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Real Talk for Real Teachers: Advice for Teachers from Rookies to Veterans: "No Retreat, No Surrender!"

door Rafe Esquith

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In Real Talk for Real Teachers, Esquith tackles the three stages of life for the career teacher, and outlines both practical advice and inspiration for managing your classrooms, challenging your students, and keeping your own passions alive. Esquith's candor about the inevitable frustration and cynicism that strike at the heart of every teacher at some point offers both comfort and connection to those who experience doubt and struggle with difficult students, endless bureaucracy, and other standard pitfalls. Esquith's years of teaching have given him gems of wisdom about how to work smarter, not harder, and how to draw on those years of experience to flourish and continue growing.… (meer)
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It's one thing to hear suggestions about becoming a better teacher from administrators who clearly became administrators in a desperate move to escape the classroom, and from outside consultants who are paid to take a cursory look at schools and offer up some changes that will prove lucrative to said outside consultants.

It's another thing to hear thoughts from a man who has given up his life to education. Rafe Esquith. Thirty years in the classroom. Students who return year after year to share their successes. Devoted. Rigorous. Fun. A great teacher.

Yes, I would listen to such a man.

And what does such a man, such a teacher, have to tell us, us real teachers? What is his real talk?

Here's a little. (I'm not going to share too much because, if you like it, you really need to support Rafe and help him save money to buy a new kitchen for his wife. No administrator is ever going to use this book in an inservice; we need to support our own kind, folks.)

You are going to have bad days. (Really? Even Rafe? He tells us, yes.)

Haters. (If you've ever worked in a school, sadly, you know this is true.)

And, most shockingly...Leave some children behind. (Remember: that's RAFE saying this. He does not shy away from truth.)

Go ahead and buy the book. You will not regret it, I think. It will help you. And you will help Rafe's wife get a new kitchen. ( )
  debnance | Sep 14, 2013 |
I love reading books about how best to educate kids, in part because I care very strongly about the issue, and in part because I like to feel inadequate.

Rafe Esquith, as you may know, was one of the inspirations for the KIPP schools (KIPP stands for The Knowledge Is Power Program). And indeed, he begins this book with the mottos he uses in his classroom - “The Ten Commandments of Room 56” - the first of which is “Our mission: Be nice. Work hard.” This is the mantra adopted by KIPP. [You can read about KIPP magnet schools in Work Hard. Be Nice.: How Two Inspired Teachers Created the Most Promising Schools in America by Jay Mathews, who considers Esquith to be one of the best classroom teachers in the U.S. He is in an excellent position to know: Mathews is an award-winning education columnist and blogger for the Washington Post, and is the author of seven books about education.]

In this book (Esquith has written several others), he explains that he has been trying “to help ten-year-old children see that they can control their own destinies and make their lives extraordinary.” He insists that all kids are not created equal - nevertheless, you can give them the opportunity to be the best they can be.

He wants teachers not to doubt themselves because teaching is a hard job and it takes time to become a “master” teacher. He advises not getting hung up on movie miracle teachers, because this is not real life [except for Rafe, I would add!]. He claims he’s just an “ordinary guy” who persevered until he got good at what he does. He warns there will be plenty of bad times, and adduces examples from his own career.

Best of all, he gives plenty of classroom tips, that I think are useful for parents (and/or grandparents) as well as teachers. After enumerating some of his rules he gives to kids, he stresses the importance of clarifying why to kids, encouraging them to come up with the reasons themselves so they see the logic of the rules. He also stresses the importance of being a role model. How can you expect children to be nice if you aren’t nice to them? Or to be neat, if you or your classroom or your house is sloppy?

Importantly, he tells how he integrates the school system’s requirements into his more interesting lesson plans, and how he explains to students the necessity for learning what will be on the tests as well as the more “joyous” learning he hopes to share with them.

He advises that if you can’t do or be all the things you want to for the kids, find expert helpers, either from other teachers in your school, friends, alumni, or local experts in any area you need help with: music, dance, sports, whatever. Kids will learn from your willingness to employ help and not maintain you yourself can do it all. He has drawn on the skills of others to great effect for his students' annual performances of the plays of Shakespeare, and he provides an excellent list of all of the myriad benefits there are to doing these plays with young children.

Finally, he talks about the many factors that embitter teachers, and offers words of encouragement. Basically his advice can be summarized by his motto: “No retreat. No surrender.”

But we don’t have to take his word for the impact his teaching methods have had on students. He directs us to his website and there are lots of resources there, including videos of performances by his students. I strongly recommend two of them in particular: one is the musical performance of Riders on the Storm for Macbeth (the students integrate contemporary music into their Shakespeare plays), and the second is a recitation of a letter home from a Civil War soldier to his wife. The young boy who performs (this was before the Supreme Court in Washington) is so good that even he is crying as he proceeds through the letter, and I bet you will be too!

Evaluation: This is yet another inspirational book about - I don’t care if you claim you’re “normal” Rafe - an exceptional teacher who makes a huge difference in the lives of his kids. [Some other good books along these lines, besides the KIPP story cited above, include Educating Esmé: Diary of a Teacher's First Year by Esmé Raji Codell and Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America by Paul Tough.] There is a lot of great advice in this book, even for those of us who are less exceptional, and whether you are a teacher or a parent or a team leader at your job. ( )
  nbmars | Aug 5, 2013 |
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In Real Talk for Real Teachers, Esquith tackles the three stages of life for the career teacher, and outlines both practical advice and inspiration for managing your classrooms, challenging your students, and keeping your own passions alive. Esquith's candor about the inevitable frustration and cynicism that strike at the heart of every teacher at some point offers both comfort and connection to those who experience doubt and struggle with difficult students, endless bureaucracy, and other standard pitfalls. Esquith's years of teaching have given him gems of wisdom about how to work smarter, not harder, and how to draw on those years of experience to flourish and continue growing.

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