R&L Education
Pages: 152
978-1-60709-105-9 • eBook • June 2009 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
Ryan A. Donlan, a charter high school leader for at-risk students, is also a university instructor, board member of a non-profit organization, and owner of a communications consulting LLC.
Chapter 1 No Teacher Left Behind
Chapter 2 Gamesmanship
Chapter 3 Straight Talk and a Prelude to the Gray Cloud over Education
Chapter 4 Getting a Proper and Just Handle on Oneself, One's Village, and One's Place in the Universe and the Gray Cloud
Chapter 5 What Our Journey Entails
Chapter 6 A Discussion for Seasoned Professionals Only
Chapter 7 What Are We Seeing in Our Newbies? The Wrong Reasons to Teach
Chapter 8 Thinking Back on Our Professional Beginnings, Why Did We Want to Teach?
Chapter 9 Never Smile until November? ... Not!
Chapter 10 What Is a Student: Philosophically, Theoretically, and Practically
Chapter 11 Your Role as a Teacher Leader
Chapter 12 Direct Advice that Teacher Leaders Can Use as Institutional Caretakers
Chapter 13 Through a Side Door in a School that's Not about Us
Chapter 14 When Parents Enable
Chapter 15 Instant Messaging for Parent Meetings
Chapter 16 It's Not about Us
Chapter 17 More on Student as a Product: Education's Raw Material
Chapter 18 Cherising Those Baby Steps
Chapter 19 The Most Important Furnishing in a Classroom: Hope
Chapter 20 One's Teaching Load, a Clairvoyant Perspective
Chapter 21 Sharpening the Scythe for Healthier Teaching
Chapter 22 Teachers as Surgeons
Chapter 23 In the Trenches Now ... the Toolbox
Chapter 24 Power and Brain-Compatible Elements
Chapter 25 The Brainbox
Chapter 26 Absence of Threat
Chapter 27 Choices and Adequate Time
Chapter 28 The 101s of Professional Supervision and Evaluation
Chapter 29 Look-Fors for Principals
Chapter 30 The Look-Fors You Don't Want
Chapter 31 Professional Evaluation
Chapter 32 Making Your Life Easier through Your Domain
Chapter 33 Organizational Effectiveness through Student Responsibility
Chapter 34 The Grab Bag for Maintaining Order
Chapter 35 The Grab Bag for Placing the Responsibility of Learning and Succeeding On Students
Chapter 36 The Grab Bag for Minimizing Interruptions
Chapter 37 The Grab Bag, Wrapping Up
Chapter 38 Room Decor
Chapter 39 On the Road Again
Chapter 40 Professional Development (PD) and Conferencing
Chapter 41 People Watching at Conferences
Chapter 42 When You're the Presenter
Chapter 43 The Healthier You: A Light Heart Lives Long
Chapter 44 You Call It Efficiency or Multitasking, I Call It Burnout
Chapter 45 A Glowing Ember Is Easily Rekindled
Chapter 46 A Healthier Perspective on the Much-Maligned, Yet Uniquely Lovable Lounge Lizards
Chapter 47 Raconteurs in Lounges and the Follies of Leadership
Chapter 48 The Leaders We Need
Chapter 49 Conclusion: What Will Come from the Briar But the Berry?
Finally someone understands that it is not only foolish to legislate academic excellence, it is impossible.....
— Robert D. Gulash
Ryan Donlan's perspective on teaching and education is provocative, even though his message may seem irreverent in places. He will challenge what you believe the state of affairs should be. He is impassioned, borne by his professional experiences. Throughhis opinions, he encourages the reader to consider carefully how things are and what should change....
— Michael B. Gilbert
With this book, Ryan Donlan has done what should be done on a daily basis for the veteran teacher. Too often these teachers are left to survive on their own?they know what they are supposed to do. The veteran teacher needs support and praise for a job well done. As administrators, educators, and society as a whole, we are not positive enough and do not praise others for a job well done. Donlan has captured the essence of life for the veteran teacher. His book lends encouragement to those teachers and shows them how they can support themselves if nothing else. It is those teachers that make all other professions possible...
— Dale L. Moore
Within the pages of his book, Ryan Donlan offers advice to the experienced teacher in a straight-forward and practical manner. Like the proverbial Dutch Uncle, he speaks to the reader from experience tempered by caring, That caring for the product of American schools?the education of our nation's children?is the overriding theme of his work and is what makes this a must-read for everyone concerned with teaching and learning in our country today....
— Sharon Stockero
Ryan Donlan provides insight into an educational administrator's greatest asset: the Master teacher. This book is a no-holds-barred look into the mind of the veteran teacher and their relationship with administration. As the number of Master teachers begins to dwindle, the need for administrators to understand what makes them tick is critical to maintaining this country's high education standards....
— Dan Holland