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| Lessons to Learn: Voices from the Front Lines of Teach for America | 
enlarge | Author: Molly Ness Publisher: RoutledgeFalmer Category: Book
List Price: $25.95 Buy New: $18.00 You Save: $7.95 (31%)
New (16) Used (8) from $17.94
Avg. Customer Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 126051
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.3 x 0.8
ISBN: 0415945909 Dewey Decimal Number: 371 EAN: 9780415945905 ASIN: 0415945909
Publication Date: November 26, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This is the inside story of the more than 8,000 recent college graduates who have joined Teach for America and committed two years of service to teaching in the nation's most troubled public schools. These inexperienced teachers come to class armed with little more than their idealism and the conviction that every student, regardless of race or background, deserves an excellent education. They take the toughest jobs at the toughest schools in the toughest districts, and they face the raw realities of America's public education system: dilapidated schools, too few books, and overcrowded classrooms. Written in the tradition of Studs Terkel, Lessons to Learn showcases the insights of a wide range of individuals with real life expertise, combining interviews and essays from TFA corps members and alumni as well as principals, superintendents, parents, and noted education experts. Current and former TFA members reflect on their teaching sucesses and failures, the life lessons they gathered along the way, and their insights about the challenges facing out nation's public schools. Education professionals and other experts help establish the broader context of the fight for meaningful public education reform. Lessons to Learn is essential reading for teaching, parents, policy makers, and anyone who cares about the fate of this nation's struggling public education system.
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The Front Lines of...What War Did You Say? June 10, 2008 2 out of 5 found this review helpful
Teachers today are always described as being on the front lines. But one might ask, of which war? I taught with Teach For America recruits. There were several things they had in common, although no doubt they were as individuals as different as the rest of us. Still their similarities suggest that they were the products of training and indoctrination. First, they had that breezy quality of visitors not employees. It was a lark for them, teaching, not a way to make a living. It was a hobby. They were short-term help, in other words, not education workers, like the rest of us. They acted like Christmas wrapping-paper crew members, working in the department store for a week or so. No problems penetrated, nothing involved them. You'd never see them at an evening staff meeting; they were out of there at 3:00, baby. Secondly, they snubbed the staff teachers but brown-nosed the administrators. They saw the teachers as working-class (rightfully) and the administrators as middle-class, that is, people like them. They were trained to look down at the teachers, because they had been trained to see us as the obstacles to reform and change and liberation and emancipation. We taught Cinderella, but they "deconstructed" Cinderella. We were regarded as purveyors of oppression; they, of enlightenment. They were management; we, just teachers, the lowest form of scum in our society. The message they received at Teach for American headquarters was this: "Teaching is a fun hobby, not a career, except for the losers you'll be meeting at your assignment. Ignore them, kiss up to the Principal, get a good recommendation, and soon you'll be raking in the bucks at your chosen profession." One thing I came away feeling was that at least on this point the alumni were well-informed.
OK intro to TFA but more analysis is needed February 16, 2005 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
This book, written by a recent Teach For America alum, strives to outline the TFA program by going through the TFA experience from recruiting to alumnus through the eyes of TFA interviewees. Those who are interested in applying for Teach for America would gain a lot from this book as it gives some perspective on the process through bite size biographies. For me, I would have liked either greater detail about the subjects interviewed or more hefty analysis of TFA as a way to address the national teacher shortage.
I did learn a few things from this book. I now know that TFA endorses high stakes testing as a way to demonstrate that their teachers are competent in the classroom at generating score improvement. I'm also aware that there's a real tension between getting the "elite" graduates to staff the program versus finding people who will commit to teaching for the long haul.
I remain positive on Teach For America, not because it's perfect, but because I feel that it is one possible strategy for addressing the teacher shortage. Still, I'm not sure that I wouldn't learn more about the program from someone with a stronger background in teaching or educational policy or even from some of the more detailed profiles in magazines on TFA teachers.
This is a good intro to the program, but I hope other researchers who can go beyond just interviewing as a research technique will join the field to figure out how to make a positve program a great program and provide honest debate on how to address the national teacher shortage.
3.5 stars
--SD
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