While I am engaged in reading about various remarkable teachers, I often come across terms that describe schools I have never heard of before. Such was the case when I came across the term "normal school."
I learned that a normal school is an institution which provided training
for high school graduates who wished to become teachers. Today, these institutions are typically called "teachers' colleges." The normal school offered courses in subjects that teachers would be expected to teach to their students,
and also instruction on how to organize and present lessons. The term derived from the intention of establishing teaching standards or norms.
The first public normal school in the United States was founded in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1839, pictured above. It operates today as Framingham State University.
Tuesday, July 2, 2013
Monday, July 1, 2013
Industrial Schools: A Way to Provide For and Educate Needy Children
Many times while I am reading biographies about remarkable teachers I come across a description of a type of school that I am unfamiliar with. I enjoy learning about various types of schools and I am eager to share my new knowledge with you. One school I have been learning about is the industrial school, an institution commonly established around the turn of the twentieth century, but not unheard of today.
An industrial school is a boarding school that provided
for the children’s basic needs for housing, food, and medical care. Often these schools were established to provide a means for caring for children who had been orphaned, neglected, or abandoned, and sometimes for those youngsters who were deemed incorrigible. Today, these children are typically cared for through adoption or placement in foster homes, and they are educated in regular public schools, but in the past century, industrial schools served a valuable service for these needy kids.
In the industrial school, students
were taught vocational skills that would allow them to seek gainful
employment once they came of age. Girls typically received training in the domestic arts or needle
trades, and boys were taught vocational skills such as carpentry, shoe-making,
or box-making. In addition, the young people were taught fundamental literacy
skills in such subjects as reading, writing, and mathematics.
You can read more about various industrial schools in my book, Chalkboard Champions, available from amazon.
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Suffrage Schools: Where Chalkboard Champions Influenced A Political Movement
When I read about remarkable teachers, I often come across terms that describe varieties of schools I have never heard of before. One such example is the term "suffrage schools." These schools were first developed by suffragette Carrie Chapman Catt, a trained teacher, in 1917, for the purpose of training women volunteers to become politically effective in their efforts to win the vote for women.
The curriculum of a suffrage school included such topics as public speaking, the organization of the U.S. government, the history of the suffrage movement, how to develop a good relationship with the press, and how to use the press for influencing the electorate. Eventually the lessons taught in these schools paid off, for women won the right to vote with the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1919.
You can read more about suffrage schools in my upcoming book, tentatively titled Chalkboard Heroes.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Henrietta Szold: The Chalkboard Champion Who Saved 22,000 Jewish Children from Nazi Concentration Camps
Henrietta Szold was born on December 21, 1860, in Baltimore Maryland, the eldest of eight daughters born to her father, a respected rabbi. She graduated from Western Female High School in 1877, and then taught school for fifteen years at Miss Adam's School and Oheb Shalom Religious School. She also established the first American school in Baltimore to provide English language classes and vocational education courses to Russian Jewish immigrants.
Henrietta is probably best known, however for founding the international volunteer organization known as Hadassah. This organization sponsored Youth Aliyah, a program designed to rescue Jewish children from Nazi Germany, and, later, from all over Europe. This organization was able to save an estimated 22,000 children from World War II death camps.
Inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 2007, Henrietta Szold is truly a chalkboard champion. You can read more about this remarkable teacher in my upcoming book, tentatively entitled Chalkboard Heroes.
Henrietta is probably best known, however for founding the international volunteer organization known as Hadassah. This organization sponsored Youth Aliyah, a program designed to rescue Jewish children from Nazi Germany, and, later, from all over Europe. This organization was able to save an estimated 22,000 children from World War II death camps.
Inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 2007, Henrietta Szold is truly a chalkboard champion. You can read more about this remarkable teacher in my upcoming book, tentatively entitled Chalkboard Heroes.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Actor Tony Danza: The Unexpected Chalkboard Champion
It seems to me that in every teacher's career, there comes a desperate moment in which we just want to be understood. We fervently wish that the public, the parents, and the media comprehended just how dedicated we are to our students, and just how hard we work on their behalf, and just how tough the job is. Tony Danza goes a long way to build this understanding in his 2012 book I'd Like to Apologize to Every Teacher I Ever Had: My Year as a Rookie Teacher at Northeast High.
Having already earned his degree in history and his teaching credential, Danza accepted a position as a first-year teacher in an inner-city school in Philadelphia, partly because he had always wanted to teach and decided now would be a good time in his career to explore that option, and partly because the experiment could be turned into a reality show that, Danza hoped, could accomplish some genuine good by turning an empathetic spotlight on our nation's over-worked, over-criticized, and under-paid teachers.
Throughout the book, Danza provides an insider's perspective on many of the topics that dominate political discussion in the media and professional conversation in the teachers' lounge, including such topics as funding cuts, high-stakes testing, high absenteeism, student apathy, and lack of parental involvement. It's amazing how he hit the nail on the head with every chapter.
I loved this book, and how Danza eloquently voiced the frustrations of practically every teacher in America. Most importantly, I loved how much his genuine affection and respect for his students, and his strong commitment to do right by them, shines through the frustrations. It's an inspirational book I recommend you read before going back to the classroom in the Fall. You can find it on amazon at I'd Like to Apologize to Every Teacher I Ever Had.
Monday, June 24, 2013
Chalkboard Champion Maria Montessori: She Worked with Special Needs Children
Almost everyone in the field of education has heard of Maria Montessori (1870-1952), the Italian educator and physician who was especially interested in working with children with developmental and intellectual disabilities. Throughout her long career, she was an advocate for disabled children and for women's rights. Her innovative methods of child-centered instruction, which include freedom of choice, self-motivation, and student autonomy, have proven surprisingly effective for many students of all ability levels. Today, her progressive instructional methods are reproduced in over 22,000 schools in 110 countries around the world in institutions are known as Montessori schools. Maria Montessori is truly an international chalkboard champion.
Sunday, June 23, 2013
Mary Catherine Swanson: The Chalkboard Champion who Originated AVID
Many educators around the country are very familiar with AVID, a program designed to show minority and other under-represented students how they can succeed in a college environment. The acronym, which stands for Advancement Via Individual Determination, truly measures up to its hype.
The program was originated in 1980 by chalkboard champion Mary Catherine Swanson, who was an English teacher at Clairemont High School in San Diego, Southern California. At the time, her school, which had a predominately white student population, was preparing a slate of remedial courses to serve an influx of minority students in response to court-ordered integration. But Swanson insisted that with appropriate academic tools and support, minority and other under-represented students could thrive in a rigorous academic atmosphere, and she set about establishing a program that would prove her point. The AVID program she developed offers strategies for note-taking and test-taking, peer mentoring, tutoring, and cultural field trips. Her efforts have positively affected the lives of over 400,000 students since the program's inauguration.
Since 1980, statistics have shown the overwhelming success of the program. Those statistics show that of those students enrolled in AVID, 95% go on to enroll in a four-year college, and 85% of them graduate. The program is so highly successful that it has been instituted in 4,500 high schools in 45 states and 16 countries around the world.
Mary Catherine Swanson, who refused to dummy-down a rigorous academic program and insisted her students were capable, is truly a chalkboard champion.
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