a swimmer, and being a swimmer means having a notoriously large appetite. We high school swimmers might not be inhaling Michael Phelps’s famous 12,000-calorie diet, but we certainly do consume more than the 2,000 calories an average American...

Elliot Analyzes the Nature of the College Application Process

By Alexis Elliot '18 “Ok, now can you describe yourself in 30 seconds or less?” During my college interview, I shifted in my seat as I tried to come up with an answer. Not wanting to seem unprepared but also worried to speak without gathering my thoughts, I asked my...

Editorial: Gatsby and Goodbyes

By Megan Pan '18 “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.” The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald Ever since I was young, I’ve had a strong sense of attachment. My mother told me that when I lost my first tooth, I cried over the...

Editorial: Ode to the Empty Nest

By Rachel Chen '18 I’ve been crying a lot lately, but here’s the latest reason why: on November 26, I decorated the family Christmas tree for last time. It was the latest of many lasts that weekend: my last Thanksgiving I’d welcome my sister home, my last squash...

How Much Privacy Do We Actually Have?

By Anna Wood '18 Simply put, media is powerful. A single hashtag or posted message can influence people for months. We’ve seen trends such as store robberies and dangerous stunts. We absorb the posts we see online, oftentimes more than we think we do. As members of...

Dear Freshmen: High School Is A Dim Sum Restaurant

By Felicia Ho (V) Transitioning into high school is a lot like walking into a dim sum restaurant. Sometimes you hear great ‘reviews’ of high school, sometimes you only hear about the huge amount of pressure during high school. However, you never know until you truly...

Editorial: The Bright Side of an Accident

By Megan Pan One morning last week, I was driving myself to school when I got into an accident. It wasn’t anything terrible. I was a little careless on the turn into the school driveway, and my car ended up scraping against the curbside stones. Aside from a harsh...

How Media Makes Us Smarter

By Ketaki Tavan (V) We’re told as children that sitting in front of the TV is a waste of time. It hampers creativity, creates couch potatoes, fosters laziness, and leads to a meaningless existence. We’re told that our time would be better spent reading a book instead....

Leaning into Discomfort in a Partisan World

By Miro Bergam (V) “Lean into discomfort.” This phrase may sound familiar from the multiple diversity assemblies you’ve been asked to attend in your years at Pingry. It is a part of a list of “conversation norms” that Pingry’s diversity work is grounded in. For many...

Editorial: Still Working on Our Story

By Rachel Chen I used to believe that if I didn’t read the end of a book, it never ended. Like if I didn’t finish Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix or Mockingjay, Sirius and Rue would go on existing perpetually, even aging and dying naturally. (Spoiler alert!)...

All the opinion articles of The Pingry Record.

The views expressed in these articles are those of the authors do not necesarily reflect or represent the views of the Record or The Pingry School. 

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