Read The Great Expectations School Online
Authors: Dan Brown
PRAISE FOR DAN BROWN'S
THE GREAT EXPECTATIONS SCHOOL
“With introspection and good humor, Brown tells a lively and often appalling storyâ¦a vivid depiction of just how hard first-year teaching and its implicit lesson that urban schools urgently need to attract and retain more thoughtful and dedicated people such as Brown.”
â
The Washington Post Book World
“[Brown is] an appealing and sympathetic figure with a seemingly genuine talent for teaching⦠yet he finds himself in charge of a class that is always on the verge of chaos⦔
â
The New York Times
“I loved reading this book. Dan Brown has not only the teaching gene, but the writing gene. His account of a year in a tough classroom is one of the best that I have read.”
âDiane Ravitch, author of
The Death and Life of the Great American School System
“A lively and searchingly intelligent work on urban education which is also a vivid and compelling story of the highest possible political significance at this moment in our history. Parents and teachers alike will be grateful to Dan for his disarming honesty.”
âJonathan Kozol
“Brown's persistence⦠earned him a range of experiences that allowed him to become a clear-eyed and trustworthy guide to the inescapable everyday social problems with which so many public school children live. If we want to ameliorate some of these problems we need to know what we're dealing with and acknowledge the impact of poverty on students. We also need to try to keep bright young people like Brown teaching in our public schools.”
â
Chicago Tribune
“[
The Great Expectations School
] is not only a great read, it's a vivid portrait of the teacher retention challenge⦠Each student in Dan's class becomes someone the reader cares aboutâthey all deserve the finest teachers and those teachers deserve a system that supports them⦔
âSusan Fuhrman, President, Teachers College, Columbia University
“Among the many first-year teaching accounts, it's one of the best. [Brown's] students sparkle with life, and his tales from the classroom shimmer with real-life stress and inspiration.”
â
NEA Today
“In [Mr. Brown's] book, we see that good teachers are the linchpin to solid reform.”
â
Newsweek
“Brown chronicles his first year teaching with heart, humor, and disarming candor.”
â
Scholastic Instructor
“My favorite first-year teacher memoir.”
âRoxanna Elden, author of
See Me After Class
“Mr. Brown has written a compelling and engaging story full of the joys, sorrows, absurdities, terrors, and treasures of becoming a teacher.”
âon Snyder, Dean, Graduate School, Bank Street College of Education
“Powerful and moving⦠Dan Brown has a story that we need to hearâand respond to.”
âDeborah Meier, author of
The Power of Their Ideas
and
In Schools We Trust
“Mr. Brown's a hell of writer in his own right, and he's just published a wallopingly good book -- his first, which is difficult to believe.”
â
The Jewish Exponent
“A compelling, scary, funny, touching look at urban education in the US.”
â
Christian Science Monitor
“Touchingly, Brown's dedication and imagination helped save those kidsâand himself.”
â
The Sacramento Bee
“Dan Brown's heartfelt account of the thrills and frustrations of a first-year teacher grips like a novel. A must-read for anyone who has dreamed of a job that makes a difference.”
âAnya Kamenetz, author of
DIY U
and
Generation Debt
“A riveting human drama full of heroes and villains, humor and tragedy. Brown is an exciting new talent and his writing is so clear and suspenseful that the pages turn themselves. I couldn't put this book down.”
âClara Bingham, co-author of
Class Action: The Story of Lois Jenson and the Landmark Case That Changed Sexual Harassment Law
“A compelling and illuminating journey through the American public education system⦠Brown's highlights the personal success-storiesâthe dedicated teachers, the kids overcoming massive oddsâhe encountered on the way. One finishes reading
The Great Expectations School
wishing those in charge of public education in this country spent less time administering overvalued standardized tests on students, and more on inspiring those students to truly learn. A good way to start would be listening to teachers like Dan Brown and some of his colleagues.”
âScott Anderson, author of
Moonlight Hotel
and
The Man Who Tried to Save the World
“A powerful, heart-breaking story that challenges our image of inner city schools and the children who populate them. Important and moving,
The Great Expectations School
grabs your attention from the first page and refuses to let go.”
âGilbert M. Gaul, two-time Pulitzer Prize winning journalist
“
The Great Expectations School
splashes some ice-cold reality on usual policy pabulum that comes from inside-the-Beltway.”
âBarnett Berry, co-author of
Teaching 2030
and President, Center for Teaching Quality
“A poignant portrait painted with skill⦠Read it and weepâand wonder no more about the human dimensions of the achievement gap.”
âGene I. Maeroff, author of
Building Blocks: Making
Children Successful in the Early Years of School
THE GREAT
EXPECTATIONS
SCHOOL
Â
THE GREAT
EXPECTATIONS
SCHOOL
Â
A Rookie Year
in the New
Blackboard
Jungle
DAN BROWN
Foreword by
RANDI WEINGARTEN
President of the American Federation of teachers
Copyright © 2007, 2011 by Dan Brown
All Rights Reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews or articles. All inquiries should be addressed to Arcade Publishing, 307 West 36th Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10018.
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10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available on file.
ISBN: 978-1-61145-033-0
Printed in the United States of America
For my Mother, Sonandia, and Colleen
My rescuers, in the order that I met them
June/July
From the Floor to the Moon
August
What Do You Want Us to Do?
October
Motivation into Submission
March
Mr. Brown Can Moo
May
Nothing Cannes Stop You Now
This book shares the journey of a teacher and the life of a classroom: an intersection of youth and experience, energy and discipline, empowerment and failure. As the drafts developed, and I circulated my work to teachers from a broad scope of backgrounds and school environments, I realized that the essence of my story did not stem purely from my own idiosyncratic misadventures in the classroom. Some inner-city teachers I know only vaguely have thanked me for articulating
their
stories.The insights and issues, whether systemic or personal, that spring from this narrative may pull back a curtain on a sector of our society that is largely invisible. One year with class 4-217 in the Bronx's P.S. 85 can illuminate the mushrooming crisis in lower-class America and the individual specks of hope that may propel us to act, or at least to care.
The contents of this book are based on my notes and recollections, though many names have been changed to protect privacy, and in a few circumstances real people have been merged into composite characters.
P.S. 85 Teachers
(* rookie teacher)
Kindergarten: | Allie Bowers |
1st grade: | Trisha Pierson Aaron Rose |
2nd grade: | Corinne Abernathy Andrea Cobb |
3rd grade: | Elizabeth Camaraza Janet Claxton Sarina Kuo Stacy Shanline Tim Shea Carol Slocumb |
4th grade: | Karen Adler, 4-110 Marnie Beck, special ed Edith Boswell, gifted Performing Arts Class Dan Brown Pat Cartwright, 4-219 Catherine Fiore, 4-210 Melissa Mulvehill, 4-220 Cordelia Richardson Wilson Tejera, bilingual |
5th grade: | Cheryl Berkowitz, gifted Performing Arts Class Paul Bonn, 5-110 Evan Krieg, 5-205 Marc Simmons, 5-207 Jeanne Solloway, 5-213 |
Prep teachers: | Fran Baker, literacy Ethel May Brick, literacy David de la O Deborah Friedberg, gym Adele Hafner, science Wendell Jaspers Wally Klein, librarian, union rep Ava Kreps, art Valerie Menzel, computers Cat Samuels Jim Zweben, gym |
P.S. 85 Administrators
Dom Beckles, Success for All coordinator
Kendra Boyd, principal
Barbara Chatton, new-teacher mentor
Al Conway, math coach
Rhonda Cooper, payroll secretary
Len Daly, Mr. Randazzo's assistant
Marge Foley, literacy coach
Sonia Guiterrez, assistant principal
Mr. Joe, security
Helen Kirkpatrick, special ed coordinator
Julianne Nemet, health clinic staff
Bob Randazzo, assistant principal
Diane Rawson, assistant principal
Marianna Renfro, special ed coordinator (summer)
Nurse Tina, nurse
Dilla Zane, regional superintendent
Class 4-217 Students
Sonandia Azcona
Deloris Barlow
Cwasey Bartrum
Asante Bell
Seresa Bosun (enter in January)
Joseph Castanon
Evley Castro
Gloria Diaz (enter in March)
Gladys Ferraro
Dennis Foster
Tayshaun Jackson
Reynaldo Luces (enter late September)
Maimouna Lugaru
Fausto Mason
Julissa Marrero
Bernard McCants
Verdad Navarez
Athena Page
Lakiya Ray
Destiny Rivera
Edgar “Eddie” Rollins
Eric Ruiz
Manolo “Lito” Ruiz
Tiffany Sanchez
Jennifer Taylor
Epiphany Torres (enter in January)
Hamisi Umar
Daniel Vasquez (enter in late September)
Clara Velez (enter in April)
Gladys Viña
Marvin Winslow (enter in late September)
Other P.S. 85 Students
Corrina Castro-Fernandez,Visual Arts Club
Lilibeth Garcia,Visual Arts Club
Jihard Gaston, Mr. Rose's class
Dequan Jones, Karen Adler's class
Mary, Kimberly, Asonai, and Sayquan, Pat Cartwright's students
Jimmarie Moreno-Bonilla, summer school
Thankgod Mutemi, Janet Claxton's class
Theo Payton, Mr. Rose's class
Jodi West,Visual Arts Club
Kelsie Williams, Success for All student