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October 22, 2013An Industry of Mediocrity ""Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach. And those who can't teach, teach teaching."Bill Keller, via a kind Peter Gascoyne email: WHOEVER coined that caustic aphorism should have been in a Harlem classroom last week where Bill Jackson was demonstrating an exception to the rule. Jackson, a 31-year classroom veteran, was teaching the mathematics of ratios to a group of inner-city seventh graders while 15 young teachers watched attentively. Starting with a recipe for steak sauce -- three parts ketchup to two parts Worcestershire sauce -- Jackson patiently coaxed his kids toward little math epiphanies, never dictating answers, leaving long silences for the children to fill. "Denzel, do you agree with Katelyn's solution?" the teacher asked. And: "Can you explain to your friend why you think Kevin is right?" He rarely called on the first hand up, because that would let the other students off the hook. Sometimes the student summoned to the whiteboard was the kid who had gotten the wrong answer: the class pitched in to help her correct it, then gave her a round of applause.Related: Teacher prep ratings. Posted by Jim Zellmer at October 22, 2013 3:51 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
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