R&L Education
Pages: 114
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-1-61048-363-6 • Hardback • June 2011 • $66.00 • (£51.00)
978-1-61048-364-3 • Paperback • June 2011 • $34.00 • (£25.00)
978-1-61048-365-0 • eBook • May 2011 • $32.00 • (£25.00)
Beth Lindsay Templeton, director of Our Eyes Were Opened, is a community activist, innovator, minister, consultant, teacher, and writer. She began her career as a secondary mathematics teacher and for the last twenty-eight years has worked at United Ministries, a non-profit in Greenville, South Carolina.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: Understanding Poverty
Chapter One: Defining the Well-Being of a Child
Chapter Two: Poverty in Our Midst
Chapter Three: Seeing With Other Eyes
Chapter Four: Becoming Aware of Assumptions
Chapter Five: Deepening Our Understanding
Part Two: Helping Students Who Live in Poverty
Chapter Six: Grasping the Effects of Poverty on Teaching and Learning
Chapter Seven: Facing More Challenges
Chapter Eight: And Then There Are the Parents
Part Three: Success Is Possible
Chapter Nine: Learning From Other Successes
Chapter Ten: Conclusion
Sources
About the Author
Appendix One: Setting Up A Poverty Tour
Appendix Two: Progress Report
Today's teachers face the challenge of growing numbers of children of poverty in schools. Templeton provides suggestions to maximize the schooling experience of these students. Their success in school is largely dependent upon an informed, nurturing faculty armed with a realistic understanding of students, their instructional needs, and an array of practical teaching strategies. Because the life experience of these students differs drastically from that of their teachers and classmates, common misunderstandings abound. For example, fulfilling homework can become impossible for students who are homeless or who live in a crowded, multifamily setting. A teacher may suspect low mental capacity in a student unable to answer a question like "What's your shoe size?," unaware that the student has worn only shoes that were found or given to her. Teachers adapt everyday interactions, like giving directions, to help students develop sequential skills by dividing tasks into components and providing students with something concrete (e.g., a sticky note) delineating each part. They can provide cues so that students who live with uncertainty can learn to identify when a lesson actually begins. This book provides teachers a much-needed resource to address the increasing amount of child poverty in schools. Summing Up: Recommended. All readership levels.
— Choice Reviews
This is a wonderful, much-needed book. Most educators will find the length and format appealing. The prose is passionate but objective and based on solid research without being overly theoretical.
— A. Scott Henderson, associate professor of education and coordinator of secondary education, Furman University
It is an important book for educators and Beth Lindsay Templeton uses poignant examples to embed knowledge. The exercises and the conversational writing style are well-developed.
— Lesley Quast, assistant academic dean, Furman University
America will live up to its aspirations for public education only if students in poverty excel to high expectations. Beth Lindsay Templeton has worked for years to understand, address, and explain the issues faced by families in poverty. Anyone interested in America's future and the future of America's communities will benefit from her wisdom and insights.
— Frank Holleman, former U.S. Deputy Secretary of Education