Failure before Success : Teachers Describe What They Learned from Mistakes

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Failure before Success : Teachers Describe What They Learned from Mistakes

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 132 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781475857481
  • DDC分類 371.102

Full Description

Even the best, most accomplished teachers make (sometimes big) mistakes. But as the experts and authority figures in their classrooms, teachers face myriad pressures to have all the answers and, in some cases, to work miracles. This book brings together first-hand stories from classrooms across the globe of hard-won lessons stemming from teachers' mistakes and failures both small and colossal to show how becoming expert actually necessitates failure. It's through their mistakes that the most successful people arrive at greatness.

Failure Before Success brings together accounts from everyone from a world-renowned Finnish education scholar and global policy advisor to distinguished professors of education to veteran teachers with decades of experience working in the complex field of teaching. While there are silver bullet books for teachers on the market, none match the comfort Failure Before Success offers by telling the stories of how some of the most accomplished in the field got it wrong and turned their mistakes into their greatest lessons on teaching excellence.

Contents

Foreword: David Reinking

Acknowledgements

Introduction

PART I: DIVERSITY, EQUITY, AND INCLUSION

Chapter 1: Learning to Become Culturally Responsive: Teaching on an Indian Reservation

Anna Baldwin

Chapter 2: Recognizing (Neuro)Diverse Perspectives in the English Language Arts Classroom

Christopher Bass

Chapter 3: Manuel's T-shirt: Learning a Hard Lesson about Student Poverty

Kip Téllez

Chapter 4: Semantic Snafu: How I Learned to Choose My Words Carefully

Chris Anson

PART II: REFRAMING ASSUMPTIONS

Chapter 5: Grading and Gate-Keeping

Andy Boyle

Chapter 6: On Teaching and Toolsheds: Role Reversal on the Construction Site

Mike Land

Chapter 7: Assumptions and Acceptance in Rural Pennsylvania

Sarah Cheatle

Chapter 8: Discomfort Zone: Overcoming Ethnocentricity and Implicit Biases in Teaching

Lisa Power

PART III: FOSTERING RELATIONSHIPS AND ADVOCATING FOR STUDENTS

Chapter 9: Be a Voice for the Voiceless

Beth Jarzabek

Chapter 10: Learning to Fly: Why Developing Student Voice Matters

Jane Saunders

Chapter 11: Learning from Nuts and Bolts: Listening to Yourself and Your Learners

Katherine Baker

Chapter 12: Safe Havens, Love, and Connection: Learning to Co-Teach Effectively

Darius Montez Phelps

Chapter 13: There Is No Ethos: How I Learned to Overcome Entitlement and Gain Student Trust

Mark DiMauro

PART IV: CREATING RESPONSIVE ENVIRONMENTS FOR STUDENT LEARNING

Chapter 14: Trigger Warnings

Alaina Smith

Chapter 15: Dealing with Math Anxiety

Bobson Wong

Chapter 16: Interrupting Binary Thinking in a Trauma-Informed Elementary Classroom

Kate Haq

Chapter 17: Learning to Overcome Dysfunctional Independence

Pete Warner

PART V - PEDAGOGY AND INSTRUCTIONAL DECISIONS

Chapter 18: Missteps in Middle School English: Moving Beyond Classroom Management and Content Mastery

Troy Hicks

Chapter 19: The Power of the Mistake: Missteps and Instructional Decisions in Teaching Mathematics

Beth Kobett

Chapter 20: Beyond Finding and Fixing Error: Responding to Student Work

Sara Heaser

Chapter 21: Lesson Plans Would Be So Easy If It Weren't For the Students

Debbie Silver

Chapter 22: The Limits of Teacher Preparation: Learning to Make Pedagogy Actionable

Pasi Sahlberg

Discussion Questions for Readers

About the Editor

About the Contributors