Everyone talks about our schools. Newspaper editorials worry about slipping educational standards. Business complains about poor training for the work force. Television programs talk about violence in school halls. Educational reports study problems and issue strategic documents. Parents attend parent-teacher interviews twice a year. Yet nobody except for the teachers and the kids seems to know what really goes on there. Ken Dryden decided to find out. From September 1993 until June 1994, he attended a high school, folding his 6'4" frame as inconspicuously as possible into a seat at the back of the room, moving from class to class when the bell rang. He watched, while everyone got used to his presence, and he took notes. The result is a documentary about the life of a typical Canadian school in this case a Mississauga, Ontario, high school with a wide range of students drawn from sixty countries. We follow a number of these students, getting to know a dozen of them well, and we follow half a dozen teachers, including the principal. We see the ups and downs in the students' academic lives, and like the teachers we understand much more when the parents come for interviews. We come to care for all of them and understand better a system that can only punish kids who skip class by suspending them, and that can't fire bad teachers. We are taken inside the teachers' world, too. We follow them as they prepare for class, watch them teach, sympathize when they lose their temper at someone who strolls in fifteen minutes late, or when they have to give a student who really tried hard a mark of zero. The book clearly demonstrates that our schools are different than we think, and prone to suffer from the world's problems and complications. Homework stands no chance set against the fast money of an evening job. But, as always, teachers do well teaching kids like them who want to learn and not so well with the average kids, the ones beyond the front row. In this intimate look at the way a school really works, Ken Dryden tackles what he sees as the education debate's retreat to a safe, unthinking and ultimately useless black and white ground of issues and policies at the expense of people. Ultimately he discovers that good teachers teach people and not just subjects. As gripping as a fine novel, In School is an exciting achievement a thought-provoking look at our schools and our society, and at how we can make them better.
It's not surprizing that one of the Canada's leading professional hockey goaltenders would have a sharp eye and a keen mind. Both are necessary to successfully transform a year of in-class observation and reflection into a meaningful book. Dryden does not hit the reader powerfully, but with subtlety. He describes high school classroom situations from the point of view of a member of the class, and then lets the reader peer into the minds of the teachers and administrators as they ponder those same events. I like the book because it has helped me in my profession as a teacher to reflect on my own teaching situation, and to more fully grasp the often forgotten realities of today's students."In School" is a reflective work for teachers, parents and administrators to digest slowly. It should help them sink their roots of understanding a little deeper into the complex issues of the modern classroom, and perhaps pave some middle ground between polarized stakeholders in the educational field.
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