Put The Essential 55 rules into practice with this new workbook! From bestselling author Ron Clark comes the ideal companion to the New York Times bestseller The Essential 55 . Ron Clark's The Essential 55 took the country by storm, selling over 850,000 copies in less than six months, and remaining on the New York Times bestseller list for months. Readers have been asking for a workbook to help them use Clark's Essential 55 rules with their own children and students. Now Clark, Disney's 2001 Teacher of the Year, provides the tools in The Essential 55 Workbook that will enable teachers and parents to transform any child into a successful student. Based on the bestselling The Essential 55 , The Essential 55 Workbook is full of easy-to-do lessons to help you reinforce The Essential 55 rules that every child should know. With a series of self-tests, exercises, and questionnaires, The Essential 55 Workbook allows you to adapt Ron Clark's successful tools to your own situation. With determination, discipline, and regular rewards, the children you stick by will be the children you eventually admire.
Ron Clark has been called "America's Educator." In 2000, he was named Disney's American Teacher of the Year. He is a New York Times bestselling author whose book, The Essential 55, has sold over 1 million copies and has been published in 25 different countries.
Ron Clark doesn't seem like a guy who would last long in education when you read his book. He writes with a tone against the education system, seems to look down on his coworkers, and is a bit high on himself in his writing. I taught 6 years in a high school English classroom, and having a long list of rules was neither feasible nor advised. If people aren't going to read the cell phone data contract that is tied to $100+ a month, they aren't going to seriously read 55 rules. A small rule list is much more manageable. I will admit that when I read this book as an Education major that it did help me think through what I needed to explicitly teach students and what types of things I did and didn't want happening in my classroom. Ron Clark's writing is good in the book, but perhaps not the most pragmatic educational pedagogy available for classroom management.
I actually read the Updated and Revised version from 2019, which was not on here. I now understand why so many teachers and educators travel to the Ron Clark Academy each year to see how he works. Even being a Special Education teacher I loved reading his book.
I read this for work (I am an educator). A lot of these items are just good manners and common sense, but I will say that good manners and common sense can get you pretty far in life. Ron Clark's thoughts are about giving his students the tools they need to succeed in life.
Bunch of good ideas on how to teach students Ron Clark's 55 rules. When you are looking for ideas on how to start and maintain high standards of behavior and as such high standard of academics this and Harry Wong's The First Days might be a great read to begin every year.
He gave me the impression of a person that is full of complexes and it's not who I want to learn from. The ideas are shallow and he is definitely full of himself.
I loved this book, especially as a new teacher which will (hopefully) be starting the "first year" of teaching soon. I love that the author took basic strategies of how to be a decent human being and put them into teaching terms - I believe all students should be provided this information in their classroom and their lives. Every teacher should teach their students how to be professional and supportive members of our society for the overall success of learning and thriving in our world today.