Mission to Teach by Dipak Basu (books to read for 12 year olds .txt) ๐
Mission to Teach chronicles the brutal murder of her dearest mentor and onset of breast cancer at age 24, to her founding of a public school in an embattled New York borough where she forged an inclusive teaching model that dramatically improved completion rates, to a unique professorship at New York University and untimely death and continuing legacy.
Narrated by Jhumkiโs father, Dipak Basu, a writer and humanitarian, Mission to Teach is ะฐbout:
โข An enquiry into the public education system, especially as pertains to science
โข A manifesto in favor of highly rational yet impassioned living
โข The all-encompassing strength of family and friends and the investment in bonds that endure
โข A breathless sense of the pace of oneโs life; how it should be, how much one can do when fully alive, and how much one can leave behind
โI am among those who feel genuinely blessed to have known her.โ - Dr. Condoleezza Rice, Former U.S. Secretary of State
โBrave and beautifully crafted, this riveting book โฆ will leave you both mesmerized and inspired.โ - John Moir, award-winning author of Return of the Condor
Learn more at missiontoteach.org.
Read free book ยซMission to Teach by Dipak Basu (books to read for 12 year olds .txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Dipak Basu
Read book online ยซMission to Teach by Dipak Basu (books to read for 12 year olds .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Dipak Basu
The astonishing thing is that Jhumki did it all.
In eight months.
E-mail from Jhumki Basu to her parents, July 11, 2008
So I wanted to tell you that things are sort of good at work, despite all the stupid cancer stuff:
3 grants supporting 3 doctoral students7 papers published, 4 are independent research, 2 reviews, 2 in the pipeline for this summergot good course evaluations for the semester, despite hospitalization, etc. got a perfect 5 score from the undergrads I teachthings are good at SDL with respect to research, and I'm starting at another school close to our housethinking about the book prospectus and laying foundations for it with the article writing and the new doc students
Good, right?
Good? It was the understatement of the millennium. These were fantastic achievements.
As the year progressed, five of Jhumkiโs academic submissions were published and, in addition to KSTF, she received two grants, the Rudin and Petri Fellowships. She decided to utilize all the money to fund four NYU doctoral students under her guidance. One of the four, Frank Signorello, worked at the New York Hall of Science, where he set up experiments for droves of visiting school kids.
โJhumki was very open to everything I threw at her vis-ร -vis ideas about the way that I teach,โ said Frank. โShe espoused many of those methods: ideas of reform-minded pedagogy, democratic ideals, giving students voice, giving them choice in what they learn and how they learn. They come to the Hall of Science for free. We donโt tell them what to do. They can play. Itโs guided play. They can take a workshop.โ
Jhumki was receptive to Frankโs ideas. She suggested that her doctoral students incorporate methods that were used in Frankโs informal techniques into a formal classroom environment.
โThe one thing I really enjoyed as I was working with Jhumki,โ Frank added, โwas she wanted us to be equals. But I would look to her for experience. I was always very in awe of all the experience she had at a very young age because I was older than her!โ
The world was paying attention to Jhumkiโs crusade. Through academic neglect, territorial politics, and parental apathy, kids in urban American schools were increasingly being left behind. Parents, schools, school boards, and governments were discouraging science either overtly or implicitly. Most science teachers in under-resourced New York schools were untrained in science. Young science teachers with dynamic ideas were the first to be laid off because of state budget crunches. America was losing the scientific innovations that had made it great. Students from affluent familiesโthose able to afford private educationโand foreign students were filling the demand for scientists in corporations and universities while inner-city youth languished in an unending cycle of poverty.
A dying educator was saying:
Rise up, America!
The flower of your youth is fading. See your lost children. They are your future. Love them. Respect them. They have the solution. They are the solution. Here is the way.
Give them a good education. Give them all a good education. Bring out their best. It is their birthright.
They are my legacy.
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Publication Date: 06-05-2013
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