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This Is Not A Test Jose Luis Vilson

This Is Not A Test By Jose Luis Vilson

This Is Not A Test by Jose Luis Vilson


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Summary

Vilson, a teacher from an urban school composed of black and poor youth, challenges racism and inequality in the classroom.

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This Is Not A Test Summary

This Is Not A Test: A New Narrative on Race, Class, and Education by Jose Luis Vilson

From his own background growing up on the drug-tainted projects of Manhattan, Jose Vilson takes the reader on the coming-of-age story of a naive young man struggling to mature through the first few years of his career, balancing the lows of murder, poverty and academic failure to the highs of growth and triumph. In this collection of essays, he provokes discussion on issues of race, class and education with stories from his classroom seen through the eyes of a Black-Latino educator. Vilson calls for the reclaiming of the education profession while seeking social justice.

This Is Not A Test Reviews

Jose Luis Vilson has written a spell-binding book that explains the joys And burdens of teaching. The joys are the kids, with all their heartaches and dreams. The burdens are the politicians and careerists who snuff out the spirit of children and teachers. Read this book! Diane Ravitch Jose Vilson writes from a place of authority about the intersection of race, class and America's education system. His straight-talk about the absurdity of America's test obsession, failure to meet or even acknowledge the needs of an increasingly diverse student population, and a reform movement that has reformed nothing, failed at much and distracted from students' very real needs is a telling portal on what's really going on in American education today. Those who can relate to Vilson's experiences as a student or a teacher will welcome his unvarnished honesty and reflections. And those for whom this is terra incognita will find an insightful and illuminating window on the educational experiences of America's emerging majority students of many hues and languages, whose families struggle everyday, for whom their education may be the only way up, yet who too often are failed by systems ill-equipped to foster their success. Vilson's visceral accounts remind us of the humanity of teachers their struggles and triumphs, their frustration with forces outside their classroom walls and, above all, their devotion to their students. By telling his own story and those of his students, Vilson shows why teacher voice is essential to shedding the failures of the past and to reclaiming the promise of public education. Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation of Teachers As the principal of Morrill, a school that serves 850 students from preK-8th grade, this book hit home for me. Our school is nearly evenly split between Latino and African-American students, and 90% qualify for free or reduced lunch status. It is critical that we, as educators, can discuss issues of race and class with our students and with our colleagues. Mr. Vilson's book is one of the most honest, relevant, and timely books I have read. His words have been inspiring to me, and helped me reflect on my own practice. I gave a copy to every member of our faculty and staff so that they too can find the inspiration and reflect on their practices as educators. Michael Beyer, Ed.D., NBCT and Principal, Morrill Math & Science School Drawing from his own insight as a teacher, Jose Vilson hits right between the eyes, exposing how hardscrabble poverty and the pernicious effect of racism distort young lives. In This Is Not A Test: The New Narrative On Race, Class, and Education Vilson argues for more teachers of color, more time for teachers to support each other, and more ways for teachers to shape policy. Bristling at the cold calculus of tests, This Is Not A Test calls for practices that engage imagination and respect students as people. In gripping language, Vilson sends students an urgent message: When we find our passions, we must enter into them boldly and believe in the value and gift of oneself. Dennis Van Roekel, President, National Education Association In its telling, Jose Vilson's evocative collection of essays are ferociously honest and, as expected from someone whose creative impulses are informed by hip-hop, unapologetic and lyrical. A thoroughly engaging narrative about the intersection of race and culture, identity, economic disparity, and education, This is Not A Test is a must-read for parents and educators who want to understand, truly and deeply, the challenges inner-city students face. It was, after all, written by one of those children, a young man from a marginalized community, who grew up and bum-rushed the system he dedicated his life to changing from within. Raquel Cepeda, author of Bird of Paradise: How I Became Latina Jose's autobiographical journey offers a big window for seeing why our nation must blur the lines of distinction between those who teach in schools and those who lead them. With powerful prose and poetry, his narrative as student and then later, NYC teacher leader, loving father (and husband), and advocate for children paints a portrait of what public education can and must be for American society. Jose's last chapter, Why Teach, offers a hopeful vision for the future of the profession in spite of wrongheaded policymakers who seek to control teachers rather than listen and learn from them. Jose represents so many teachers across the United States, whose pedagogical skills and leadership acumen have yet to be tapped in the transformation of teaching and learning. Read This is Not a Test now! Dr. Barnett Berry, CEO and Founder of The Center for Teaching Quality Too many books about teaching read like dull academic treatises, condescending how-tos, or simplistic Hollywood scripts. Jose Vilson's This is Not a Test avoids these traps with a narrative that is by turns passionate and funny, angry and vulnerable, and full of keen insight born of on-the-ground experience in schools. Whether referencing Jay-Z or John Dewey, discussing corporate school reform or the intimacy of one-on-one interactions with students, Vilson is a bold and fearless writer, weaving his own story and struggles into broader conversations about race, equity, and the future of public schooling. His singular, urgent voice is one we all need to hear. Gregory Michie, a public school teacher in Chicago and author of We Don't Need Another Hero: Struggle, Hope, and Possibility in the Age of High-Stakes Schooling Jose Vilson is a teacher of the highest order. Through the powerful narrative of his life both inside and outside of the classroom, Jose teaches us important lessons on every page of _This Is Not a Test_. Jose teaches us about the intersection of education, race, class and activism while calling all of us to do better - to be better - as we strive along with him to be the educators all our children need us to be. This book is a must read for educators, soon-to-be educators, parents, students and anyone who cares about education and the children of this country. Chris Lehmann - Founding Principal, Science Leadership Academy
Jose Luis Vilson has written a spell-binding book that explains the joys And burdens of teaching. The joys are the kids, with all their heartaches and dreams. The burdens are the politicians and careerists who snuff out the spirit of children and teachers. Read this book! -Diane Ravitch Jose Vilson writes from a place of authority about the intersection of race, class and America's education system. His straight-talk about the absurdity of America's test obsession, failure to meet or even acknowledge the needs of an increasingly diverse student population, and a reform movement that has reformed nothing, failed at much and distracted from students' very real needs is a telling portal on what's really going on in American education today. Those who can relate to Vilson's experiences as a student or a teacher will welcome his unvarnished honesty and reflections. And those for whom this is terra incognita will find an insightful and illuminating window on the educational experiences of America's emerging majority-students of many hues and languages, whose families struggle everyday, for whom their education may be the only way up, yet who too often are failed by systems ill-equipped to foster their success. Vilson's visceral accounts remind us of the humanity of teachers-their struggles and triumphs, their frustration with forces outside their classroom walls and, above all, their devotion to their students. By telling his own story and those of his students, Vilson shows why teacher voice is essential to shedding the failures of the past and to reclaiming the promise of public education. -Randi Weingarten, President of the American Federation of Teachers As the principal of Morrill, a school that serves 850 students from preK-8th grade, this book hit home for me. Our school is nearly evenly split between Latino and African-American students, and 90% qualify for free or reduced lunch status. It is critical that we, as educators, can discuss issues of race and class with our students and with our colleagues. Mr. Vilson's book is one of the most honest, relevant, and timely books I have read. His words have been inspiring to me, and helped me reflect on my own practice. I gave a copy to every member of our faculty and staff so that they too can find the inspiration and reflect on their practices as educators. -Michael Beyer, Ed.D., NBCT and Principal, Morrill Math & Science School Drawing from his own insight as a teacher, Jose Vilson hits right between the eyes, exposing how hardscrabble poverty and the pernicious effect of racism distort young lives. In This Is Not A Test: The New Narrative On Race, Class, and Education Vilson argues for more teachers of color, more time for teachers to support each other, and more ways for teachers to shape policy. Bristling at the cold calculus of tests, This Is Not A Test calls for practices that engage imagination and respect students as people. In gripping language, Vilson sends students an urgent message: When we find our passions, we must enter into them boldly and believe in the value and gift of oneself. -Dennis Van Roekel, President, National Education Association In its telling, Jose Vilson's evocative collection of essays are ferociously honest and, as expected from someone whose creative impulses are informed by hip-hop, unapologetic and lyrical. A thoroughly engaging narrative about the intersection of race and culture, identity, economic disparity, and education, This is Not A Test is a must-read for parents and educators who want to understand, truly and deeply, the challenges inner-city students face. It was, after all, written by one of those children, a young man from a marginalized community, who grew up and bum-rushed the system he dedicated his life to changing from within. -Raquel Cepeda, author of Bird of Paradise: How I Became Latina Jose's autobiographical journey offers a big window for seeing why our nation must blur the lines of distinction between those who teach in schools and those who lead them. With powerful prose and poetry, his narrative as student and then later, NYC teacher leader, loving father (and husband), and advocate for children paints a portrait of what public education can and must be for American society. Jose's last chapter, Why Teach, offers a hopeful vision for the future of the profession in spite of wrongheaded policymakers who seek to control teachers rather than listen and learn from them. Jose represents so many teachers across the United States, whose pedagogical skills and leadership acumen have yet to be tapped in the transformation of teaching and learning. Read This is Not a Test now! -Dr. Barnett Berry, CEO and Founder of The Center for Teaching Quality Too many books about teaching read like dull academic treatises, condescending how-tos, or simplistic Hollywood scripts. Jose Vilson's This is Not a Test avoids these traps with a narrative that is by turns passionate and funny, angry and vulnerable, and full of keen insight born of on-the-ground experience in schools. Whether referencing Jay-Z or John Dewey, discussing corporate school reform or the intimacy of one-on-one interactions with students, Vilson is a bold and fearless writer, weaving his own story and struggles into broader conversations about race, equity, and the future of public schooling. His singular, urgent voice is one we all need to hear. -Gregory Michie, a public school teacher in Chicago and author of We Don't Need Another Hero: Struggle, Hope, and Possibility in the Age of High-Stakes Schooling Jose Vilson is a teacher of the highest order. Through the powerful narrative of his life both inside and outside of the classroom, Jose teaches us important lessons on every page of _This Is Not a Test_. Jose teaches us about the intersection of education, race, class and activism while calling all of us to do better - to be better - as we strive along with him to be the educators all our children need us to be. This book is a must read for educators, soon-to-be educators, parents, students and anyone who cares about education and the children of this country. -Chris Lehmann - Founding Principal, Science Leadership Academy

About Jose Luis Vilson

Jose Luis Vilson is a math educator for a middle school in the Inwood / Washington Heights neighborhood of New York, NY. He writes for Edutopia, GOOD, and TransformED / Future of Teaching, and has written for CNN.com, Education Week, Huffington Post, and El Diario / La Prensa, NY.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents ON PERSPECTIVE [AN INTRODUCTION] 3 PLEASE PUT YOUR PENCILS DOWN 9 PRELUDE TO A HURRICANE 20 CAN IT BE THAT IT WAS ALL SO SIMPLE THEN? 32 A SYNOPSIS OF THE ROAD LESS WANTED 44 FALSE KINGS 54 THE ANSWER 65 The Post-TFA Assessment 72 BLUE MAGIC 80 THE HOMEROOM IS A HOME 87 SNITCHES OPEN STITCHES 96 ON THE REASON WHY YOU DON'T SEE MORE BLACK / LATINO TEACHERS ... YET 102 THE FINE ART OF THE CLASSROOM JOKE 117 WHAT HAPPENED 123 IT DOESN'T MATTER WITH ME NOW 132 RACE AND EDUCATION WRITING IN THE 21ST CENTURY 139 TECHNICALLY, IT'S CALLED CONVENIENT IGNORANCE 147 WHY YOU POST-RACIALISTS GET IT WRONG ... AGAIN 153 BAND OF BROTHERS 159 GOD GOT JOKES (THE CASE OF 702) 172 IT'S THE LIFE 180 GENESIS OF A NEMESIS 187 WHITE NOISE (ON BEHALF OF RUBEN REDMAN) 193 GOODBYE YELLOW BRICK ROAD 198 A CAUTIONARY NOTE TO BURGEONING TEACHER LEADERS [THE EAGLE VS THE HUMMINGBIRD] 206 CONSIDER TEACHING 211 ON THE STATE OF TEACHER VOICE 216 AFTERWORD 232

Additional information

CIN1608463702VG
9781608463701
1608463702
This Is Not A Test: A New Narrative on Race, Class, and Education by Jose Luis Vilson
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Haymarket Books
2014-07-10
242
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - This Is Not A Test