Archive for the ‘Inspirational Teachers’ Category

#StandByRafe

June 20, 2015

rafe-suspended

It’s time to send the message to those responsible for suspending the greatest teacher working today to offer their own resignations and install the great Rafe Esquith. To suspend him for any more time is to further damage the reputation of a leading teacher and a mentor to myself and many others.

I have read all of Rafe’s books and have used some of his strategies and ideas to wonderful effect in my own classroom. I am deeply upset that his students have been deprived of his vision, energy and creativity since March and that his Shakespeare show has had to be cancelled this year.

And all for what? A passage from the great Huckleberry Finn!

 

Without providing more details about the allegations against a nationally recognized teacher, the leader of Los Angeles Unified said the district will not rush an investigation into why the instructor was removed from the classroom simply because of his popularity.

Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said the probe into allegations of misconduct against longtime Hobart Boulevard Elementary School teacher Rafe Esquith is “very complex” and must be handled carefully.

He added, “The Los Angeles Unified School District will not be rushed to make a decision and will complete our investigation with the highest level of integrity. The safety and security of every district student will remain our number one priority.”

Esquith’s attorney, Mark Geragos, said earlier this week that the district had 10 days to issue a public apology and return the award-winning teacher to the classroom or he would sue the system.

Parents and former students also are demanding more information about the investigation into Esquith, who has written several books on teaching and received multiple awards for his work. His attorneys said he was pulled from the classroom after a complaint about a Mark Twain passage that he read in class.

On Friday, Ben Meiselas, an attorney who works with Geragos, said, “We now welcome Supt. Cortines as a defendant to our lawsuit if he does not issue an apology during the time frame we provided.”

That 10-day period ends June 26, he said.

“Supt. Cortines’ statement sadly and shockingly confirms what we have said since day one,” Meiselas said. “This is a fishing expedition of the worst kind by bureaucrats who don’t know a thing about the classroom. Apparently, after the ‘initial’ investigation was found to be meritless, LAUSD has taken it upon itself to manufacture new ways to attempt to defame Mr. Esquith.”

Esquith was removed from his classroom in March and is now home waiting for the results of the district’s investigation, which is expected to be completed before school starts in August.

Geragos said the district has not clearly outlined the allegations against the popular teacher, but he learned that the investigation stemmed from a complaint by another teacher after Esquith read to a class a passage from “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” by Mark Twain.

The passage, which is much longer, includes this section: “The duke and the king worked hard all day, setting up a stage and curtain and row of candles for footlights. … At last, when he’d built up everyone’s expectations high enough, he rolled up the curtain. The next minute the king came prancing out on all fours, naked. He was painted in rings and stripes all over in all sorts of colors and looked as splendid as a rainbow.”

On Friday, Esquith’s attorneys offered more context about a joke that Esquith made following the reading of the literary passage.

Meiselas said Esquith, who puts on an annual Shakespearean play, joked with students that if he could not raise enough funding, the class would have to perform naked like the king in the book. Meiselas said he learned about the joke Friday after asking Esquith for more details about his use of the passage.

Esquith’s nonprofit, the Hobart Shakespeareans, cancelled 12 performances of “The Winter’s Tale,” which were set to begin April 23.

District officials this month also required Esquith to cancel a trip with students to attend the Shakespearean Theatrical Festival in Oregon.

In a letter to Esquith, officials said the trip had not been authorized or sponsored by the district “as evidenced by the lack of authorization via the proper channels for field trip authorization.”

Esquith, who wrote three books, including “Teach Like Your Hair’s on Fire: the Methods and Madness inside Room 56,” has received national recognition for his teaching abilities. He also has criticized what he considers to be too much testing and scripted teaching methods. 

 

If Mother Teresa was a public school teacher in America, she would have been suspended too!

 

Click on the link to read The Teacher I Most Look Up To, Removed from the Classroom

Click on the link to read This is the Way a Teacher Should Retire (Video)

Click on the link to read Inspiring Act by Professor Goes Viral

Click on the link to read Is There Anything More Important Than ‘Knowing’ Your Students?

 

The Teacher I Most Look Up To, Removed from the Classroom

June 16, 2015

 

 

I can’t believe that my mentor Rafe Esquith who has written some of the best books about teaching, has been suspended from doing what he loves so dearly.

 

A popular teacher who’s been nationally praised for his work has been removed from the classroom at a Koreatown elementary school.

Only on CBS2/KCAL9, Rafe Esquith’s attorney fired back Monday at Los Angeles Unified School District officials, saying the allegations are ruining a great man’s reputation for no reason.

Esquith, then a fifth-grade teacher at Hobart Elementary, spoke with us about his unique and inspiring teaching methods in the classroom back in 2004.

There are dozens of articles and videos about the LAUSD employee who started the Hobart Shakespeareans Foundation, which raises money for classroom materials and field trips.

That’s why Esquith’s neighbor, Steve Montgomery, was just as surprised to learn he was removed from the classroom several months ago during an investigation by the school district.

“He is a very dedicated teacher,” Montgomery said.

No one answered the door at Esquith’s home, but a woman picked up the phone when CBS2/KCAL9’s Jasmine Viel called. The woman said Esquith is OK and agreed he’s a great teacher.

A district spokesperson said Esquith is still on the payroll but would not say what led to the investigation.

Esquith has hired famed attorney Mark Geragos.

Geragos tells us it was a complaint from another teacher concerning a quote Esquith used from Mark Twain that started it all.

Geragos issued the following statement regarding the matter: “The State of California has thoroughly investigated and cleared Rafe, who is a nationally recognized and award-winning teacher. If LAUSD does not immediately reinstate Rafe and issue a public apology, we will file immediate legal action.”

 

 

Click on the link to read This is the Way a Teacher Should Retire (Video)

Click on the link to read Inspiring Act by Professor Goes Viral

Click on the link to read Is There Anything More Important Than ‘Knowing’ Your Students?

Click on the link to read Could this be the Most Inspiring Teacher Working Today?

This is the Way a Teacher Should Retire (Video)

May 31, 2015

 

What a great way for this teacher to say goodbye to teaching! Not bad for a 60-year-old!

 

 

Click on the link to read Inspiring Act by Professor Goes Viral

Click on the link to read Is There Anything More Important Than ‘Knowing’ Your Students?

Click on the link to read Could this be the Most Inspiring Teacher Working Today?

Click on the link to read There Are Some Teachers That Just Love What They Do

Inspiring Act by Professor Goes Viral

May 18, 2015

professor-engelberg

 

One of my university professors did the very same thing, and I count it as one one of the most inspiring things I encountered at Uni:

 

With one simple gesture, Hebrew University Professor Sydney Engelberg became an champion for parents pursuing higher education.

On May 11, Engelberg’s daughter Sarit Fishbaine shared a photo on Facebook that shows her father holding a baby while conducting a lecture. She explains in the caption that during her father’s organizational behavior class, a student’s baby began to cry, and when the mother got up to leave, Engelberg didn’t hesitate to take the infant into his arms and soothe it. He then “continued the class as if nothing had happened,” she wrote.

 

Click on the link to read Is There Anything More Important Than ‘Knowing’ Your Students?

Click on the link to read Could this be the Most Inspiring Teacher Working Today?

Click on the link to read There Are Some Teachers That Just Love What They Do

Click on the link to read We Would Take a Bullet for Our Students

Is There Anything More Important Than ‘Knowing’ Your Students?

April 18, 2015

#wishmyteacherknew

For me, knowing my students is an absolutely essential part of what I do. Without that knowledge, I can’t properly plan, teach, motivate or resolve situations. I am so pleased that thanks to one teacher’s experiment, the notion of trying to understand ones students has caught on:

 

A Colorado teacher who posted notes from her grade 3 class online and started a social media whirlwind under the hashtag #IWishMyTeacherKnew said on Friday the assignment had been a revelation for her.

Kyle Schwartz, 26, asked the eight and nine-year-olds at her Denver inner city school to write down something they wished she knew about them, partly as a writing exercise, and partly as a way for her to learn about her pupils.

Responses included “I don’t have pencils at home to do my homework”, and “I want to go to college”, to one tear-jerker from a girl who said she had no friends to play with at recess.

When the teacher shared photographs of some of the notes on Twitter, similar messages and pictures came pouring in from other schools worldwide.

Ms Schwartz, a self-described suburban girl who has taught at south-west Denver’s Doull Elementary for three years, said she has conducted the exercise each year, in part because she wanted to underline the issue of poverty in US inner cities.

About 90 per cent of Doull’s 532 students are Hispanic, and 46 per cent are classed as English-language learners.

Ms Schwartz said one message that garnered a lot of sympathy online, from a girl who said she missed her father after he was deported to Mexico several years ago, was particularly revealing.

“That student comes to school each day with a smile on her face,” the teacher said, adding that she would not have known what the girl was going through if not for the handwritten note.

She said the pupils were told they could write anonymously if they wished, but that most were happy to add their names and to share their messages with classmates.

One widely commented upon note was from a girl who said she had no friends to play with during break time.

Ms Schwartz said that message had been “heartbreaking”, but that she was gladdened to see how the other pupils rallied to support the child who wrote it.

“The next day at recess, all the girls huddled around her and played tag,” Ms Schwartz said.

“A lot of what we’re teaching is how to be a good friend. My students’ emotional needs are just as important as their academic needs.”

 

 

Click on the link to read Could this be the Most Inspiring Teacher Working Today?

Click on the link to read There Are Some Teachers That Just Love What They Do

Click on the link to read We Would Take a Bullet for Our Students

Click on the link to read Teachers Don’t Get Any Better Than This!

Could this be the Most Inspiring Teacher Working Today?

March 30, 2015

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8veT5QspylE

 

No teacher’s personal journey and story has inspired me as much as the great Brad Cohen. Brad, who suffers from Tourette Syndrome, didn’t let his condition get in the way of his dream on becoming a classroom teacher. Above is the very faithful movie version of his life. I urge you to watch this and recommend it to others.

 

 

Click on the link to read There Are Some Teachers That Just Love What They Do

Click on the link to read We Would Take a Bullet for Our Students

Click on the link to read Teachers Don’t Get Any Better Than This!

Click on the link to read The Remarkable Way A Teacher Brought a School Together (Video)

There Are Some Teachers That Just Love What They Do

March 23, 2015

 

Whilst there are more than enough teachers in the system that have all but lost their enjoyment for teaching, their are still many of us out there that love every second of what we do. And then there are some that show their love for what they do by going the extra mile.

 

Click on the link to read We Would Take a Bullet for Our Students

Click on the link to read Teachers Don’t Get Any Better Than This!

Click on the link to read The Remarkable Way A Teacher Brought a School Together (Video)

Click on the link to read Teachers Know How to be Generous

Click on the link to read I Just Love it When a Teacher Gets It

We Would Take a Bullet for Our Students

February 22, 2015

teacher-donates-kidney

So many of us would do everything possible to ensure the safety and wellbeing of our students. Whilst it doesn’t surprise me that a teacher is donating her kidney to save one of her students, one must properly understand that teachers are unlike so many other professionals. So many of us were drawn to teaching for no other reason but for the altruistic purpose of changing the world. Ms. Painter should be commended for her courage and dedication and for reminding our critics what sets teachers apart from many other professionals:

 

AN AMERICAN first grade teacher will be saving one of her students lives when she donated her kidney to the six-year-old in a month.

The teacher, Lindsey Painter, has only been at the school since last winter, where she met little Matthew Parker and learned of his condition.

“He does dialysis three days a week; it’s in San Antonio and we do live here in New Braunfels. He travels three days a week and it’s a full day, so he only goes to school twice a week,” Matthew’s mum, Lisa Parker, explained to Fox 4 Kansas City.

Matthew’s kidneys began to fail when he was just three weeks old, which required him to receive a kidney transplant. This will be the second transplant he will have had to have had in only his six year life.

Nearly 100 people were tested to see if they could be a match for Matthew, with his teacher eager to help from the very beginning.

“I knew right away that I needed to find out if I could help Matthew.

“So many people came forward trying to help him and I’m the one that gets to do it. I mean I feel very lucky,” she said.

The surgery is scheduled for mid March and if all goes well, Matthew will go back to a normal life in just a few months.

 

Click on the link to read Teachers Don’t Get Any Better Than This!

Click on the link to read The Remarkable Way A Teacher Brought a School Together (Video)

Click on the link to read Teachers Know How to be Generous

Click on the link to read I Just Love it When a Teacher Gets It

Click on the link to read The Teacher as Superhero

Teachers Don’t Get Any Better Than This!

January 29, 2015

rafe-esquith

If I had to nominate the teacher I look up to the most, it wouldn’t take me very long to answer. Rafe Esquith is the mentor I have spent countless hours with, yet never had the pleasure to meet. I have devoured all his books and tinkered with my style to accord with his advice. I hope you enjoy this speech as much as I did. I recommend, if you haven’t already, that you search for a teacher who can take your own teaching to a whole new level like the great Mr. Esquith has done for me.

 

 

Click on the link to read The Remarkable Way A Teacher Brought a School Together (Video)

Click on the link to read Teachers Know How to be Generous

Click on the link to read I Just Love it When a Teacher Gets It

Click on the link to read The Teacher as Superhero

Click on the link to read I Wish All Principals Could Be Like This

The Remarkable Way A Teacher Brought a School Together (Video)

January 27, 2015

 

I love this video. It is not just about changing the common perception of school as a dreary, cold place, but a way of uniting a student population for a common purpose.

 

school-dance-party

 

Click on the link to read Teachers Know How to be Generous

Click on the link to read I Just Love it When a Teacher Gets It

Click on the link to read The Teacher as Superhero

Click on the link to read I Wish All Principals Could Be Like This

Click on the link to read The 6 Most Inspiring Teachers of 2013