There are no shortcuts / Rafe Esquith.
Publication details: New York : Pantheon Books, c2003.Edition: 1st edDescription: x, 210 p. ; 22 cmISBN:- 0375422021
- Subtitle on jacket: How an inner-city teacher, winner of the American Teacher Award, inspires his students and challenges us to rethink the way we educate our children
- 372.11/0092 21
- LA2317.E78 A3 2003
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | NMC Library | Stacks | LA2317 .E78 A3 2003 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039000749464 |
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LA1013.7 .S34 2011 Finnish lessons : what can the world learn from educational change in Finland? / | LA2311 .C8 1959 The social ideas of American educators, | LA2311 .L66 1989 Lone voyagers : academic women in coeducational universities, 1870-1937 / | LA2317 .E78 A3 2003 There are no shortcuts / | LA2317 .K64 A33 1984 Growing minds : on becoming a teacher / | LA2317 .P335 A3 2005 The art of teaching / | LB7 .J78 The function of teaching; seven approaches to purpose, tradition and environment. |
Publisher's description: The banner in Rafe Esquith's classroom at Hobart Elementary School reads: "There are no shortcuts." And his students are a testament to the power of that philosophy. These are kids who speak English as a second language, fourth -- and fifth -- graders who go to school in a part of Los Angeles where violence and despair are the norms of the neighborhood. But the statistics are not what you'd expect: Esquith's students score in the country's top 10 percent on standardized tests and go on to colleges such as Harvard, Princeton, University of Chicago, Swarthmore, Stanford, and UCLA. How do they do it? Esquith's view -- that learning isn't easy and that it shouldn't be -- is an increasingly unusual take among educators. Success, he believes, comes from a strong work ethic and from dedication and perseverance on the part of children, teachers, and parents alike. But such ideas prove to be a hard sell to those who believe that hard work and fun must be mutually exclusive. On the other hand, visitors from all over the world have made a pilgrimage to this astonishing classroom. Esquith's students work hard. They are in the classroom at 6:30 a.m. and stay until 5:00 p.m. They come to school during their vacations. Each year the Hobart Shakespeareans, as Esquith's students are known, perform one of the Bard's plays-Sir Ian McKellen and Hal Holbrook are passionate patrons. These Renaissance children are outstanding mathematicians and scientists; they read Steinbeck and Malcolm X; they are artists; they play classical music and blistering rock 'n' roll. Above all, they are recognized for their impeccable manners, which serve them well as Esquith accompanies them all over the United States. They are, as many observers have commented, the gold standard in American education. His former students in middle and high school return on Saturdays, where they read Ibsen, Chekhov, and eight Shakespeare plays a year. In their "Wake Up with Will" program, these eager youngsters travel the world with Esquith and his wife, from London to Paris to colleges all over the country. It's a classroom where the American Dream really does come true. There have been no shortcuts for Rafe Esquith, either. He had to learn the hard way: dealing with bureaucratic administrators, antagonistic colleagues, and his own impetuous and occasionally tactless, even confrontational, nature. But his history, peppered with funny and painful incidents, and a gallery of incisive portraits -- Miss Mothball, Miss Busy-As-a-Bee, Mr. Incompetent -- explains his extraordinary success as a teacher. His scathing yet loving view from the front lines is the most trenchant look at American education to appear in many years. It's a full-alert warning signal, an inspiration, and a guide for teachers, parents, and all the rest of us who care about our country's children.
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