Teach Like Your Hair's on Fire: The Methods and Madness Inside Room 56
Teach Like Your Hair's on Fire: The Methods and Madness Inside Room 56 book cover

Teach Like Your Hair's on Fire: The Methods and Madness Inside Room 56

Hardcover – January 18, 2007

Price
$10.82
Format
Hardcover
Pages
256
Publisher
Viking
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0670038152
Dimensions
5.7 x 0.83 x 8.5 inches
Weight
1.01 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. Esquith might be the only public school teacher to be honored by both Oprah Winfrey and the Dalai Lama; he is the only school teacher ever to receive the president's National Medal of the Arts. For the past 25 years, Esquith has taught fifth graders at Hobart Elementary in central Los Angeles. Like most progressive educators, Esquith is outraged by the tyranny of testing, the scripting of teaching under "No Child Left Behind" and the overwhelming bureaucratization of the education industry. Still, he's done wonders with the basic curriculum—developing a hands-on arts program, a money-management curriculum and a sports-based statistics unit. Esquith and his Hobart Shakespeareans are world famous for the rock opera they create every year. Throughout each school day, Esquith teaches life skills: how to think about problems, how to plan a strategy to solve them and, most important, how to work together and be nice to each other. While his goals are inspiring, he's also practical—most chapters include affordable, how-to directions for a variety of his most effective classroom activities; he's even got a few tips for revamping those inescapable "test prep" sessions. (Jan.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. BACKCOVER: Praise for Rafe Esquith: “Rafe Esquith is my only hero.” —Sir Ian McKellan “Politicians, burbling over how to educate the underclass, would do well to stop by Rafe Esquith’s fifth grade class as it mounts its annual Shakespeare play. Sound like a grind? Listen to the peals of laughter bouncing off the classroom walls.” —Time “Esquith is a modern-day Thoreau, preaching the value of good work, honest self-reflection, and the courage to go one’s own way.” —Newsday Praise for Rafe Esquith: "Rafe Esquith is my only hero." x97Sir Ian McKellan "Politicians, burbling over how to educate the underclass, would do well to stop by Rafe Esquithx92s fifth grade class as it mounts its annual Shakespeare play. Sound like a grind? Listen to the peals of laughter bouncing off the classroom walls." x97Time "Esquith is a modern-day Thoreau, preaching the value of good work, honest self-reflection, and the courage to go onex92s own way." x97Newsday Rafe Esquith has taught at Hobart Elementary School for twenty-two years. He is the only teacher in history to receive the National Medal of Arts. He has also been made a Member of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth. His many other honors include the American Teacher Award, Parents magazine’s As You Grow Award, Oprah Winfrey’s Use Your Life Award, and the Compassion in Action Award from the Dalai Lama. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Barbara Tong. Read CBS's news story on Rafe Esquith. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PROLOGUE Fire in the Classroom It is a strange feeling to write this book. I am painfully aware that I am not superhuman. I do the same job as thousands of other dedicated teachers who try to make a difference. Like all real teachers, I fail constantly. I don’t get enough sleep. I lie awake in the early-morning hours, agonizing over a kid I was unable to reach. Being a teacher can be painful. For almost a quarter of a century, I have spent the majority of my time in a tiny, leaky classroom in central Los Angeles. Because of a little talent and a lot of luck, I have been fortunate to receive some recognition for my work. Not a day goes by when I do not feel overwhelmed by the attention. I doubt that any book can truly capture the Hobart Shakespeareans. However, it is certainly possible to share some of the things I’ve learned over the years that have helped me grow as a teacher, parent, and person. For almost twelve hours a day, six days a week, forty-eight weeks a year, my fifth-graders and I are crowded into our woefully insufficient space, immersed in a world of Shakespeare, algebra, and rock ’n’ roll. For the rest of the year, the kids and I are on the road. While my wife believes me to be eccentric, good friends of mine have not been so gentle, going as far as to label me quixotic at best and certifiable at worst. I don’t claim to have all the answers; at times it doesn’t feel as if I’m reaching as many students as I succeed with. I’m here only to share some of the ideas I have found useful. Some of them are just plain common sense, and others touch on insanity. But there is a method to this madness. It is my hope that some parents and teachers out there will agree with me that our culture is a disaster. In a world that considers athletes and pop stars more important than research scientists and firefighters, it has become practically impossible to develop kind and brilliant individuals. And yet we’ve created a different world in Room 56. It’s a world where character matters, hard work is respected, humility is valued, and support for one another is unconditional. Perhaps when parents and teachers see this, and realize that my students and I are nothing special, they will get a few ideas and take heart. I am sad when I see so many good teachers and parents surrender to forces that sap their potential excellence. The demons are everywhere. Those who care deeply often feel outgunned by apathetic or incompetent administrators and politicians. Expectations for children are often ridiculously low. Racism, poverty, and ignorance often reign supreme on campus. Add to this mix ungrateful students, and even mean-spirited people in the teaching profession itself, and the hardiest of souls can be crushed. Each defeat usually means that a child’s true potential will not be developed. I was fortunate to have a ridiculous moment in the classroom that literally lit my way out of the darkness. Years ago, feeling tired and frustrated, I spent a few weeks searching my soul and did something I rarely do—I questioned whether teaching was worth it anymore. A combination of the aforementioned demons had beaten me down, and I was practically down for the count. But for some reason, when I was guilty of feeling sorry for myself, I spent a day paying extra attention to a kid in class whom I liked very much. She was one of those kids who always seem to be the last one picked for the team, a quiet girl who appeared to have accepted the idea that she could never be special. I was determined to convince her that she was wrong. I was teaching a chemistry lesson, and the students were excited about working with alcohol lamps. But the girl couldn’t get her wick to burn. The rest of the class wanted to move on with their projects, but I told everyone to wait. I was not going to leave her behind, even after she told me to continue with the others and not worry about her. Normally I do not interfere with science projects, because failure can be part of the learning process. Yet this was simply a matter of faulty equipment; it had nothing to do with the chemical principle we were exploring that morning. I needed to step in. The girl had tears in her eyes, and I felt ashamed of myself for ever having felt like giving up. Suddenly her sadness was all that mattered. Athletes often refer to getting “into the zone” when they forget about the crowd and the pressure and see only the ball. It can happen in other fields too. For that one moment, the only thing that mattered to me was that this girl should have a successful experiment. She was going to go home that day with a smile on her face. I bent closely over the wick of her alcohol lamp. For some reason the wick was not as long as it should have been—I could barely see it. I leaned as close as I could, and with a long kitchen match tried to reach it. I was so close to the match that I could feel the flame as I tried to ignite the lamp. I was determined to get the lamp working. And it started working! The wick caught fire, and I looked up triumphantly to see the smile I expected on the girl’s face. Instead, she took one look at me and began screaming in fear. Other kids started yelling as well. I did not understand why they were all pointing at me, until I realized that while I was lighting the lamp, the flame had touched my hair; it was now smoldering and scaring the hell out of the children. Several of them ran to me and swiped at my head. Talk about a dream come true—they got to hit their teacher on the head and say they were trying to help him. A few minutes later, all was well and the experiment proceeded. I felt (and looked) like an idiot. And yet for the first time in weeks, I felt great about being a teacher. I had been able to ignore the crap that all teachers on the front lines face. I had done everything I could to help someone. I didn’t do it particularly well, but the effort was there. I thought to myself that if I could care so much about teaching that I didn’t even realize my hair was burning, I was moving in the right direction. From that moment, I resolved to always teach like my hair was on fire. There are so many charlatans in the world of education. They teach for a couple of years, come up with a few clever slogans, build their Web sites, and hit the lecture circuit. In this fast-food society, simple solutions to complex problems are embraced far too often. We can do better. I hope that people who read this book realize that true excellence takes sacrifice, mistakes, and enormous amounts of effort. After all, there are no shortcuts. From the Trade Paperback edition. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Read Rafe Esquith's posts on the Penguin Blog.
  • From one of America’s most celebrated educators, an inspiring guide to transforming every child’s education
  • In a Los Angeles neighborhood plagued by guns, gangs, and drugs, there is an exceptional classroom known as Room 56. The fifth graders inside are first-generation immigrants who live in poverty and speak English as a second language. They also play Vivaldi, perform Shakespeare, score in the top 1 percent on standardized tests, and go on to attend Ivy League universities. Rafe Esquith is the teacher responsible for these accomplishments.
  • From the man whom
  • The New York Times
  • calls “a genius and a saint” comes a revelatory program for educating today’s youth. In
  • Teach Like Your Hair’s on Fire!
  • , Rafe Esquith reveals the techniques that have made him one of the most acclaimed educators of our time. The two mottoes in Esquith’s classroom are “Be Nice, Work Hard,” and “There Are No Shortcuts.” His students voluntarily come to school at 6:30 in the morning and work until 5:00 in the afternoon. They learn to handle money responsibly, tackle algebra, and travel the country to study history. They pair
  • Hamlet
  • with rock and roll, and read the American classics.
  • Teach Like Your Hair’s on Fire!
  • is a brilliant and inspiring road map for parents, teachers, and anyone who cares about the future success of our nation’s children.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(383)
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(160)
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15%
(96)
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7%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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A Book of Inspiration and Ideas from the "Hobart Shakespeareans" Teacher

During our teaching careers, most of us have experienced a few "Ah-ha" moments. For Rafe Esquith, his wake-up call was literally when his hair caught on fire during a science experiment. Why was he the last one in the class to realize his head was ablaze - because he had inadvertently reached classroom nirvana.

I think of it as being in the zone, Esquith labels it "ignoring the crap," either way, this gifted teacher had a transcendental moment that altered his educational philosophy forever and his influence is rapidly spreading into classrooms across the globe. Part quixotic and possibly part "mad," he has transformed his 5th grade class, of mainly ESL students, into Shakespeare-quoting individuals who have learned how to take charge of their own learning.

Esquith's book challenges such issues as the obsession with high-stakes testing, unresponsive administrators, ineffective professional development opportunities, and the "demons" that take away our energy and spirit. At the heart of his "cookbook" is getting students to take responsibility for their actions and to value failure as an integral part of the learning process.

Check out this book because it explores the realities of teaching difficult students, as opposed to your typical educational log of impractical theories. Pick up this book if you agree with his classroom motto of, "Be nice, work hard. There are no shortcuts." Finally, purchase this book if the biggest fear for your students is that they become ordinary.

Lastly, what really motivated me to buy this book was that Esquith hasn't been lured out of the classroom. Instead, he continues to embrace his mission of finding the different keys it takes to ignite each of his students.

Michael James D'Amato, author of "The Classroom"
97 people found this helpful
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Something rotten in Denmark?

I am a teacher of 23 years. I have raised two children who are excellent students and learners. I think about education every single day. I spend hours designing lessons. I think about my students constantly, especially those who are challenged by dysfunctional families, poverty, language barriers or learning disabilities. I keep in touch with generations of kids I have taught since I live in the town where I teach. I am aware of both my successes and my failures. I am a fan of Parker J. Palmer's "The Courage to Teach" and just finished two books on seminar teaching by Brooke Workman, whose dedication, practical approach and humility were apparent on every page.

With all of this in mind, I give Esquith's book one star. There is something amiss here. Amid a few good ideas is a lot of HIM. Snarky unnecessary comments about his fellow teachers, about his administrators, about parents who may disagree with him; a ridiculous expectation of spending 12 hours a day at school; a busy-ness in the classroom that I find manic; self-serving references to his celebrity friends, and a sense of humor that isn't . .. funny. The book is not even that well written for someone who professes to love words and literature. Those phony dialogues between "Rafe" and his kids are nauseating! Where are his editors?

So this is only a tolerable read for a veteran teacher who can roll her eyes at this over-the-top approach, but impractical and poor advice for new teachers and up and comers. I can't wait to take it back to the library.
62 people found this helpful
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Just another "set the fields on fire and watch'em run" book!

We teachers are a very "gullible" lot. We are betimes analogous to chickens in a barnyard running around telling our chicken friends about this "new way" to a redder comb. The buzz is juicy and gossipy and of course comes from a very popular graduate of the Ivy. The problem of course is that the price of chicken just went through the roof, and tomorrow all us chickens go to the slaughter. LOL. Mr. Rafe has "0" to very few inner city African Americans in his classes. He teaches 5th grade. He is a very fun and exciting teacher; nothing more. HARVARD? Gimme a break! Poor Mr. Esquith with all of those brilliant inner city Asians and Latinos to teach. Oh, and what subject was that, DRAMA/MUSIC??? C'mon, someone pinch me and wake me up. At least teach a class that is obligatory before telling us all how to do it. I do not mean to be disrespectful, however, this book was written by the wrong author. I cannot believe that this author has the same experience with his inner city oranges that some of us have with our inner city apples. Mr. Esquith's opinion. however well intended, doesn't ring true for "teachers" of real core subject matter. It would be a great benefit to have this book written by an inner city "African American" Science teacher, or Math teacher, or English teacher, or History teacher. These teachers do not get the "pick of the litter" as it were, but we get EVERYONE, and many against their will! Let's Re-write this one from OUR angle!
26 people found this helpful
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Teach Like Your Hair's On Fire: The Methods and Madness Inside Room 56

As a public school teacher, I often lament about all the frustrating and pointless changes that I have had to endure over the course of my 23 years of teaching. The madness of chasing after accountability has slowly been sapping the energy out of myself and I am sure out countless others in the teaching profession. Just when I was thinking all hope was lost I stumbled upon this incredible book by Rafe Esquith. In the tradition of Chicken Soup for The Teacher's Soul, this book truly does remind us about what motivated us to become teachers in the first place: Our Students.

The true beauty of this book is that it is written by someone who is actually in the trenches. Mr. Esquith has been teaching in the same school for 22 years in a less than desirable location in Los Angeles. This clearly adds to the credibility of his message and the inspirational affect the book has on the reader. In short Rafe Esquith "gets it".

He shares in the book his own frustration with a "test happy" system that has gone mad, and how it drives him crazy. Yet despite this reality, he has still one sanctuary left that he has control over and that is Room 56 at Hobart Elementary School.

The book is a beautiful blend of practical suggestions and inspirational proof of what takes place in room 56. As a teacher at the high school level I was skeptical about how I could incorporate any strategy that he used in a 5th grade classroom with juniors and seniors. What I learned however, is the message he tries to convey to his students, "be nice and work hard" though simple, has relevance for any age level.

This book is a must for all teachers. Whether you are a wet behind the ears newbie or a slightly graying grissly veteran like myself, this book will inspire you. The book is also great for anyone who needs to believe that there are still inspirational people in the world. I know this is going to be a book that I keep very handy as a reminder to me about why I do what I do.

Thank God for incredible human beings like Rafe Esquith. I know he did not write this book for recognition or praise because he is clearly a level VI thinker, but I am thankful he did. This book can and should inspire generations of current and future teachers for years to come.

Mike Elko-Langhorne, PA - Go Falcons
22 people found this helpful
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Inspirational...then depressing.

I enjoyed reading the book, it was certainly well-written. It's amazing what one teacher has managed to accomplish with a group of kids who otherwise would have been relegated to the future "have-nots" of America. I would love to have such a great bunch of kids in my classroom - and I do have some really sweet, caring students.

But then it got depressing. I started the year with 171 students. The idea of giving that much attention to each and every student is quite daunting. I suppose it must be easier in elementary school...but then, my husband teaches in an elementary school district and he has 40 kids in his classroom. Unfortunately, some of them have bigger problems than he can deal with in the classroom - students who are on probation for serious issues of violence, students who are already parents at age 12, etc.

What was really depressing was looking at how much time he spends to get these results. 12 hours a day? 6 days a week? If I spent that much time on raising other peoples' kids, who would raise MY kids? I want to be a great teacher, and I do my best - but I also have a husband and three kids of my own who need some attention from time to time. I'm not going to give up on being a part of their lives so I can turn out excellent students - I'd like the parents of my students to help me along the way. Sadly, many of them don't. It's the teacher's problem if they aren't behaving, and it's the teacher's responsibility to fix the problem - but you can't actually do anything to fix the problem, because the parents will sue.

I do recommend this book as an interesting read. But it's certainly not as inspirational by the time you finish it as it was in the beginning.
19 people found this helpful
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Get it from the library

This book is only for the teachers who have a lot of money to burn, and an administration that isn't standing over their shoulder. Most of us have to PROVE we are following ALL the standards, test scores CAN mean our jobs,we do want the students to realize testing is a part of their lives, and we do not have the money and huge amounts extra time he has. In addition to that, I am unsure that I would want my children in his room... considering he feels that R rated movies are okay to show to 5th graders, as a teacher, I know I am not allowed to show anything unless it is rated G. Makes me wonder how he got to be where he is without getting fired. His lack of respect for the other teachers in his building shows that he is unaware of his actions as a role model. This book is NOT worth the money, go to the library if you want the handful of good ideas he has. Most of the websites that he has listed are sales sites, so don't get your hopes up unless you or your district has the money to spend. There are much better teacher role models out there!
15 people found this helpful
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Good, but not great

"Teach Like Your Hair's On Fire" is a far cry from his earlier self-serving book, "There Are No Shortcuts". This time, Mr Esquith writes with a comfortable humility and spends less time dishing out former student letters and comments.

"TLYHF" is neatly divided up into sections (although numbered chapters and a table of contents would have really helped) and focuses on subjects individually. Within these sections, Mr Esquith details how he and his students go about accomplishing set tasks; he provides at length different ideas and tactics he uses in order to get students form point A to point B. I really enjoyed his classroom management techniques, such as the "six stages of morality" which I used with my classes with great success.

The downsides: he continues to speak of himself as a lone island trying to stand against a disparaging sea of public education and educators. He even went so far as to take an angry note written by a colleague, photo copy it, pass it out to students, and have them edit it for grammar and spelling mistakes. Honestly, how unprofessional is that? Especially for a teacher? What message are you sending your students here?

Secondly, I am overwhelmed by the amount of time he puts into his classroom. As teachers we already spend a good deal of time outside the classroom just preparing for what goes on inside...isn't it healthier to actually find a balance? Personally, I think it's an incredibly unhealthy borderline obsession. Teachers need to maintain their own lives and certainly the relationship with their families. Whilst he claims that his wife supports him wholeheartedly, what about his poor children?

Thirdly, there are boundaries that I find crossed too many times with students. Trips should be chaperoned by more than just the classroom teacher, students should be showing respect by referring to you by your last name not your firs, and parents should be the ones showing their young ones around to colleges. It feels that he is trying to hard to be a father to each student...what about being a father to his children and letting other parents parent their own?

It was difficult sometimes to get past these shortcomings, but I do recommend the book solely for its practical purposes. Though he teaches gifted students, there is something to be said for some of his classroom management techniques. There are also other good tidbits you can find to help teach other subjects. If you can just get past the rest of it...
11 people found this helpful
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Too good to be true? I think so.

A couple years ago I wrote an Amazon review of Esquith's first book, which you can find at "There Are No Shortcuts." I liked some of its ideas while finding the author a manipulative loony.

Afterwards, a credible-seeming series of emails arrived to my email address from somebody who said he was a former student of Mr. Esquith. He spelled out in detail accusations against Esquith in terms of his controlling and inappropriate relations with students. He asked for help in exposing them publicly. I urged him to contact a journalist or school officials.

Now, I don't know if any of this was true, of course. And teachers are very vulnerable to being falsely accused. But now that I see Esquith put out another book this year AND that some Hollywood types put out a book about his Shakespeare troupe, I have to wonder if anybody is going to investigate this guy?

It is astonishing to me that his megalomania, so obvious to many other reviewers on here, is glossed over by his fans like it was just a mild flaw like "caring too much" or being forgetful. Megalomania in a teacher is a very dangerous thing! He is not a college professor but a teacher of 5th graders! Having read his work, I know I would not trust him with my child.
11 people found this helpful
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ideas, ego

Mr. Rafe is at his best when he describes his teaching methods and ideas. The book would be immensely more enjoyable if he had not repeatedly shamed and put down colleagues. Teaching is difficult; to teach well is an art. There was no need to state his judgments of other teachers. His ideas and examples stand on their own as outstanding. The denigration of colleagues weakens his book.
11 people found this helpful
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A little bit good.

I just finished this book after hearing the author on NPR. I'm searching for a classroom economy model to have in my 5th grade class and Esquith mentioned his own system in the interview. Unfortunately the instructions for Esquith's classroom economy program were in his first book. The chapter in this book was the "why" not the "how" of the program. Ugh, I'm glad I got it from the library and didn't pay for him to partially re-package an old idea.

Additionally, I thought the book read like one long tattle-tale session, with Esquith griping about all the crappy teachers in LA. Not once did he reference a good idea of a colleague. No one teaches as well as he does, according to the book. If I worked at his school, I'd leave a dog turd in his mailbox! Really though, it was an uncomfortable ride on his ego trip from start to finish. Ick!

That said, there was good information about how to help kids prepare for standardized tests. I've always struggled to know what to do when we review the practice test answers. How do we dig into question after question in a purposeful way? Happily, on page 80 I found a few good paragraphs that helped me make a plan for the upcoming year.

My advice: don't buy it -- borrow it, and skim through.
10 people found this helpful