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What I Wish I Could Tell Them About Teaching in a Title I School, by Love
Teach
“I would tell them that students who break rules at our school often don’t receive consequences. Last
year our school had a higher number of office referrals and in-school suspensions, so this year teachers
have been ‘strongly encouraged’ to deal with discipline problems themselves. That means that unless
the offense is severe or dangerous, students remain in class, whether or not their behavior is blatantly
defiant.”
“There’s an element of this rage at bad teachers that’s hard to talk about, and so it’s often avoided: the
dismaying truth that we don’t know how to educate poor inner-city and rural kids in this country.”
“But what makes a good teacher? There have been many quests for the one essential trait, and they
have all come up empty-handed. Among the factors that do not predict whether a teacher will succeed:
a graduate-school degree, a high score on the SAT, an extroverted personality, politeness, confidence,
warmth, enthusiasm and having passed the teacher-certification exam on the first try.”
4. It’s Time to Stop Telling Our Kids Their Best Efforts Aren’t Good Enough,
by Captain Awesome
“My school, like all schools, is big on research-based strategies. Anything we do with the kids, they want
to see a study proving that it works. And yet, like every school I’ve ever seen, we also try to use fear to
motivate the kids to achieve on standardized tests … despite the fact a mountain of research tells us
that’s pointless.”
“The hard part of teaching is coming to grips with this: There is never enough. There is never enough
time. There are never enough resources. There is never enough you.”
6. Why Are Teachers and Kids Working in Buildings That Are Falling Apart?,
by Caralee Adams
“The condition of a school building may have a stronger influence on student performance than the
combined influences of family background, socioeconomic status, school attendance and behavior,
according to the National Clearinghouse for Educational Statistics. More specifically, students who
attend better buildings have test scores ranging from 5 to 17 percentile points higher than students in
substandard facilities.”
“We can’t answer the question ‘Is tech useful in schools?’ until we’ve grappled with a deeper question:
‘What kinds of learning should be taking place in those schools?’ If we favor an approach by which
students actively construct meaning, an interactive process that involves a deep understanding of ideas
and emerges from the interests and questions of the learners themselves, well, then we’d be open to
kinds of technology that truly support this kind of inquiry.
“The overwhelming isolation of students of color in schools with mostly low-income classmates
threatens to undermine efforts both to improve educational outcomes and to provide a pipeline of
skilled workers for the economy at a time when such students comprise a majority of the nation’s public
school enrollment.”
“Because Don and I were lucky (white) enough to live in middle class neighborhoods with good schools,
we had opportunities denied to many other children. Don and I read our way to better lives because we
had books to read in the first place. Many children raised in poverty—disproportionally children of
color—grow up in communities without meaningful, consistent access to books or positive reading
experiences.”
“Teaching is like a relationship. As awesome as it would be to be given a script of exactly what you
should say on a first date (instead of, for example, rambling incessantly about facts you learned about
dolphins from a podcast), life just doesn’t work that way. If you did follow a script on a first date, you
would sound like a robot and be completely unable to maintain any kind of conversation, let alone a
relationship. Teaching is not that different. A different kind of relationship, yes, but one in which
authenticity, responsiveness, and listening matter fundamentally.