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FORCES OF INFLUENCE

HOW EDUCATORS CAN LEVERAGE RELATIONSHIPS TO IMPROVE PRACTICE

Educators are sure to enjoy this fresh approach to getting results.

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An interactive relationship toolkit for educators.

Longtime educators Ende and Everette designed their book for other teachers, who will find sage guidance here on fostering relationships with colleagues. They offer a road map to leveraging relationships that can support one’s teaching colleagues and help achieve desired outcomes. The first 50 pages lay necessary groundwork, but patient readers will be rewarded with the book’s full flavor from the fourth chapter onward, in which the co-authors begin to systematically unpack their practical and innovative suitcase of advice. Curiously, their premise rests on four “forces” that would land almost any student in detention in another context: “push,” “pull,” “shove,” and “nudge.” They explain how and under which circumstances to use a particular method and when to opt for a different route. For example, one could “nudge” by starting “a practitioner inquiry project of my own” but not “actively try to get my team involved,” or “push” by starting the same project but “asking for help from team members.” There’s always a plan B in case a particular method doesn’t play out as expected. The fourth through seventh chapter are the meat of the book and include interactive components that make it a fun, individualized read. Each delves into one of the four forces, and the final chapters pull them all together. The “pull potential tool,” for instance, tests how likely a “pull” is to result in the desired outcome. The concept of “stacking” forces adds layers to the strategy. The co-authors pinpoint three roles people play—"giver,” “taker,” and “wonderer”—and weave them into the force equation. The appendix includes useful role-playing scenarios that enable readers to practice before applying the forces in the real world. Each chapter concludes with questions, worksheets, and other tools that help readers grasp and apply the principles, and Ende and Everette address how one should respond if one is undesirably on the receiving end of one of the forces. Overall, their methodology could apply just as well to other professions and to life in general.

Educators are sure to enjoy this fresh approach to getting results.

Pub Date: Feb. 10, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-4166-2873-6

Page Count: 196

Publisher: ASCD

Review Posted Online: May 6, 2020

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UNCOMFORTABLE CONVERSATIONS WITH A BLACK MAN

This guide to Black culture for White people is accessible but rarely easy.

A former NFL player casts his gimlet eye on American race relations.

In his first book, Acho, an analyst for Fox Sports who grew up in Dallas as the son of Nigerian immigrants, addresses White readers who have sent him questions about Black history and culture. “My childhood,” he writes, “was one big study abroad in white culture—followed by studying abroad in black culture during college and then during my years in the NFL, which I spent on teams with 80-90 percent black players, each of whom had his own experience of being a person of color in America. Now, I’m fluent in both cultures: black and white.” While the author avoids condescending to readers who already acknowledge their White privilege or understand why it’s unacceptable to use the N-word, he’s also attuned to the sensitive nature of the topic. As such, he has created “a place where questions you may have been afraid to ask get answered.” Acho has a deft touch and a historian’s knack for marshaling facts. He packs a lot into his concise narrative, from an incisive historical breakdown of American racial unrest and violence to the ways of cultural appropriation: Your friend respecting and appreciating Black arts and culture? OK. Kim Kardashian showing off her braids and attributing her sense of style to Bo Derek? Not so much. Within larger chapters, the text, which originated with the author’s online video series with the same title, is neatly organized under helpful headings: “Let’s rewind,” “Let’s get uncomfortable,” “Talk it, walk it.” Acho can be funny, but that’s not his goal—nor is he pedaling gotcha zingers or pleas for headlines. The author delivers exactly what he promises in the title, tackling difficult topics with the depth of an engaged cultural thinker and the style of an experienced wordsmith. Throughout, Acho is a friendly guide, seeking to sow understanding even if it means risking just a little discord.

This guide to Black culture for White people is accessible but rarely easy.

Pub Date: Nov. 10, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-250-80046-6

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Flatiron Books

Review Posted Online: Oct. 12, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2020

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INSIDE AMERICAN EDUCATION

THE DECLINE, THE DECEPTION, THE DOGMAS

American schools at every level, from kindergarten to postgraduate programs, have substituted ideological indoctrination for education, charges conservative think-tanker Sowell (Senior Fellow/Hoover Institution; Preferential Polices, 1990, etc.) in this aggressive attack on the contemporary educational establishment. Sowell's quarrel with "values clarification" programs (like sex education, death-sensitizing, and antiwar "brainwashing") isn't that he disagrees with their positions but, rather, that they divert time and resources from the kind of training in intellectual analysis that makes students capable of reasoning for themselves. Contending that the values clarification programs inspired by his archvillain, psychotherapist Carl Rogers, actually inculcate values confusion, Sowell argues that the universal demand for relevance and sensitivity to the whole student has led public schools to abdicate their responsibility to such educational ideals as experience and maturity. On the subject of higher education, Sowell moves to more familiar ground, ascribing the declining quality of classroom instruction to the insatiable appetite of tangentially related research budgets and bloated athletic programs (to which an entire chapter, largely irrelevant to the book's broader argument, is devoted). The evidence offered for these propositions isn't likely to change many minds, since it's so inveterately anecdotal (for example, a call for more stringent curriculum requirements is bolstered by the news that Brooke Shields graduated from Princeton without taking any courses in economics, math, biology, chemistry, history, sociology, or government) and injudiciously applied (Sowell's dismissal of student evaluations as responsible data in judging a professor's classroom performance immediately follows his use of comments from student evaluations to document the general inadequacy of college teaching). All in all, the details of Sowell's indictment—that not only can't Johnny think, but "Johnny doesn't know what thinking is"—are more entertaining than persuasive or new.

Pub Date: Jan. 4, 1993

ISBN: 0-02-930330-3

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Free Press

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 1992

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