Sunday, August 7, 2011

Teachers Learning from Students | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Teachers Learning from Students | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

Teachers Learning from Students

Individuals writing about what they learned from former teachers is common. It is uncommon, however, for teachers to write about what they learned from former students. I do not mean those many instances when tech-savvy students helped teachers solve hardware and software problems. I mean the kinds of learning that doesn’t come from only books but from the questions students ask and the thoughts they express in and out of class.

I learned from Carol Schneider, a 16 year-old junior in my U.S. history class at Glenville High School in Cleveland. The year was 1958. I was a 23 year old teacher beginning my third year of teaching at Glenville. I relished teaching six classes of U.S. history a day in this largely black high school. By the end of the day, I was bone-tired (yeah, I shudder to think what teaching four straight classes, a break for lunch, then two more in the afternoon would do to my body and mind now). I went to Case-Western Reserve two evenings a week to get my Masters degree in history and had begun to prepare classroom lessons in what was then called Negro history. I