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Possible Lives: The Promise of Public Education in America
Possible Lives The Promise of Public Education in America
Author: Mike Rose
In evocative prose and telling anecdotes, the author of Lives on the Boundary recreates the classrooms he visited in a four-year journey through America's public schools. Rose shows readers how teachers work, how children learn, and what schools do for their neighborhoods. In the process, he offers new hope that by bringing out the best in publi...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781439508343
ISBN-10: 1439508348
Publication Date: 6/26/2008
Pages: 454
Edition: Reprint
Rating:
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Book Type: Library Binding
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover
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reviewed Possible Lives: The Promise of Public Education in America on + 2 more book reviews
A spirited, optimistic showcase of the potential of our public schools, gleaned from a wide array of American classrooms. For four years Rose (Lives on the Boundary, 1989), director of the UCLA Writing Program, visited classrooms from rural Montana to New York City. At a time when faith in public education is at its nadir, Rose finds redeeming attributes in America's greatest democratic experiment. The book's findings are a testament to the resilience, boldness, and inventiveness of our nation's educators. Whether on Chicago's South Side or in Kentucky's coal country, those teachers who are in the forefront of meaningful education share a deep respect for their students (both as individuals and as members of distinct communities and cultures) and a determination not to be bound by the bureaucracy of traditional pedagogy, which departmentalizes knowledge and divides students by age rather than ability. Elena Castro, for example, a teacher in the southern border town of Calexico, integrates language arts with science, enabling students to study in more interesting contexts. In the course of a school day, her elementary school students shift from one work station to another: They might edit a story on the computer at the Publishing Station or work on mathematics with the assistance of audiotapes at the Listening Station. Students are free to follow their interests and assume responsibility for mastering their studies. Castro responds to a problem student by asking herself, "What can I do that will work for this child?" The featured educators integrate the distinct histories of their students along with day-to-day realities into a curriculum that respects all cultures. In the author's analysis, these teachers also tend to communicate more successfully with their colleagues and with the parents of their students - interaction deemed an integral part of the educational process. With these creative models, Rose skillfully restores hope to public education.

Mike Rose travels across the US to many cities and rural areas to find classrooms that are working. He describes teachers who are effective and duly inspiring. Rose is an effective writer since he describes classroom scenes in terrific detail. This is a must read for future educators, current educators, and everyone concerned with what's happening in American education. It is uplifting and truly inspiring.
reviewed Possible Lives: The Promise of Public Education in America on + 87 more book reviews
Terrific must-have for teachers or teachers-to-be. In-depth look at classrooms across America, especially of those with enthusiastic, imaginative teachers.