Educating Esme: diary of a teacher's first year --
Esme Raji Codell
November 3Apparently, Miss Pointy in Sahara Special is not a fictional creation. She IS Esme Raji Codell. The book was a riot--I laughed out loud on a pretty consistent basis, and kept interrupting Josh's reading to read him parts, which is always a sure sign of greatness in a book.
Assembly today. National anthem. Oh, no, I thought. Will they...?
"...land of the free and the home of the brave!: A small group of voices enthusiastically added the postscript. "Play ball!"
Mr. Turner stepped up to the mike. "All right, who did that!" Nobody peeped.
They had no homework today, as a reward for showing good judgment when it counted most.
It chronicles her first year teaching--a fifth grade class in Chicago. She deals with a horrible principal, very little funding, a major lack of enthusiasm on the part of many of the volunteers and other teachers, abused kids, a book thief, as well as the regular teacher stuff. Add to all of this the on-going war with the principal about whether or not she's allowed to have the kids call her Madame Esme:
"The ACLU?" His eyebrows draw up fearfully. "Is that the teacher's union? You didn't call the teacher's union, did you?"A lot of people that reviewed the book at Amazon seem to think that she's really conceited, too hard on her co-workers, etc. She didn't strike me like that at all, she seemed more frustrated than anything--and if you can't vent in your diary, where can you vent?
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