Ms. Moffett's First Year

Becoming a Teacher in America

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching
Cover of the book Ms. Moffett's First Year by Abby Goodnough, PublicAffairs
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Abby Goodnough ISBN: 9780786736881
Publisher: PublicAffairs Publication: April 28, 2009
Imprint: PublicAffairs Language: English
Author: Abby Goodnough
ISBN: 9780786736881
Publisher: PublicAffairs
Publication: April 28, 2009
Imprint: PublicAffairs
Language: English

In summer of 2000, legal secretary Donna Moffett answered an ad for the New York City Teaching Fellows program, which sought to recruit "talented professionals" from other fields to teach in some of the city's worst schools. Seven weeks later she was in a first grade classroom in Flatbush, Brooklyn, nearly completely unprepared for what she was about to face.

New York Times education reporter Abby Goodnough followed Donna Moffett through her first year as a teacher, writing a frontpage, award-winning series that galvanized discussion nationwide. Now she has expanded that series into a book that, through the riveting story of Moffett's experiences, explores the gulf between the rhetoric of education reform and the realities of the public school classroom. Ms. Moffett's First Year is neither a Hollywood- friendly tale of ‘one person making a difference,' nor a reductive indictment of the public education system. It is rather a provocative portrait of the inadequacy of good intentions, of the challenges of educating poor and immigrant populations, and of a well-meaning but underprepared woman becoming a teacher the hard way.

While the story takes place in New York, Ms.Moffett's first year is a metaphor for the experiences of teachers everywhere in America, one that illuminates the philosophical, economic, political, and ideological dilemmas that have come more and more to determine their experience -and their students' experiences - in the classroom.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In summer of 2000, legal secretary Donna Moffett answered an ad for the New York City Teaching Fellows program, which sought to recruit "talented professionals" from other fields to teach in some of the city's worst schools. Seven weeks later she was in a first grade classroom in Flatbush, Brooklyn, nearly completely unprepared for what she was about to face.

New York Times education reporter Abby Goodnough followed Donna Moffett through her first year as a teacher, writing a frontpage, award-winning series that galvanized discussion nationwide. Now she has expanded that series into a book that, through the riveting story of Moffett's experiences, explores the gulf between the rhetoric of education reform and the realities of the public school classroom. Ms. Moffett's First Year is neither a Hollywood- friendly tale of ‘one person making a difference,' nor a reductive indictment of the public education system. It is rather a provocative portrait of the inadequacy of good intentions, of the challenges of educating poor and immigrant populations, and of a well-meaning but underprepared woman becoming a teacher the hard way.

While the story takes place in New York, Ms.Moffett's first year is a metaphor for the experiences of teachers everywhere in America, one that illuminates the philosophical, economic, political, and ideological dilemmas that have come more and more to determine their experience -and their students' experiences - in the classroom.

More books from PublicAffairs

Cover of the book The Fate of the West by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book Bring the Noise by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book The Hour of Sunlight by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book The World in Conflict by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book The Fall of the House of FIFA by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book The Biology of Desire by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book Bringing Mulligan Home by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book America's Fiscal Constitution by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book Fifty Million Rising by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book A People's History of Science by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book What Stays in Vegas by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book Slave by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book The Silence and the Scorpion by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book Denial and Deception by Abby Goodnough
Cover of the book Fearless by Abby Goodnough
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy