Available Formats
The Emergency Teacher: The Inspirational Story of a New Teacher in an Inner-City School
By (Author) Christina Asquith
Foreword by Mark Bowden
Introduction by Harry K. Wong
Skyhorse Publishing
Skyhorse Publishing
3rd November 2014
United States
General
Non Fiction
Teaching staff
371.10092
Paperback
232
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 15mm
263g
The Emergency Teacher is Christina Asquiths moving firsthand account of her year spent teaching in one of Philadelphias worst schools. Told with striking humor and honesty, her story begins when the School District of Philadelphia, faced with 1,500 teacherless classrooms, instituted a policy of hiring emergency certified teachers to fill the void. Asquith, a twenty-five-year-old reporter for the Philadelphia Inquirer, joined their untrained ranks. Assigned to a classroom known as the Badlands, she was told to sink or swim.
More challenging than the classroom are the trials she faces outside it, including the antics of an overwhelmed first-year principal, the politics that prevent a million-dollar grant from reaching her students, and the administrations shocking insistence that teachers maintain the appearance of success in the face of utter defeat, even if it means falsifying test scores. Asquith tells a classic story of succeeding against insurmountable odds.
With a foreword by bestselling author Mark Bowden and an introduction by award-winning educator Dr. Harry K. Wong, The Emergency Teacher will inspire every teacherbe they first-timers or experienced professionalsto make a difference.
Christina Asquith is a former reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer, and has written for The New York Times, The Economist, and The Chronicle of Higher Education. She has a master's degree in Educational Philosophy from The London School of Economics and Politics. She lives in Washington, D.C. Her web site is christinareporting.com