The Teachers: A Year Inside America's Most Vulnerable, Important Profession

by Alexandra Robbins

Hardcover, 2023

Call number

371 ROB

Collection

Publication

Dutton (2023), 384 pages

Description

A riveting, must-read, year-in-the-life account of three teachers, combined with reporting that reveals what's really going on behind school doors, by New York Times bestselling author and education expert Alexandra Robbins.   Alexandra Robbins goes behind the scenes to tell the true, sometimes shocking, always inspirational stories of three teachers as they navigate a year in the classroom. She follows Penny, a southern middle school math teacher who grappled with a toxic staff clique at the big school in a small town; Miguel, a special ed teacher in the western United States who fought for his students both as an educator and as an activist; and Rebecca, an East Coast elementary school teacher who struggled to schedule and define a life outside of school. Robbins also interviewed hundreds of other teachers nationwide who share their secrets, dramas, and joys.   Interspersed among the teachers' stories--a seeming scandal, a fourth-grade whodunit, and teacher confessions--are hard-hitting essays featuring cutting-edge reporting on the biggest issues facing teachers today, such as school violence; outrageous parent behavior; inadequate support, staffing, and resources coupled with unrealistic mounting demands; the "myth" of teacher burnout; the COVID-19 pandemic; and ways all of us can help the professionals who are central both to the lives of our children and the heart of our communities.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member 1Randal
A real "pull back the curtains" look into the teaching profession today. Coming out of the Covid crisis, and all of it's ramifications for children's education, it's important to understand what teachers are going through. The author does a good job of illustrating this, by taking a good look at
Show More
several different teachers. After reading this, my heart goes out to all of those involved in the education process today. I really don't know what the answer is, but I hope someone can figure something out quickly. I would have rated this book higher, but it really did depress me.
Show Less
LibraryThing member FormerEnglishTeacher
I did something I hardly ever do: I bailed on this book. And I think I gave it a chance. I read just over 200 pages, but some of the anecdotes the author recounted were just too painful for this 40-year veteran teacher to take. I don’t doubt that what she is reporting actually happened. I saw it,
Show More
but mainly in elementary schools. I taught high school where maybe people are too busy to participate in all the corner of the hallway gossip and faculty bullying. One of the teacher characters in this book seemed to be like the character Eeyore with gloom and doom following her around wherever she went. Not everything in my career was perfect. I mean, after all, I taught for four decades. But combing my entire career it wouldn’t add up to the drama in this school during one year. I think I’ll go back to watching “Abbot Elementary.” I know it’s pollyanish, but I’d rather see that side of teaching than the one portrayed in this book.
Show Less
LibraryThing member sedelia
This is an important book for anyone who has a stake in education, whether you work in it or are a parent who has a kid in it, this book details the struggles teachers and students face–the everyday struggles of simply learning material and gaining social emotional skills, and the struggles that
Show More
simply shouldn’t be struggles, like lack of funding and unsupportive administration. However, Robbins doesn’t let the tough times overshadow the special moments that make teaching and education worth it. This book is a great balance of harsh reality and heartwarming inspiration.

Truly, this book has my heart. With my husband being a now-school librarian and a former English teacher, and having studied education, student taught, and tutored for quite some years myself, I see how teachers are consistently undermined and undervalued in their profession. This book speaks to those experiences but also shows just how dedicated most teachers are.

I love the combination of personal stories from Robbins’s correspondence to other teachers and data from studies and surveys. It provides a nice touch to show the human, emotional side of what the data represents. She goes through the school year, following three teachers in three different areas of the country. I fell in love with them and their stories. I cried when I read about the impossible situations they sometimes found themselves in.

Teaching is a tough job, made tougher by lack of administrative support and funding in many places. Robbins doesn’t shy away from the tough parts–where administration keeps painting over mold in a classroom, despite inherent health risks–where a special education teacher’s classes are overloaded with students, creating an unsafe environment. These are common situations many teachers find themselves in and often they don’t feel comfortable fighting against it because they don’t want to lose their jobs.

But Robbins also shows the rewarding part–the moment when you see a concept click with a kid–when a shy student feels safe and comfortable enough to come out of their shell–those wonderful times when a student calls you their favorite teacher and is so excited to see you and learn with you every day. It’s these moments that keep teachers going and that makes the profession so special. I love that she captured part of that.

I really loved this book for its honesty and its efforts to show a true glimpse of teaching. I think this is a great book to read for people who aren’t in the classroom every day to get a glimpse of just what is happening in education and be better informed as to what to advocate for when it comes to public education.
Show Less

Pages

384

ISBN

1101986751 / 9781101986752
Page: 0.4838 seconds