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City Kids, City Teachers: Reports from the Front Row

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A powerful myth plaguing many of our urban schools is the belief that African-American, Latino, and immigrant children are nothing but trouble. City Kids, City Teachers offers a new look at urban schools by examining the city, the kids, and the teachers to explode stereotypes of teaching in the city.
In more than twenty-five provocative essays set in context by Ayers and Ford, leading educators and writers explore the realities of city classrooms from kindergarten through high school. City Kids, City Teachers moves back and forth from the poetic to the practical, celebrating the value of city kids and their teachers. It is a useful guide as well as a call to action for anyone who teaches, has taught, or is considering teaching in urban schools, and for every parent with children in our schools today.

345 pages, Hardcover

First published April 17, 1996

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About the author

William Ayers

72 books23 followers
William Ayers is Distinguished Professor of Education and Senior University Scholar at the University of Illinois at Chicago (retired), education activist, and bestselling author of Teaching the Taboo: Courage and Imagination in the Classroom (with Rick Ayers), To Teach: The Journey of a Teacher, Third Edition, and To Teach: The Journey, in Comics (with Ryan Alexander-Tanner).

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
207 reviews12 followers
January 22, 2016
I really loved this book, and i'm super glad I read it. Some of it was outdated, mostly because I'm reading it about 20 years after its original publication, but most of the content on urban education is still relevant and useful. It was also a great reference to other works with similar ideology. Some of the pedagogical articles were a bit challenging to wade through, but the pieces that were written as stories, or first hand accounts of incidents, were amazingly powerful. I also loved that there were two student-created tests in there. They did a great job of showing how cultural bias is so pervasive in testing. This was definitely an issue that, even though this book was written in the 90s, is still going on and prevalent today. In some ways, this book was depressing because of that. It's 20 years old, so all this information should be outdated, and reading it should be a reflection of how far we've come. Instead, it's disheartening because two more generations of children have graduated from the public school system, and we're still facing the same challenges that we were 20, 30, even 50 years ago.
Regardless, these stories were all interesting to read and there were several that got me all emotionally invested in the critters again. Stuff like this is good to read every so often to keep you going when the teacher burnout looms near.
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218 reviews21 followers
June 9, 2011
I picked this up the other day at Myopic Books. I think the essays I found most useful were the ones I'd already read (Lisa Delpit and Martin Haberman).
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews