Yvette Jackson shows educators how to focus on students’ strengths to inspire learning and high intellectual performance. Jackson asserts that the myth that the route to increasing achievement by focusing on weaknesses (promoted by policies such as NCLB) has blinded us to the strengths and intellectual potential of urban students―devaluing the motivation, initiative, and confidence of dedicated educators to search for and optimize this potential. The Pedagogy of Confidence dispels this myth and provides practical approaches for rekindling educators’ belief in their ability to inspire the vast capacity of their urban students. Book
Yvette Jackson’s “Pedagogy of Confidence” as described in her book, The Pedagogy of Confidence: Inspiring High Intellectual Performance in Urban Schools, is based upon the idea that belief in students’ abilities to learn and teaching practices grounded in high operational practices will result in high intellectual performance. I found the book an oversimplification of the problems faced in underachieving schools. Merely professing a belief that students can learn and providing students with rigorous activities will not result in increased learning if students choose not to participate in the learning process. I found the book lacking in suggestions for implementing the “Pedagogy of Confidence,” handling students’ disinclination to learn, and administration’s refusal to change current practice.
Finished this one in June for the last school district book club meeting.
Yvette Jackson makes a compelling argument that the principles and assumptions of gifted education should be applied in every classroom setting. Assume every child is highly capable and curious and can attain high levels of academic achievement. Build relationships that unlock student potential, activate their interest and agency, and mitigate the effects of racism, classism and poverty. Plan learning experiences from this foundation of high expectations and deep understanding of the students. Selfishly, a part of her argument that really resonated with me is how low expectations and focus on skills over intellectual engagement with content contributes to teacher burnout and dissatisfaction.
4/5 stars because it is so theoretical with minimal details of what her recommendations look like in practice.
Yvette Jackson provides her readers with a progressive theory of education that calls for teachers to apply the strategies they implement in gifted programs to other classroom contexts. The first of The Pedagogy of Confidence’s three sections is amazing and easily five stars. The other two grow a bit repetitious and don’t provide the same level of insight. Rather those two sections come off as oriented more so towards administrators and teachers with more empirical orientations.
I love the ideas behind this book, I just could not get into the writing style. The belief that all students are capable of learning at a high level is important. I just wish the book were a bit more palatable and that it provided more examples of implementation.
This book was confusing to me and hard to follow. The main ideas behind high intellectualism and high support were important, but I needed so many more examples to make it useful. Hearing Yvette Jackson speak this year was much more meaningful than the book because of her examples and modeling.
Took a lot of notes. Love the poems included. Lots to think about...believing in students, applying the gifted/talented lens and expectations and plans to the whole class, healthier perspectives for teachers. School as an oasis.
I am not a teacher per se but love reading books about teaching. This one in particular is about how to help people, adolescents in particular, bring out the best in themselves.
All students have the capacity to learn at high levels: It is up to us to cultivate their strengths into results.
Dr. Jackson is passionate about her research and partnership with her mentor. It clearly shows throughout the book. I would like to see an update with current research and sustainability of the NUA strategies in urban districts.
Great information about teaching in urban schools and includes helpful brain research applicable to teachers. It's a very dense book, with lots of rereading required. Would have liked to have had a large print addition, the print/spacing drove me a little batty.