Mathews, Jay. Work Hard. Be Nice.: How Two Inspired Teachers Created the Most Promising Schools in
Work Hard. Be Nice. is the story of how two Teach for America Alumni started KIPP charter schools. The author Jay Mathews, a well-published author of education in
I. Effective Teacher Inside and Outside of the Classroom
Work Hard. Be Nice. proves without a doubt that Mike Feinberg and Dave Levin are very successful teachers. They are and compatriots at their schools, including Frank Corcoran, a Notre Dame alumnus, routinely won Teacher of Year awards. Countless visitors attested to the fact that these guys could each low-income kids to succeed. These guys were so successful because they employed their 5 Pillars of KIPP. First, they set high expectations for their kids, in terms of the academic and behavioral. 2. They had parents commits and students commit in written contracts to this success. 3. They taught until 5:00 and had 3 week long summer courses. 4. They had teachers who ran the classroom and the principals who ran the school with complete control. 5 Everything boiled down to results.
These were the five things that KIPP claimed as their reasons for success. However, I noticed that they did other things that could be used in any classroom. First, everything about their classrooms was about learning, right down to the vocab clouds on the ceiling. Even if a kid was staring-into-space they were learning. This is something that I don’t do in my Spartan classroom. Second, they built a culture of learning, where the cool thing was to be learning, to be smart, and everything revolved around that. Punishments of being put on the porch were designed so that they would want to return to this learning environment. Three, they also used a lot of different mnemonics and games to make learning fun. I don’t do this. Four they also teach a lot of study skills and critical thinking, which my kids lack and I wish I knew how to teach. I want to be able to teach these skills but I don’t know how you teach a kid to have critical thinking. Fifth, and most importantly they would do whatever it takes from getting that parents involved to completely changing teaching styles in order to succeed.
In terms of outside of the classroom, these guys were always looking for mentors who they could watch and learn from. This was the biggest take away, they found good teachers and simply copied. This is something I need to do more of as well.
II. Charter Schools
Charter schools can be more efficient because they are easier to create a culture of learning and separate this culture from previous experiences. When a child enrolls in a charter school, the entire school can be a different experience from their past home-life or school life. Its hard for a single teacher to do that because you never know what’s going to happen before or after they leave that classroom.
In terms of creation, it seems that basically anybody with an idea, the motivation, and the money could start their own school. The key thing is always money and in this case it came from the founders of GAP. Money is just as important at
III. Critique of KIPP
The last few chapters of the book took a more critical eye to KIPP and raised a number of points to why KIPP might not be a silver bullet. Number one, KIPP creams the students who have parents who care. If it’s something they have to sign up for then its getting the better parents. Although the techniques that KIPP employs are good, its not sure that they will work for every school. However, regardless of its expandability, KIPP has allowed hundreds of low-income students who wouldn’t go to college go to college, and as long as its doing that its doing a good thing.
I am interested in reading this book to find out more about KIPP schools. I think building that "culture of learning" in my classroom and making learning cool is something i definitely struggle with. I think the charter school setting is easier to develop this culture because of the fact that is is the whole school's responsibility to develop the culture, not one individual teacher's. Being results driven and getting parents involved seem to be key components of success for low-income students.
ReplyDeleteGreat post. I'm interested to see what you may do with this information, maybe start a charter school yourself? I think you are a good person to create the environment of learning.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I agree with your critique of KIPP...but their opt-in ways produces pretty good results.
Great review and personal reflection on the elements you wish to incorporate more into your classroom.
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with Cara. I really want to work on making a positive learning culture where achievement is cool in my classroom but the Charter School Bubble would make that much easier. I'd like to read this book to see if it's possible to divine some of their success in the normal public school setting.
ReplyDeleteI’ll have to start with a “thumbs down”, due to your love of all things dealing with Notre Dame [including Teacher of the Year Frank Corcoran]. Unfortunately I won’t be able to expand the “thumbs down” to your entire response, since it was extremely informative. Like you, I haven’t mastered many of the suggestions from Matthews’ book. I could definitely stand to include a few vocabulary clouds into my classroom, and I would love to learn how to truly make learning the cool thing to do. It sounds like I could definitely benefit from reading your book.
ReplyDeleteLike Erin, I find it hard to believe an Notre Dame alumnus can become an effective teacher. However, I like your description of the book because it provides our own background for one of the most effective educational reform attempts in recent history. Those 5 pillars of KIPP schools sound like they could make great pillars of classroom goal setting. I don't think it's impossible to make my own classroom into a mini-KIPP with those kinds of expectations set up. Having dedicated parents right off the back is convenient, but I agree, overall KIPP is a great step forward.
ReplyDeleteSimilar to what Erin and Mark said, since you are a Notre Dame alumnus, this must mean you are going to be named Teacher of the Year too right? And has anyone else noticed that Jim is basically posting the same comment on everyone's blogs? =)
ReplyDeleteI really liked your post. Environment appears to be a key determining factor in a student's academic success. That is why KIPP schools are so successful. The more we can expose a student to an environment that promotes high student achievement, the less likely they will fall into the traps of negative thinking and/or participating in negative behaviors. Reading my book also got me thinking about what it would take to set up a charter school that follows more of the Japanese model of teaching. We need to encourage our kids to think on a higher level in mathematics. I think this would be a good book to look at.
Love the takeaways about copying from good teachers. I would agree that KIPP is great, but because they only accepts students with committed parents, it's not bound to reach every child. What efforts is KIPP making to reach out to apathetic parents? What efforts could other schools show to get parents and teachers on the same page? How can these efforts be replicated in a public school?
ReplyDeleteA story about how KIPP was founded, sweet. I have heard about KIPP and how great it is but now reading about how KIPP actually came to be is cool. The pillars of KIPP seem to be reworking of many things that TFA proclaims, however it make it seem that KIPP just does it better because the whole model is different. The difference between TFA and KIPP is that KIPP attempts change through concentration and TFA does it through assimilation.
ReplyDeleteCool model that to be very honest intimidates the crap out of me. Hearing the things that "great teachers" complete and then seeing my classroom when sometimes i feel like my wheels are spinning out of control, it is grounding and telling of just how much i need to grow as a teacher.
Nice review. Detailed and well written. As someone who already has an interest in KIPP you made me want to go out and buy the book. It sounds like you were able to get some solid ideas about a positive classroom environment and I may try to copy the ceiling example. I also liked how the author included a critique of the schools. In the end though, regardless of who they pull in, KIPP is sending students from low-income areas to college. Solid work Glen. Play like a champion today.
ReplyDeleteThe whole topic of charter schools is pretty controversial. I think that prior to being in TFA I may have looked negatively upon them. I have always gotten the sense from my mom, public school teacher veteran of 30+ years, that money should be going to help schools that are already in need rather than pouring resources into a "better" charter. But now that I'm in TFA I think I've been brainwashed to think they are a great way to go, and have even considers, could I start my own?
ReplyDeleteGreat review, thanks for sharing!
You summary and reflection was great! It seems as if you really got a lot of this read. My perception of charter schools were neither positive or negative. As an educator I think every student should receive the proper education.
ReplyDeleteThanks for breaking it down Glen. I enjoyed learning more about KIPP. I'm interested to know more about how they create this culture where kids are so invested in learning. It's a rigorous program, and I wonder if they have issues with burn out. I went to college with a kid who graduated from KIPP in Houston, and he said it completely changed his life. He's at KIPP now through TFA
ReplyDeleteExceptionally extensive job Glen! Thank you for breaking down in such a clearly formatted way, unlike the wild formatting of one, erin morimoto :-P. Nah, but I really think it must have been interesting to see how the two people created KIPP and how it actually works. I feel like I've heard a lot of great things about it, and yet still know very little. Can't wait to hear more about it from you later tonight when you get home!
ReplyDeleteI think both this models and the idea of charter schools in general is so interesting, and reading this review made me want to look deeper into the topic. It makes me think about the importance of creating community among students and infusing that will a culture consistent with the values of the school- as they did with KIPP and I know they do with other Charter schools. It makes me think about how we might adopt that in a typical public school and if that is possible, and/or how we might incorporate some of those positive strategies into classrooms/team models.
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