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Skip to content THE SOURCE Close TopicsTopics Arts & Culture Business & Entrepreneurship Campus & Community Humanities & Society Medicine & Health Science & Technology SchoolsSchools Arts & Sciences Brown School McKelvey School of Engineering Olin Business School Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts School of Continuing & Professional Studies School of Law School of Medicine PublicationsPublications Newsroom The Record Washington Magazine Search Menu Search for: Search Close Washington Magazine Sections Alumni Activities Alumni Profiles Big Idea Class Notes Coursework Featured Books Features First Person From the Chancellor In Memoriam My Washington Online Exclusives On Topic Point of View Browse Past Issues The messy middle Laura Meckler returns to her hometown of Shaker Heights, Ohio, to chronicle decades of a city grappling with questions many communities never ask. By Leslie Gibson McCarthy April 15, 2024 SHARE Award-winning journalist Laura Meckler, AB ’90, has decades of experience reporting on social and political issues. She began her journalism career at WashU’s Student Life before graduating to a newspaper job in Canton, Ohio. Then came stints at the Associated Press in Canton, Ohio, and in Washington, D.C.; at The Wall Street Journal; and her current job as national education reporter for The Washington Post. Yet, it turns out, one of the most significant stories of her career was in her hometown, in the Cleveland, Ohio, suburb of Shaker Heights. That’s where what began as a long-form story on the city’s well-known history of racial equity and school integration turned into a five-year journey writing Dream Town: Shaker Heights and the Quest for Racial Equity (Macmillan 2023). Established in the early 20th century, Shaker Heights had long been viewed as a model for fair housing and, since the 1970s, school integration. But over time that model proved to be a challenge, and Meckler went home to learn why.  In taking a deep dive into how Shaker Heights grappled with decades of trying to do the right thing for all its citizens, Meckler tackles complexity and nuance chapter by chapter with one simple reporter’s tool: the power of story. Each chapter of Dream Town is anchored by an individual who made a difference in the Ohio suburb — sometimes for better and worse, at the same time. “This story exists in that messy middle where people aren’t all villains and aren’t all heroes,” Meckler says. “There are good people trying hard and making mistakes; there are people making progress, and those not making enough progress. I wanted to paint a portrait of what racial equity looks like when you actually try,” Meckler says.  Dream Town is the story of a community that made mistakes but has managed to become a place where racial equity remains part of the conversation. While she admits in the book that Shaker Heights is far from perfect, Meckler, through years of reporting experience, is able to make the city and its characters accessible.  Meckler began her journalism career as the editor of Student Life and has returned to campus many times since earning her degree in Arts & Sciences in 1990. In 2016, reporting for The Wall Street Journal, she returned to cover the Presidential Debate. (Photo by Melina Mara/The Washington Post) “Everything was so familiar,” she says. “I’d turn a corner in my old high school, and there’d be a poster or a smell I’d recognize, or I’d meet up with one of my old teachers. I felt like I was home. But I was coming back as a reporter, so I was able to ask hard questions, to step back and look at things much more analytically. “Marrying those two things — the personal feeling of really caring about this place with my skills as a reporter and the ability to detach — brought joy to writing this book.” It’s a story 70 years in the making, and one of Shaker Heights’ own is telling it, even challenging her own notions of growing up in the community as a white, Jewish Gen Xer. In doing so, she has laid out a roadmap for other communities to follow, if they are willing to try. “My conclusion is a positive one about what this community has done and is trying to do,” she says. “But there is a lot of struggle here, too. And there are things that have not succeeded, and I don’t flinch at telling that story as well.” SHARE SectionsFeatured Books TopicsHumanities & Society Schools Arts & SciencesRead more stories from Arts & SciencesVisit Arts & Sciences Leave a Comment Comments and respectful dialogue are encouraged, but content will be moderated. Please, no personal attacks, obscenity or profanity, selling of commercial products, or endorsements of political candidates or positions. We reserve the right to remove any inappropriate comments. We also cannot address individual medical concerns or provide medical advice in this forum. You Might Also Like ‘Student Life’ alumni celebrate 140 years October 15, 2018 Published In Washington Magazine From campus news to the halls of power September 9, 2016 Published In Washington Magazine Briefing the nation May 6, 2016 Published In Washington Magazine Also in this Issue April 2024 Alumni Activities Rat tales Alumni Profiles Conversing with canvas and paint Helping every dog have its day Interplanetary rockstar Bridging humanities research and federal legislation Big Idea Harnessing modern data, transforming society Coursework Evidence isn’t enough Featured Books The messy middle Features Moment of promise Drawn in Navigate the neurosciences at WashU Medicine First Person Shifting the beauty standard From the Chancellor The next era of neuroscience research My Washington Global talent, proud advocate On Topic Women deserve better health care. Engineers can help. 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