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36 Children

36 Children

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: All teachers and teachers to be need this book!
Review: Many time teachers don't see success in the class room but somewhere deep down know they are making a difference. It's when the years past and we forget the difference that we have made in lives of many.

Be challenged to teach out of your comfort zone. Allow your sweet spirit to be given to kids who fall asleep in class because the gun shots at four am woke them up and are afraid to go back to sleep.

Be reminded to learn from your students and allow students to teach you.

Wherever you are, make your class room a safe place to share, learn and grow.

One more thing; don't rely on records from the previous year tell you what kind of class you'll have in the fall, set high yet real expectations for your students. Your students will act as you you expect them too.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good case study on difficulties of teaching poor city kids
Review: The book "36 Children" is intersting to compare to Jonathan Kozol's more famous book "Death at an early age", written at about the same time, in the 1960s. I would say that Kozol had a better experience than Kohl, and he was a better teacher. But Kohl's book is valuable because it is brutally honest about the selfish motivations of the average teacher, as well as the difficulties, stereotypes and misunderstandings that get in the way of good teaching.

Another difference between Kohl and Kozol is that Kozol had one class of children to teach, while Kohl was teaching children who were 1 or 2 years older and split into separate classes. It makes me wonder if it is easier to teach kids in a single class rather then divide them up into periods so that the teachers keep changing.

Other books to recommend in this genre are "Savage Inequalities" by Jonathan Kozol, "Children of crisis" by Robert Coles, and "Ghetto schooling" by Jean Anyon.


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