From Liz Willen, The Hechinger Report <[email protected]>
Subject Remembering Fazil Khan
Date February 26, 2024 11:30 PM
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A beloved colleague and star data journalist dedicated to exposing injustice 

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The Report
A newsletter from The Hechinger Report
Liz Willen Editor’s note: This week, I am dedicating my newsletter to Fazil Khan, Hechinger’s brilliant and kind data journalist, who tragically died last week.

Liz Willen, Editor in Chief



** Remembering our friend and colleague Fazil Khan
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Khan, who moved to the U.S. from India to attend Columbia Journalism School, was a beloved colleague and star data journalist dedicated to exposing injustice 

By Hechinger Staff 

Fazil Khan got in just under the wire when he applied for a data reporter job at The Hechinger Report in the summer of 2022.

While his application may have been among the last received, his interview vaulted him to the front of the pack.

“I don’t know that anyone has ever made that positive a first impression on me anywhere, let alone via a tiny Zoom screen,” said Sarah Butrymowicz, Hechinger’s senior editor for investigations and Khan’s direct supervisor. “You could just tell right away that he was such a thoughtful person, really smart.”

And that impression proved true. No more than two weeks after he was hired, he burrowed into a project uncovering Arizona’s habit of handing out long suspensions for attendance violations ([link removed]) , often derailing students’ academic progress.

“We said, ‘Here’s this disaster of a spreadsheet, have fun!’” Butrymowicz said. “But he had no complaints, no grumbling, he was able to wrangle it.” The project led to proposed legislation in Arizona. 

Khan, 27, died February 23 in a fire in his Harlem apartment building. Though his time at Hechinger was short, he made a dazzling imprint on those fortunate enough to call him a colleague.

“Fazil always thought about ways reporting problems could be solved, rather than why they were intractable,” said Jon Marcus, a higher education writer at Hechinger.

Among the collaborations between Marcus and Khan was reporting that foundthat many colleges were raising their net prices ([link removed]) — the cost after discounts and financial aid — faster for their poorest students than for their richest. Khan then produced a follow-up story about colleges wherethe richest students pay less than their lower-income classmates ([link removed]) .

Khan “was thoughtful about using data not just as an end unto itself but to tell important stories about students who get shut out of the privileges that come with higher educations,” Marcus said.
Continue reading ([link removed])
A collection of Fazil Khan’s work


**

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Beyond the Rankings: College Welcome Guide ([link removed])

Go beyond test scores and rankings to find out what the culture on campus is like

The pandemic robbed thousands of New York City children of parents. Many aren’t getting the help they need ([link removed])

Students and their families describe a lack of mental health services to help them cope with grief

Where poor students pay more than rich ones ([link removed])

At 17 colleges, the poorest students paid more out of pocket than the wealthiest ones, due to variations in financial aid policies

Education Suspended ([link removed]) ([link removed])

When students are blocked from class for missing class

Why are prices rising more for lower-income college students than their higher-income peers? ([link removed])

In the competition for revenues and students, financial aid is shifting from needy families to wealthier ones

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