The Challenge of Greatness: The Legacy of Great Teachers
By (Author) Michael Gose
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Education
30th July 2012
United States
General
Non Fiction
Teaching staff / Educators
371.102
Paperback
168
Width 150mm, Height 230mm, Spine 13mm
268g
The Challenge of Greatness: The Legacy of Great Teachers reveals the characteristics and teaching strategies of Great Teachers. Simultaneously the book describes a Pantheon of thirty-two great teachers, and challenges the reader to continue their legacy by becoming one. Recognizing the uniqueness of a great teacher, the book raises the kind of issues they face, and a range of possibilities from which they find solutions.
Students, schools, and their communities benefit from the legacy of great teachers. Good teachers push their students, but great teachers teach their students to push themselves within and beyond the walls of the classroom. Gose is one of these great teachers, and his book challenges the good to become great. -- Erin Shitama, Fulbright scholar, former student, and Assistant at Sunset Magazine
The Challenge of Greatness is one of those books that takes on that complex and profound idea of how great teachers really do make a difference with clarity and passion. Every teacher, aspiring or experienced, should know about it. -- Rosanne Liesveld, Senior Consultant, Gallup Consulting
Gose (Pepperdine Univ.) seeks to clarify the difference between good teachers and great ones and explore and recognize the legacy of great teachers. Gose selects 32 participants who met specific criteria as set forth in the Houston Peterson analysis of great teacher characteristics. Readers may wonder: what makes a great teacher, and have I ever had one Other chapters address topics such as what great teachers do differently to achieve their reputation and how these teachers identify factors and strategies for meeting the needs of all students in their charge. Gose provides concrete practices, suggestions, and considerations for the educator; however, he counsels that teaching has a creative and artistic side and teachers who confront day-to-day pressures of prescriptions, controls, and meaningless processes may experience frustration. All in all, the author achieves his goal of describing the abstract concept of what good to great teaching can be. Summing Up: Recommended. All readership levels. * Choice Reviews *
Michael Gose, has taught at the elementary, secondary, and university levels. He has been a professor at Pepperdine University in teacher education and great books since 1980.