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Teaching in America
The Slow Revolution
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and
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
1999
About this book
Would America’s schools be better served if teachers shared more of the authority that professors have long enjoyed? Will a slow revolution be completed that enables schoolteachers to shoulder more responsibility for hiring, mentoring, promoting, and, if necessary, firing their peers? This book explores these questions.
Reviews
Gerald Grant and Christine Murray have interviewed and observed more than 500 teachers and spent a decade studying schools, colleges, and universities. The book that grew out of that research, Teaching in America describes a paradox made apparent by their work. Schoolteachers and professors do the same fundamental work--teaching students--yet the respect, compensation, and working conditions of schoolteachers often fall short of those traditionally accorded to professors...Those separate histories have created misleading images of each profession, [Grant] adds: To see professors as bookish scholars is as much of a distortion as to see schoolteachers as little more than baby sitters.
-- Julianne Basinger Chronicle of Higher Education
-- Julianne Basinger Chronicle of Higher Education
Teaching in America is an engaging book. For the reader who is or has been an educator in the schools, the historical narratives and the contemporary issues ring true. But the book lends itself to a much wider audience that includes all those interested in our schools and in education who want to understand the complexities of where we are and how we got there by listening to the voices of teachers in a relatively jargon-free story.
-- June K. Phillips College Board Review
-- June K. Phillips College Board Review
Readers concerned with the condition of public schools and the status of schoolteachers will find that Grant and Murray not only provide them with solid ammunition for debate but also give them reason to keep up their spirits.
-- Publishers Weekly
-- Publishers Weekly
By sharing the thoughts of famous teachers and some ordinary ones too, [Gerald Grant and Christine Murray] thoughtfully review the teaching profession. Their in-depth focus on recent experiments that give teachers the power to shape their schools and mentor new recruits to teaching is insightful. Grant and Murray conclude that the educational system will be saved not by better managers but by better teachers. These new teachers' talents and skills must be developed and their teaching performance assessed through better means and the involvement of other teachers.
-- G. E. Pawlas Choice
-- G. E. Pawlas Choice
Grant and Murray base their work on years of research in grade schools, high schools, and higher education institutions. They address the positive aspects of teaching and explore questions dealing with the empowerment of U.S. schoolteachers. The authors argue that teaching is a multi-skilled activity that involves knowing the learners, engaging and motivating the students, imparting knowledge, modeling appropriate behavior, and evaluating student progress...Teachers, parents, and those preparing themselves for teaching as a vocation will be inspired by this true analysis of their profession. Recommended for all libraries.
-- Samuel T. Huang Library Journal
-- Samuel T. Huang Library Journal
Teaching in America not only poses many questions about the state of education in the next generation--How will teachers think about themselves and their profession? Will teachers be able to meet the nation's changing educational goals? How will a new generation of creative, talented people be drawn into the field of education?--but also provides the information and inspiration needed in the search for answers to those questions.
-- Zolton Bédy Syracuse Record
-- Zolton Bédy Syracuse Record
Gerald Grant and Christine Murray have written a classic study of teaching. In powerful, often lyrical profiles they take the reader up close to the everyday experiences of teachers, the professional and ethical decisions they make, the satisfactions and challenges they find in their work. They also step back to see the profession in historical perspective and project alternative futures. The book cuts through the cant and hype that pervade much talk of educational reform while it offers hope for a 'slow revolution.'
-- David Tyack, co-author with Larry Cuban of Tinkering Toward Utopia: A Century of Public School Reform
-- David Tyack, co-author with Larry Cuban of Tinkering Toward Utopia: A Century of Public School Reform
In this admirably inclusive history of the marvels and malaise of our public school system, a portrait emerges of its unsung heroes. For all the broad sweep of reform movements and power struggles at the top, Grant and Murray are most intrigued and inspired by the dreams and disappointments of those individual schoolteachers who dared to challenge the hierarchy and follow their own visions toward a more exciting classroom life for themselves and their students. It is this quest for self direction that may define the next century of teaching in America. If the authors' radical notion is valid, that the art of teaching is the same whether practiced in grad school or the university, then we as a nation must decide: How is the dignity of the teacher-child relationship to be enhanced and valued? Teaching in America helps us gain the necessary perspective with which to debate these and other urgent issues concerning the future of our schools.
-- Vivian Gussin Paley, author of The Girl with the Brown Crayon (Harvard)
-- Vivian Gussin Paley, author of The Girl with the Brown Crayon (Harvard)
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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1. Two Professions?
1 -
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2. Assessing America’s Teachers and Schools
10 -
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3. The Essential Acts of Teaching
31 -
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4. Three Questions Every Teacher Must Answer
57 -
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5 The Modern Origins of the Profession: Florence’s Story, 1890–1920
76 -
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6. Reforming Teaching in the Midst of Social Crisis: Andrena’s Story, 1960–1990
103 -
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7. Teachers’ Struggle to Take Charge of Their Practice: The Rochester Story, 1987–1997
141 -
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8. The Progress of the Slow Revolution throughout the Nation
182 -
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9. Teaching in 2020
213 -
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Research Methods
239 -
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Notes
243 -
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Acknowledgments
269 -
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Index
271
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
July 1, 2009
eBook ISBN:
9780674037892
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
288
eBook ISBN:
9780674037892
Audience(s) for this book
General/trade;