125 Years for the Boys best practices from the haverford school
125 Years for the Boys Best Practices from
The Haverford School
Published by Š The Haverford School
Haverford, PA
Acknowledgements Editor/Designer Meghan K. Mulrooney Copy Editors Kathy Stevenson Cox Dawn Blake Archivist Sandy Mercer Photography Dawn Blake George Scarino Linda Walters Michael Branscom Maura Ciccarelli Peter Miller Meghan Mulrooney Timi Wolov Blair Stambaugh Terri Grossman Jim Roese Linda Katz Jill Wurman Contributing Editors Joseph T. Cox Rebecca Davis Todd Wolov ’88 Andy Grossman ’96 Tom Stambaugh ’90 Dawn Blake Lisa Snyder Mondo Murage Special Thanks To Francis Bonner, M.D., P’08 and to Trustee Ken Brier ’68 P’09 for financing Abigail James’ consultancy.
Contributing Authors Joseph T. Cox, Ph.D., Headmaster Brad Adams Abigail James, Ph.D. Valerie Case William Palmer Pat Renehan Jane Manns Cheryl Saunders Mondo Murage Jenny Waring Kate Thorburn Todd Wolov ’88 Cheryl Joloza Carol Ann Luongo John Suter William Strong Chris Avery Nick Romero Andrew Franz Pat Gately Andrew Grossman ’96 Gerhardt Reich Joyce Chan Lori Reed Tom Stambaugh ’90 Mark Fifer Ben Rein Robert Upton Brett Boham Rebecca Smedley Jamison Maley Carol O’Brien Gerry Rooney Andrew Poolman Sara Adkins Michael Stairs Edward Hallowell Lisa Snyder
This book is dedicated to: Haverford School faculty – past, present, and future.
125 Years for the Boys Best Practices From THe Haverford School
Table of Contents One Hundred and Twenty-Five Years for the Boys..........................................1 Headmaster Joseph T. Cox, Ph.D. Great Schools for Boys........................................................................9 Brad Adams, Executive Director, International Boys’ School Coalition Timeline.......................................................................................15 The Haverford School:125 Years Intuitive to Intentional........................................................................31 Abigail Norfleet James, Ph.D. Lower School Lessons........................................................................ 49 Middle School Lessons......................................................................79 Upper School Lessons.......................................................................105 From the Archives...........................................................................135 Bibliography...................................................................................159
years of concern and commitment to the best practices in boys’ education. We hope that itwill serve as a resource and guide for everyone who loves and
The Haverford School
teaches boys.
One Hundred and Twenty-Five Years For the Boys
C
Board Chair Bill Thorkelson, Haverford ’68 and Par-
taking part in a celebration
cation, Bill hopes that they automatically conflate
of a century and a quar-
excellence in educating boys with The Haverford
ter of educating boys and
School. Because of our long and exemplary his-
Headmaster young men to serve their Joseph T. Cox, Ph.D. community and country. In
tory as a remarkable School for boys, many do au-
1884, The Haverford School was founded on the
The Haverford School. We are justly proud of our
Haverford College campus by a group of parents
125 years of serving the educational needs of boys,
who wanted the best possible education for their
and this book celebrates both our unique and distin-
sons, and it has prospered throughout the past 125
guished history and our ongoing efforts to produce
years thanks to the good judgment of able adminis-
bright, responsible, well-rounded young men.
ongratulations!
ent of Alumnus, David ’96, succinctly articulates our
By reading this
value proposition as a school for boys. When any-
book you are
body begins to discuss best practices in boys’ edu-
tomatically equate the best in boys’ education with
trators, the generosity of concerned and committed alumni and parents, and, most importantly, the wis-
The history of The Haverford School is one of dis-
dom, compassion, and hard work of distinguished
tinguished graduates and distinguished teachers.
teachers.
Excellence in boys’ education begins in the classroom. If the relationship between teacher and stu-
This book will share with you a chronology of the
dent is weak, the educational process is undermined.
School, an analysis of educational best practices
At The Haverford School, our outstanding teaching
gleaned from observations of Haverford teaching
award is named in honor of Spanish instructor Ra-
by a leading expert on how boys learn, a collection
fael Laserna, and it celebrates, “the teacher who has
of sample best lessons for boys assembled by three
a lasting influence on his or her students and who
Haverford School alumni who currently teach at
inspires them to learn and to excel in the classroom
their alma mater, and an annotated bibliography of
and in life.” I didn’t know Rafael, but what his col-
the most current thought on best teaching practices
leagues and former students tell me over and over
for boys. This book reflects The Haverford School’s
is how he inspired success in students who were
not always successful in other areas and how he changed lives in the classroom because he cared about every boy, and every boy knew it. He set the standard of good teaching expected at Haverford: every boy counts, and it is the job of every teacher to develop each boy’s full potential. The Haverford School has been on the front line of the latest efforts to define and enact the best teaching practices for boys. As a charter member of the International Boys’ Schools Coalition, Haverford has worked with schools for boys from around the world to define the key educational methods that
statistics reveal that girls are more tolerant of bad
best serve boys’ learning. Several years ago, the
teaching; they will learn despite negative teacher
theme of an International Boys’ Schools Coali-
traits that will set boys back. For example, boys will
tion Conference in Australia was the “The Spirit
not do the work for a teacher they believe does not
of Boys,” and speakers and workshops focused on
like them; girls will. Girls work through situations
best practices to help boys learn and grow into emo-
where the teacher is not organized; boys are more
tionally healthy men. One lecture in particular has
affected by the organizational skills of a teacher.
stayed with me. In a presentation entitled “School
Boys learn better with a touch of laughter and hu-
and Teacher Effectiveness – Especially for Boys,”
mor in the classroom; funny is not as much a fac-
Dr. Kenneth J. Rowe, Director of the Australian
tor in girls’ learning. Girls can deal with ambiguity
Council for Education Research, made a statisti-
better than boys. More than girls, boys like to know
cally supported case for outlining what works best
what the rules are, and they are more discouraged in
in schools for boys.
a classroom when they perceive a lack of fairness. The four F’s: Friendly, Focused, Funny, and Fair,
I greatly oversimplify Dr. Rowe’s presentation,
describe teacher characteristics that prove more ef-
but what he shared has immediate implications
fective with boys than girls.
for making schools more intentionally effective learning environments for boys. Not surprisingly,
A personal recollection of my most effective teach-
Dr. Rowe’s research showed that boys and girls
ers supports these conclusions, and, I think, if we review the effectiveness (or ineffectiveness) of your
respond to teacher traits differently. Overall, the
or your son’s teachers, you can trace it to these char-
Boys respond to role models, and they need to see
acteristics. The truly great teachers seem to have all
a wide range of masculinity after which to pattern
the right stuff, and sometimes a teacher can build
their lives. At The Haverford School our graduates
a reputation by stressing one or two unique teach-
have been exposed to a variety of men who model
ing traits. However, a significant weakness in any
their masculinity in different ways. They have also
one teaching trait, according to the research, will
benefited from strong women teachers and coaches
dramatically reduce a teacher’s effectiveness, espe-
who know how boys learn and appreciate their in-
cially with boys. As in most good research, these re-
imitable ways. Boys have been taught by teachers
sults seem to confirm common sense. The Haverford
who appreciate the unique learning needs of boys
School has had more than its share of boy-friendly
and develop in them important empathetic skills,
teachers who were fair, focused in presenting their
and, as you will see in the sample lessons, we are
material, and who appealed to a boy’s sense of hu-
working to share what our teachers know to be the
mor to impart important lessons.
best ways to teach boys. At The Haverford School our most effective teachers are those who genuinely like the boys and young men they teach. You can’t
At an International Boys’ School Coalition Confer-
fake that with boys.
ence in Dallas, Texas, Dr. Edward Hallowell was especially insightful in the teaching methods that reach boys best. He talked about his intellectual awakening in eleventh-grade English, his teacher’s use of laughter, never shame, to bring out his students’ attention to detail and words. He reminisced about the beginning of a conversation that has never ended, a conversation of the mind that has turned into the very thing that as a psychologist Dr. Hallowell does for a living. He talked about how this extraordinary teacher made learning an emotional experience and how that experience was more concentrated and less distracted because of the all-boy environment. That teacher is still teaching boys at Saint Mark’s and was on the stage to introduce his former student.
It is sad that so much of the debate about new re-
physical breaks to help them release excess energy
search into learning style differences between girls
and focus in class; and that at The Haverford School,
and boys is fraught with sociological caveats and,
their sons will never come home and tell them that
more often than not, hijacked by the left-right po-
the teachers like the girls better.
litical noise machine. I would bet that most teachers and laymen would agree that boys and girls interact
In Middle School, boys need extra attention teach-
differently to their educational environments. In-
ing them organization skills, and they thrive aca-
spired and energized by a common effort to educate
demically without the added stress of navigating the
good men, those of us who teach at The Haverford
hormone jungle that is puberty in competition with
School do not see a school for boys as an anachro-
young women who are two to three years ahead
nistic throwback to some forgotten age. Instead, we
of them in maturity. Also, in an all-boys Middle
see Haverford as a place to learn fundamental les-
School, they are allowed, in fact encouraged, to con-
sons about our sons and to revel in the joy that boys
tribute their talents to the arts. Sometimes, the arts
bring to our lives. We know what it means to be a
can be perceived as outside the domain of men, but
school for boys, and we celebrate the unique quali-
at Haverford they are an important part of a well-
ties of the boys and young men we teach.
rounded education. The boys do not have to be selfconscious about demonstrating musical, artistic, or
Education is not gender neutral unless teachers are
dramatic skills. They are encouraged to pursue the
informed of gender learning differences and adjust
complete range of their human potential.
to individual student needs. Girls and boys move through their developmental stages in markedly different ways, and often quite out of harmony with one another. Girls acquire language facility sooner, comprehend concepts earlier, and develop small motor control at a younger age. There is a fastidiousness to the work of girls that most boys never acquire. I usually begin The Haverford School admissions sessions pointing out that boys are slower to learn the language arts than girls, thus we emphasize learning reading skills thoroughly; they are more rambunctious and need the strenuous activity of recess and gym class, thus their days are full of
In Upper School, young men need to learn how to listen, to make good decisions, and how to empathize. We work against the strong, silent stereotype, encouraging and actually teaching empathy. In peer leadership and social psychology classes, we teach and encourage boys to learn how to listen to and care for one another. The boys form incredibly strong relationships with one another. Again, the ability to focus on the arts without being selfconscious, to pursue academic achievement for academic achievement’s sake, and the lack of superficial posturing for the opposite sex enhance their Upper School experience. Sociological and political opinions aside, all of our students need our individual attention. No one argues that certain segments of our male population are failing disproportionately, and that our success
about relationships, being part of something bigger
as a society depends on all of our children getting
than yourself, and loving those around you. Boys
the best education we can provide. The best thing
are joiners and boys make great friends. The bonds
we can do is to get beyond the myths and the poli-
of friendships that form in the all-male class last a
tics of single-sex education, encourage all of our
lifetime.
students to blossom, and, most importantly, never stop celebrating the joy that is the wonder of boys.
Boys are competitive. When confronted with intel-
And what should we celebrate?
lectual or artistic challenges, boys rise to the trial. They like to compete with one another, and they
Boys are social. They want to be part of something
like to test themselves against their limits. Girls are
larger than themselves. The former All-American
more sympathetic to those who do not win, where
and All-Pro football player Joe Ehrmann points
boys exalt in their victories. If handled correctly,
out that in today’s world boys are taught that being
competition in an all-male environment is a strong
a man is about being successful in athletics, with
motivator and can be a positive force in the learning
women, and earning money when, in reality, life is
dynamic.
Boys are active. Anyone who has been around boys knows that they can’t sit still. They like to touch each other and push when in a line. They pick up sticks and sword fight when they are supposed to be on a nature walk. They respond to big-muscle, active-learning challenges and thrive on physical challenges. Their boundless energy can sometimes be at the root of behavior and discipline problems if not appreciated and guided in more positive directions. Boys love hands-on projects – making things, building things up, or tearing things down. Boys are great leaders. They can handle responsi-
tice is engaged. Boys tend to see the world more
bility from a very young age and respond in direct
black-and-white than girls and, as Carol Gilligan
proportion to the trust shown them. Compared to
has pointed out in her groundbreaking research on
levels of self-confidence in girls, boys are overly
girls, boys are less concerned with feelings in de-
confident, even when the evidence for such confi-
ciding moral issues than they are concerned with
dence is not there. In the hands of a good teacher,
fairness and justice. Boy-friendly schools engage
this built-in can-do attitude can be a wonderful in-
boys in making the rules that they should live by,
centive to academic achievement, leadership suc-
and once established, boys feel more comfortable
cess, and self-esteem. Given opportunities for lead-
in a community with very set boundaries. They are
ership, boys will rise to the challenges and exceed
much more literal than girls in their efforts with
our expectations more often than not.
moral calculus.
At boy-friendly schools you will find boy-focused
Boys like to take charge, and those of us who work
support services. In boys you will find a wider
with boys are generally impressed with the virtues
range of learning differences than you will with
of letting boys take responsibility for their moral
girls, therefore boy-friendly schools have extensive
decisions. Our student-run honor system has been
support systems to make sure all learning styles are
a success because our boys take responsibility for
fully engaged and appreciated.
community values of respect and honesty, and they have the courage to speak up when those virtues are not being adhered to.
At boy-friendly schools, a boy’s innate sense of jus-
Likewise, boys should be engaged in hands-on, re-
Essential Qualities of a
sult-oriented community service. There are more
Haverford Graduate
visual and active learners among the ranks of boys, and the “Empty Bowls” hunger project that re-
With the background of a superior liberal arts education, a Haverford School graduate should:
quires making soup bowls and preparing a dinner to raise awareness about world hunger is a big hit
Think critically and communicate effectively.
with them. Building Iroquois log houses out of invasive trees culled from a city park is a wonderful, hands-on Middle School service program. At the
Possess intellectual curiosity and a passion for lifelong learning.
Upper School level, Habitat for Humanity is a sure-
Appreciate the arts.
fire way to engage boys in meaningful community
Have a moral compass to guide him through life.
service.
Respect others. Schools for boys are schools where teachers care.
Cherish the humanity in all people and treat them equitably.
Any good school is a school where teachers love their students and their job of teaching. This is a
Take joy in his accomplishments and those of others, but also recognize the potential for growth from adversity.
truism that we can all agree to, but it does not go far enough in illuminating what happens in a truly
Value perseverance and hard work.
boy-friendly school. They are magical places. I can only speak from my experience at The Haverford
Meet the challenges of daily life, great and small, with courage, flexibility, and humor.
School, but the key to success in any school is making the student know that his learning is important
Pursue health of mind and body.
and that HE is important – to himself and to oth-
Know how to collaborate and compete with grace, to lead and to follow.
ers. The wonder of boys transcends sociology and politics. Inspired and energized by a common effort to educate good men, those who teach at all-boys’
Share responsibility for the environment.
schools see them as places to learn fundamental les-
Live as a cooperative, compassionate, and engaged member of his local, national, and global communities.
sons about our sons and to celebrate the joy that boys can bring to our lives. Enjoy the following celebration in word and image of The Haverford School’s 125 years for the boys.
The Haverford School
Founded 1884
development that can have important consequenc-
Great Schools for Boys
es for effective teaching. For example, many boys
Brad Adams, Executive Director International Boys’ Schools Coalition
struggle with the tasks of reading and writing, especially as taught in the modern curriculum, and good
I
schools for boys are especially savvy in deploy-
It’s an opportunity to mark and
ponent where they own the flow and objectives of
celebrate the flourishing, and in-
learning. Of course, good teachers know that there
deed, the renaissance of schools
is a wide range of learning styles and preferences
for boys! In fact, Haverford is a
among boys, but an all-boys’ classroom can be a re-
leading member of the International Boys’ Schools
markably effective and inclusive place to spark and
Coalition, a remarkable worldwide network of
celebrate all of them. This highly specialized focus
schools, all dedicated to learning together about
leads to heightened practice. In fact, Haverford and
what makes a school for boys a truly great one.
seventeen other IBSC schools are currently engaged
These schools are in so many places and differ in so
in just such an unearthing of these best approaches:
many important ways, but in their daily work and in
The Wisdom of Teaching in Boys’ Schools.
t is a privilege to join in cel-
ing texts and approaches that lift achievement. We
ebration of The Haverford
know, too, that many boys tend to respond better to
School’s 125th anniversary.
lessons with a strong competitive and active com-
their aspirations they have the following attributes in common.
How boys learn, and learn together First and foremost, great schools for boys start with how boys learn. Good teachers in these schools have perhaps always plied their craft with intuitive good sense and wise observation about what “works” to engage boys. What we are seeing today is a burgeoning, intentional, and increasingly precise “pedagogy for boys.” It’s informed in part by an expanding body of neuro-cognitive research, which is beginning to unveil differences between boys’ and girls’ trajectories of brain and learning
Boys in the zone
cause. And as members of a team, boys display and
Ambitious schools for boys have an unusual capaci-
learn about the sometimes challenging lessons of
ty to tap their imaginative energy and intense focus.
character and self-discipline. And, the spirit of team
Absorbed in hobbies and collecting, in spontaneous
reaches further into the fabric of school life – to the
play and sports, or in an almost unimaginable va-
string ensemble, the theater troupe, and even the
riety of activities and projects, boys are especially
collaborative classroom.
affirmed by the performance of mastery and competency. They revel in what Milhaly Csikszentmi-
The Arts
halyi calls being in the “flow” – “that condition
Increasingly so, contemporary schools for boys put
of heightened focus, productivity, and happiness
an emphasis on the arts – to develop self-expression
that we all intuitively understand and hunger for.”
and competency, and to deepen a sense of meaning
Great schools for boys celebrate and build upon this
and purpose. So often the first stop on a tour of a
natural enthusiasm and passion, and use it wisely
thriving school for boys is the new fine arts studio,
as a powerful tool to deepen school and personal
theatre, the design and technology facility, or the
engagement. They guide and celebrate “boys in the
music rehearsal and performance spaces. There,
zone” – whether on the rugby pitch, in the music stu-
boys are often at their most focused best, in the
dio, or in the classroom.
“zone” of creative enterprises. These meet the needs of the talented student, but they also bring a sense of
Team
creative mastery to the life of every boy. Schools for
It is perhaps axiomatic that sports are everywhere
boys can be highly effective in encouraging them
in a school for boys – from the elite team down
to explore this additional dimension of personhood.
to that spontaneous handball game at recess. In a
On the same tour, the visitor is likely to encounter
school for boys, even the eternal rhythms of the
the multitalented and engaged boy – the fullback
school day are harnessed to help boys find positive
who sings in the choir, the thespian who captains
outlets and expression for their unstoppable energy.
the rugby team. And that’s an intentional outcome
Not all boys, of course, are as athletic or gregarious
of the mission of a school for boys.
as others, but the experience of team has a positive role in a boy’s life. Team play of all sorts enriches
Many paths to manhood
the mastering of skill. The “team” is for many boys
One of the most remarkable aspects of these high-
a training ground for camaraderie and loyalty, a
functioning schools is their ability to expand the
foundation for learning how the self finds a greater
horizons of manhood for boys, and to do so in ways
10
With this core affirmation begins a rich and ongoing commentary about “what it means to be a man.” Diversity of perspective and achievement are welcomed and celebrated; and the men and women who teach there serve as strong, engaging role models. It’s interesting to observe that more and more schools for boys offer or require courses or units on the topic of “masculinities,” inviting boys to dig deeper into this core of their identity. In addition, lots of hard evidence tells us that boys in schools for boys are more likely to explore subjects that might be considered “unmasculine,” and to pursue a broader range of disciplines and vocations thereafter.
Boys step up In these schools, boys are encouraged to “step up.” Here the distinct advantage of an all-boys’ learnthat can profoundly challenge a constricting defini-
ing environment means that boys routinely and
tion of masculinity. They can point the way to “many
naturally rise to tasks that girls might otherwise do.
paths to manhood,” and guide boys along this jour-
Boys lead in every aspect of classroom discussion
ney. But it begins with an open and compassionate
and participation, and show a wider and more com-
affirmation. Reporting for the “Good Man Project,”
plete range of engagement and thought than might
a collaborative undertaking of New Zealand boys’
be the case in a coed environment. They step up as
schools, Cecilia Lashlie writes:
school leaders, as editors of the yearbook; they step
“By their very existence, boys’ schools encourage
up as flutists and singers, as budding poets in the
the building of a sense of pride in being male. In a
literary journal. They take risks on new challenges
world where there’s a great deal of discussion about
and activities where they might slip or fail; and they
the absence of positive male role models and where
show courage in standing up in an assembly hall
much of the media focus is on the more negative
to talk about something that matters to them and
aspects of young men, the ability of boys’ schools
to the community. And when they step up in these
to provide an alternative view cannot be underesti-
and other ways, they are supported and celebrated
mated.”
by their peers.
11
Compass
Robert Greenleaf’s enduring Servant Leadership
At the heart of any great school for boys is the work
comes to mind: “The servant-leader is servant first
of character. Boys are natural and strong justice-
… It begins with the natural feeling that one wants
makers, possessed of a strong moral sense. The
to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings
task of educators of boys is to nurture and draw out
one to aspire to lead.”
those core values of integrity, respect, and responsibility. It can find expression in formal character
Perhaps in just this way, and in deep resonance with
or leadership programs, but it lives especially in the
an enduring notion of masculinity, schools for boys
ethos and relationships of the school community.
foster their natural but often unexpressed capacity
A football coach explains the lesson of a famous
for service and sacrifice for others. “Hands on” ser-
headmaster:
vice learning and volunteerism – in the neighbour-
“I want you to have revolving integrity. What does
hood, in the city, or abroad – are thus important to
that mean? No matter which way you turn, or what
schools for boys, and deftly tap their energy. Boys
situation you’re in that turns you, people will see that you have the same integrity in every situation. You’re no different here with me than you are tonight with your friends. You’re no different in class than you are at home. When a situation’s easy, you’re no different than when it’s hard …” Schools for boys differ widely, of course, and the enterprise of character building may be specifically religious and spiritual, and the form it takes in any particular school will find different words and emphasis. But this central work is powerfully consistent across all effective schools for boys.
To serve and to lead It follows that a major purpose of a great school for boys is to heighten awareness and action in their community, and in their relationships with others.
12
are profoundly rewarded and challenged by service
taking care of themselves. Boys are more likely
opportunities that take them out of themselves and
than girls to engage in high risk activities, abuse
grow the roots of empathy and connectedness to
substances, and commit violence. Far more boys
their community. Inside the school, cutting-edge
than girls are diagnosed with learning disabilities
leadership programs are likely to emphasize team-
and medicated. We have already discussed boys’
work and mentoring, the hallmarks of service lead-
emotional vulnerability. These are all difficult
ership.
matters that are not easily solved, but an effective school for boys can address these issues head-on.
Connected boys
They keep boys “in the groove” – active, fit, and
The work of growing up is joyful, but sometimes,
engaged. They provide support and counseling, and
and for some boys, it’s hard. Too often they pick
tackle the toughest issues in assemblies and in the
up the message that emotional connectedness and
curriculum. And they help parents to sharpen their
expression are somehow unmanly: better to hide
knowledge and skills. More than ever, the promo-
behind a tough-skinned exterior. But the emotional
tion of boys’ health and well-being is vital to the
current runs deep and many boys are vulnerable
work of schools for boys.
and alone, often without support and skill. It may well be that many boys are less able than most girls
Community
to put words to feelings. In contemporary schools
Schools for boys are community-builders. Boys are
for boys, teachers and staff are well-versed in this
capable of great loyalty and love for one another,
social-emotional realm, and provide an empathy-
and for their school. Friendships and relationships
building environment. In a boys’ literature class,
are easy and relaxed, even if noisy and rambunc-
without the pressure to pose, defer, or hide, boys
tious at times! Intentionally, schools for boys cele-
can and will express themselves, and they do so
brate the full range of achievement, and thirst on its
with remarkable acuity and sensitivity. All of this
daily demonstration, often in novel and compelling
matters, of course, because their personal well-be-
ways. Pride in the fellowship of the school commu-
ing is foremost. But it also important because such
nity is kindled again and again. And many schools
social-emotional intelligence is essential to their
for boys relish history and a degree of ceremony,
well-faring as tomorrow’s citizens and leaders.
all of which help to knit the tight fabric of community life. The task of a good school for boys is to
Healthy boys
build on this natural will to belong and to use it as
Medical research from around the world is grimly
foundation for building self-confidence and shared
consistent: men – and boys – are not very good at
purpose as a learning community.
13
Understanding the business of boyhood
Neither slogan nor relic, the mission statement lives
Lashlie again hits the mark: “… one of the inher-
at the heart of a school that is truly for boys.
ent strengths of boys’ schools,” she writes, “is their ability to revel in and celebrate the business of
The future
boys.” Never a dull moment! At a time when boys
There can be no doubt that such wonderfully fo-
are so often seen as toxic or somehow deficient, ed-
cused and diverse schools for boys are well-poised
ucators in schools for boys champion them as rich
to embrace all the exciting, if daunting, challenges
in potential to achieve and “to do good.” They strive
of the future. Indeed, they are at the forefront of
to be places where “each boy is known and loved,”
educational leadership. Best wishes to The Haver-
to borrow one school’s unabashed declaration of
ford School as it celebrates this anniversary, and as
purpose. While setting clear and firm boundaries
it continues to grow and innovate in service to the
and expectations, schools for boys are wise about
next generations of boys!
the business of boyhood.
Mission And finally, all of these attributes are anchored in mission. To a great degree, these schools are no longer just “boys’ schools by tradition.” They are now “boys’ schools by conviction” – with confidence in their institutional purpose and effectiveness. Further, they are not “schools comprised of boys,” but schools for boys – designed in every way to respond to their needs, to harness their potential, and to guide them along the journey toward full and responsible manhood. As mission-driven schools for boys, governors and trustees put this overarching objective as a key instrument on their dashboard of governance overview. And most important of all, the men and women who teach there are engaged in lively, focused, and constant discussion about the best ways to ensure that the mission is advanced.
14
125 Years: A timeline of the Haverford School
15
Notable Alumnus: Smedley Darlington Butler
Smedley Butler was a Major General in the U.S. Marine Corps and, at the time of his death, the most decorated Marine in U.S. history. He is one of nineteen people to be awarded the Medal of Honor twice, and one of only three to be awarded a Marine Corps Brevet Medal and a Medal of Honor, and the only person to be awarded a Marine Corps Brevet Medal and a Medal of Honor for two different actions. Butler attended Haverford until 1889, when he left to join the Marines at age seventeen.
The Haverford College Grammar School opens with twenty-five students. Sumner Crosman becomes Headmaster the same year.
1884
Haverford College Grammar School joins the two-year-old Inter-Academic Athletic Association.
1885 Merion Cottage is completed and becomes the first school building. Its nickname is “The Incubator.”
16
1888
1891
Haverford’s football team wins the first Inter-Academic and Inter-Scholastic Championships.
Notable Alumnus: Maxfield Parrish 1898 Maxfield Parrish was a famous painter, known for such works as “Daybreak” and his illustrations of Poems of Childhood. His work has been featured as album art for musicians including Enya, the Moody Blues, Elton John and Michael Jackson. In 2001, Parrish was featured in a U.S. Postal Service commemorative stamp series honoring American illustrators.
Official name becomes “The Haverford School” and Wilson Hall opens.
The Dramatic Club is formed.
1894
1897
1903
The Haverford School purchases the Austin Estate. The Oaks boarding facility is acquired as part of this purchase, which brings the campus to its current location.
Fun Fact: 1898 Because of the similarity of the School colors and those of the flag of Spain, the student body voted to drop yellow from “maroon and yellow” for the duration of the Spanish-American War and adapted the School colors to “maroon and gold.”
17
Edmund Mood Wilson becomes Headmaster.
Fire destroys The Oaks boarding facility, but the School rebuilds.
1905
1909
1906
The Haverford School withdraws from the Inter-Academic Athletic Association (having won the AllAround Cup five years in a row) in order to compete with schools outside the I.A.A.A., and to deemphasize winning in favor of sportsmanship.
1912
The first of the second generation of Haverford School boys: Collwyn Kennedy Humphreys and Charles Owen Humphreys enrolled in Lower School.
Alumni Athlete: W. Howard Fritz Jr. 1909 Represented the United States in the 1912 Olympics. He placed eighth in pole vault.
18
Notable Alumnus: E. Burke Wilford Jr. 1918 Wilford is believed to have designed the first American aircraft to fly without wings. In 1931, his gyroplane made its first successful flight from the field. He is also credited with the design of the powered dental chair now in general use. Wilford also developed the varispeed control system for electrical motors, which is now used on everything from drills to food blenders. This invention won him a Franklin Institute award.
The Haverford School reenters the Inter-Academic Athletic Association.
1916
Haverford’s basketball team wins Inter-Academic Championship.
1921
The School becomes a nonprofit organization.
1923 Twenty-five graduates lost their lives in World War I. Memorial Field was dedicated to these graduates in 1924.
19
1924
FUN FACT: Philip Bishop Day In 1938, upon the death of Phys. Ed. teacher, Philip Bishop, the School’s Annual Spring Sports field day was dedicated to his honor. The Annual Spring Sports field day has been a part of Haverford tradition since 1889 , but has wavered in popularity over the years. Philip Bishop Day is alive and well at present, with a community service component as a newer tradition in honor of Philip Bishop.
Ryan Gymnasium is completed and the Cum Laude Society is founded.
1926 The first Phi Beta Kappa Award is given.
Cornelius B. Boocock becomes Headmaster.
1931
1935
1937
Haverford’s football team wins Inter-Academic Athletic Championship Notable Alumnus: Francis Beverly Biddle 1903 On Aug. 25, 1941, President Roosevelt nominated Francis Biddle to be Attorney General of the United States. The Senate promptly approved the appointment. Biddle’s great-great-grandfather, Edmund Randolph, was the first Attorney General of the United States, and was appointed by President George Washington in 1789. - Haverford School Alumni News, October 1941
20
Two wings are added to Wilson hall in honor of the hundreds of alumni who served in World War II.
Dr. Leslie R. Severinghaus becomes Headmaster when Boocock leaves to join the Navy to serve in World War II.
1941 After the bombing of Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, faculty, students, and alumni either volunteered or were drafted.
1942
1943 Fire damages The Oaks a second time and The Haverford School decides to discontinue boarding students.
21
1949
Alumni Athlete: Frederick “Fritz” P. B. Thornton ’47 was on the 1956 U.S. Olympic field hockey team. At The Haverford School, he garnered fifteen varsity letters (football, squash, basketball Captain, track, baseball, and tennis).
The Service Club sponsors foreign exchange students for the first time and Dr. Severinghaus institutes the Annual Fund.
1951
Van Pelt Hall, the new Lower School, opens.
1955 The Oaks is torn down and building begins on Crosman Hall, the new Middle School. SPECIAL HONOR:
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Hughes had six sons attend Haverford. All six boys were enrolled in 1954. Their youngest son graduated in 1964. Dr. and Mrs. Hughes paid a total of seventy years of tuition fees.
22
1959
1965
Memorial Gymnasium is completed and Ken Kingham serves as interim Headmaster.
Notable Alumnus: Charles “Pete” Conrad Jr In 1969, Pete Conrad landed on the moon with Alan Bean. He was the third man to walk on the moon. He served on Gemini 5 and 11, Apollo 12, and Skylab 2 missions. Conrad attended The Haverford School for eleven years.
Davis R. Parker becomes Headmaster.
1966 Notable Alumnus: Britton Chance ’31
The wrestling team wins its twenty-third consecutive Inter-Academic Championship.
1968 The lacrosse team wins State Championship.
Dr. Chance received the Franklin Medal for his many contributions to medical science. Chance’s father and grandfather had also won Franklin Medals in 1925 and 1912, respectively.
23
1973
FUN FACT: Bench Ball
Bench Ball is an original sport invented by Haverford students in the 1980s and played seated on benches with a tennis ball. Bench Ball games originated in the courtyard behind Wilson Hall, but were suspended in 2007 due to construction. Thankfully, the Bench Ball court has been restored behind the new Upper School.
W. Boulton Dixon ’61 is the first graduate to become Headmaster.
1983
1986
The Haverford School celebrates its 100th anniversary. Centennial Hall is built to commemorate the occasion.
Alumni Athlete: Michael Francis Mayock ’76
Coach Neil Buckley celebrates his 500th wrestling win, making him the high school coach with the most wins in a single sport in the nation.
Mike Mayock played for the New York Giants from 1982 to 1984 before going into broadcasting. Mayock is currently a college football analyst and draft analyst for NFL network.
24
1987
Notable Alumnus: Stuart Ambrose ’96
For the first time, the School broke with tradition and hired women faculty for the Middle and Upper School, and appointed a woman as Head of the Lower School.
1988
Joseph P. Healy becomes Headmaster.
1992
Ambrose has achieved critical acclaim on stage, screen and in the studio. In addition to his success in musical theater, he has had multiple appearances on Guiding Light and As the World Turns. He also released his debut album “Making it Through,” which received rave reviews.
1996
Haverford’s soccer team achieves its 700th win and takes the Inter-Academic Championship.
Fun Fact: Headmaster Healy established “On Behalf of Boys,” a research project aimed at understanding the unique aspects of education in an all-male environment. He hired the School’s first psychologist and created its first student learning center.
25
Dr. Joseph T. Cox becomes Headmaster.
1998
Haverford’s water polo team is formed.
1999
2000
The Haverford School celebrates its fifth alumnus to become a Rhodes Scholar, Jeff Manns.
Alumni Athlete: Jeremiah White ’00
White, a professional soccer player in California has been on two U.S. National teams. White’s first pro team was in Belgrade, Serbia.
2001
New Athletic Facility opens
Fun Fact:
In the Army, elite units have coins, symbols of pride that serve as a tangible emblem of a special commitment. Headmaster Cox brought that tradition to The Haverford School in 1999. These coins are given to students in special recognition of their dedication to the School and each other. On one side is the School crest with our founding date of 1884, as a reminder that our boys are part of a long and distinguished tradition. On the back of the coin are three words: Respect, Honesty, and Courage, the pillars of the Honor Code. 26
FUN FACT:
In 2001, The Haverford School began its Service Learning Program. Prior to that, the School had taken part in community service, but adding Service Learning to the curriculum was the beginning of an organized and sustained effort to help the community and to teach students the value of charity. The new Lower School, designed for how boys learn, is completed.
2002
2005
The students vote to have an Honor Code and in 2003, they elect the Honor Council to enforce this code.
27
2006 The Haverford School wins the highly coveted Inter-Academic League Heyward Cup, which is awarded to the school whose athletic teams have the combined best record for the year.
FUN FACT:
In 1955, The Big Room in Wilson Hall was converted to classrooms. In 2008, the Big Room was restored to its rightful purpose as a place where boys can gather to relax, study, or play games.
FUN FACT:
In November 2008, The Haverford School and Episcopal Academy participated in their 99th Haverford/EA Day competition. In 2009, the two rival schools will celebrate the 100th anniversary of their quest for the split sweater.
2008 New Upper SChool Opens and Haverford celebrates 125 years ...for the boys.
28
29
Intuitive to Intentional
Abigail Norfleet James, Ph.D. “Education is not filling a bucket, but lighting a fire.” ~William Butler Yeats (1865-1939)
C
der. Because they lack specific
Teaching boys
knowledge about the world, it is
At the heart of education is the acquisition of lan-
tempting to see them as vessels
guage, both spoken and written. Boys’ brains de-
to fill with facts, and much of
velop language fluency somewhat later than girls.’
education is framed just so. This curricular model is
This difference is greatest at the earliest ages, and
necessarily teacher-centered and student-static for
consequently some little boys find that they are
boys who learn best when they are an active part of
ill-equipped for the verbal requirements of educa-
the learning process, and it often tamps down the
tion. If school is about filling a bucket with words,
fire of intellectual hunger. When teachers kindle a
boys often lose their excitement and interest as they
passionate interest, boys learn with joy and excite-
struggle to remember facts that seem to them to be
ment.
irrelevant and unrelated. A school for boys, how-
hildren enter school full of enthusiasm, curiosity, and won-
ever, encourages active participation as a way to During the past twenty years, educators have be-
frame the world so that boys will perceive the con-
gun to realize the problems that boys are having in
nections between words and meaning.
school. They recognize that many boys are not excited about their daily classes and that they are doing
In 2007, The Haverford School invited me to ex-
just enough to complete the minimum level. Many
plore every part of their program – visiting each
of today’s schools for boys, on the other hand, offer
classroom, talking with all of the teachers, and ex-
a very different picture. Boys are the focus of these
amining how the School puts into practice the art
special environments where every part of the school
and science of teaching boys. Having extensively
is intentionally designed to respond to the way boys
researched gender learning differences, I was asked
learn best. These communities produce boys who
to identify and articulate those strategies I observed
love school and who love to learn.
that were most clearly effective in teaching boys.
31
The following presents short descriptions of the
to ear infections, which muffle sound and interfere
neuro-cognitive and educational research about
with hearing. One theory about why boys have a
gender-based learning, matched with examples
particularly hard time with spelling is that they
from my observation of teaching and learning at
don’t hear words precisely.
The Haverford School. The teaching practices in each division at Haverford are marked by “H.”
In the Kindergarten and first grade, a computerbased program helps the boys learn to recognize
Physical differences
the sounds of words. Students listen through
At the most basic level, boys and girls differ in their
headphones and respond appropriately.
ability to manage sensory information. The following teaching methods target a specific sense and
The Kodály music program used in the Lower
help boys develop strategies to compensate where
School begins with singing and moving rhyth-
they might not have strengths.
mically so that the boys can train their ears to hear music and learn music phrasing.
Hearing: Due to a structural difference in the cochlea or the part of the ear that turns sound waves
To help boys start to hear words with simple
into neural impulses, girls can hear sounds that are
consonant patterns and those with complex
higher and softer than sounds boys can hear. Fac-
patterns, the second grade manipulates a stack
ing the listeners and speaking with a supported
of 3x5 cards with different words on them. As
tone are basic methods that heighten hearing. Even
they read, pronounce, and sort each word with
with such strategies, boys often still need training
patterns such as “dge” and “tch,” they associ-
in listening to help them distinguish the sounds of
ate the way the word looks with the way that
language. Additionally, boys are more susceptible
it sounds. One Lower School science teacher uses humor to help the boys learn to pay attention to verbal directions. The teacher said that they could leave when he said “go.” Then he said, “One, two … gopher!” Several boys jumped up, realized their mistake, laughed, and sat down. Then he said, “One, two … ghost!” No one moved. Finally,
32
when he said, “One, two … go!” they all rose.
In Middle School music, the boys sing by solfeggio – fa, la, re, do, and so forth. They have to listen closely to make sure they intone the right notes. Next the boys match actions, such as marching or moving their hand up and down, with a specific note or rhythm, thereby reinforcing their auditory knowledge. In an Upper School Spanish class, the teacher shows part of a Harry Potter movie dubbed in
lessons designed to help the boys understand
Spanish. The boys know the scene in English
the complex nature of the three-dimensional
and hearing it in Spanish as they watch sharp-
world.
ens their attention to the sounds of Spanish. In Lower School physical education, the boys Another Spanish teacher has students listen
are divided into two teams designated by two
to Spanish radio or TV and keep a journal in
colors. Eight balls of the same two colors are
Spanish recording key phrases and reactions
on the floor. They play a version of dodge ball
to the news. Writing down what they hear as-
with the added detail of having to use the ap-
sists the boys in both distinguishing and re-
propriate color ball when they throw. Among
membering the sounds of the language.
other things, this exercise uses movement to sharpen their attention.
Vision: From birth, boys’ eyes react to movement while girls tend to fix on faces. Boys who do not ap-
One Middle School English teacher introduces
pear to be paying attention may be following some
the boys to a graphic version of The Masque
movement in the classroom. Incorporating move-
of the Red Death by Edgar Allen Poe. They
ment into a lesson plan is an effective strategy to
use the pictures to grasp the basic narrative.
focus the student on the intended message.
Some of the vocabulary, even in this abridged version, is a bit ambitious for the boys, but
A Lower School art teacher shows the boys
associating pictures with verbal descriptions
how to construct a “17-box guy.” Drawing a
provides a helpful frame that leads to the
series of rectangles, boys are able to create a
boys’ reading the text with more confidence, accuracy, and appreciation.
credible human figure. This is one of many art
33
In Upper School introductory physics class, boys interpret a schematic diagram in building a circuit which can create a distorted “fuzz” tone when a musical instrument, such as a guitar, is plugged into it. The boys must use their understanding of electronics and theory, as well as the diagram, to troubleshoot and achieve the desired outcome. Translating a diagram into a real device challenges boys to look closely at detail and visualize it in a different form. In an art class, the instructor prepares students for drawing the human face by working through a series of projects that build the The sixth-grade science students plant bulbs in
necessary skills. Projects focused on seeing
the gardens on the school campus. Before they
light and shade develop boys’ observational
put the bulbs in the ground, the boys make a
abilities and knowledge of three-dimensional
map of the bulbs, which they refer to in the
form. Then drawings analyzing the structure of
spring when the flowers come up and other
eyes, mouths, and noses give boys experience
planting commences. This exercise teaches vi-
really seeing human facial features. Working
sual organization and planning as well as the
with mirrors, boys then draw larger than life
benefits of mapping.
self-portrait heads using their newly acquired observational skills and drawing techniques.
One project in Middle School art is to design
In this way, breaking down a complex project
and make a mythology platter. Each student
into manageable components, boys are pre-
sculpts a large dish to represent the head of
pared on multiple levels, and “set up for suc-
the legendary figure they have studied. The
cess” for the challenge of drawing their own
assignment is to create a visual design that re-
face.
flects characteristics of this figure. It requires research and develops understanding of symbolism.
An Upper School English teacher shows clips
34
from three different film versions of Hamlet.
After the boys view different versions of the same
as well as its appealing shape helps the stu-
scene, they analyze the production, setting, and act-
dents to focus on a particular word or number.
ing. This lesson teaches boys that the same material
In the teacher’s hand this utensil is a sound
can be expressed in radically different ways and re-
cue, a visual cue, and a motion cue; moreover,
quires that they look for nuance.
when the boys point with it in the final activity, it is a touch cue.
Touch: Boys learn best when they can touch materials. Hands-on activities help boys pay attention
In a unit on ancient Egypt, students make de-
and provide additional information as they manipu-
cade strips to determine their lifespan and to
late things. In many schools, boys are disciplined
construct a timeline. They begin by counting
for handling classroom materials; consequently,
out ten decade strips to make one hundred.
they are denied an instinctive means of learning.
One group glues the strips together into a long
In a school for boys, lessons are designed so that
line, and another group glues the centuries to-
boys interact with materials as they learn about the
gether. Gluing together these very long time-
abstract.
lines gives the boys a physical sense of how long a decade, a century, and even two mil-
In Kindergarten, containers labeled with a let-
lennia are.
ter are filled with little things that begin with the assigned letter. The teacher dumps three
In a second-grade math lesson about poly-
containers and mixes the items and the boys
gons, the teacher reads the story The Greedy
sort them by the letter that begins their name.
Triangle which tells of a triangle who is not
For instance, they place the little lizard and
satisfied with only three sides and consequent-
light bulb in the “L” container and the little
ly seeks out a “shape-shifter.” The students
umbrella and unicorn in the “U” container.
use bendable straws to create various shapes
When watching this lesson, I noticed that each
into which the triangle could metamorphose
boy handled the object as if holding it helped
and finally name their creations: hexagon, oc-
him identify the sound of the letter more de-
tagon, pentagon, etc.
finitively. Science has an unfair advantage over other disciOne first-grade teacher uses a pointer with
plines because performing experiments is an ap-
a miniature wooden car fastened to the end.
pealing way for boys to learn about the subject. In
When she touches it to the board, the small tap
many schools, experiments are limited or are only
35
demonstrated because teachers do not know how to
As a fifth-grade social studies class learns about
use the energy of boys effectively.
the Mayan people of South America, they play Pok-A-Tok, a traditional Mayan game, which
At The Haverford School, science classes at ev-
historically ended with the losers being sacri-
ery level contain many activities and exercises.
ficed. In this twenty-first century version the
Rarely do the boys sit and take notes for the entire
winners are awarded chocolate instead, none-
class period. Instead, they are often working on
theless still providing the boys with an active
long-term projects or short activities that allow
way to understand Mayan customs.
them to experience concepts within a concrete framework. Their final assessments synthesize
In Middle and Upper School, a rotating sched-
the skills and content of the courses through
ule provides movement throughout the school
such creative projects as building bridges from
day. Classes are student-centered, and it is
popsicle sticks and testing their integrity with a
common to observe a student leading discus-
pneumatic device. The students who won built a
sions or presenting individual research.
bridge that withstood 152 pounds of pressure. Little boys develop their large muscle groups The common belief is that little boys are very ac-
early, and they enjoy practicing their targeting
tive and cannot sit still. If one observes a coed
skills (directing objects toward targets). At all
classroom, the boys generally look more restless
levels, math and science classes use manipu-
or bored than the girls. In Lower School, the boys
lative exercises that require aiming and read-
are very active and kinesthetic learning reigns. In
justing. For instance, fifth-graders delight in
Middle and Upper School, students are encouraged
building and racing dragster cars as VI Form-
to learn collaboratively. Accordingly, there is a cre-
ers (seniors) revel in building and testing tre-
ative buzz emanating from classrooms throughout
buchets. It is generally the fine motor skills,
Haverford.
however, that need more attention as these develop later. Handwriting, for example, is often
In Junior Kindergarten, all lessons have a
a challenge for boys.
physical component. During the unit on trees, the boys walk around the school campus iden-
In Junior Kindergarten, students use sticks and
tifying different types of conifers. They collect
other objects to shape letters. Cutting out let-
small samples of the different types of trees to
ters with scissors both trains the hand muscle
compare and take back with them to class.
and reinforces the figure of the letter. The final
36
favorite activity is forming letters with their bodies. One Lower School science teacher, as part of a health unit on coordination, teaches the boys to juggle using water-filled tennis balls. Learning to juggle requires concentrated hand-eye coordination, and the earlier boys start acquiring this skill the better their handwriting will be – as well as their ability to hit a baseball. however some generalizations can be made about In Lower School, students practice handwrit-
their cognitive abilities. The right side of the brain,
ing on individual white boards and on the
where spatial skills are centered, usually develops
classroom board. These different exercises
first in boys; whereas the left side of the brain, where
employ larger muscle groups rather than the
verbal skills are centered, develops first in girls. The
fine ones required for the conventional writing
twenty-month-old girl is likely to have twice the vo-
with pen and paper.
cabulary of a twenty-month-old boy, but the young boy can throw a ball with greater accuracy than can
Throughout the curriculum, art class projects
the young girl. In the primary grades at recess, it is
naturally strengthen boys’ fine and gross mo-
the girls who are chattering and whispering while
tor skills. Projects focus on developing specific
the boys are running, exploring, and shouting terse
manual skills, such as working on the potter’s
exclamations. School is all about verbal skills that
wheel in ceramics; at times projects such as still-
are used to convey ideas and to judge how much a
life drawings from observation are focused on
child has learned. In schools where evaluations are
developing eye-hand coordination. The oppor-
based solely on language skills, boys often struggle
tunities for boys to be physically engaged and
to express their knowledge. In a school for boys,
challenged to develop multiple fine and gross
students are given both nonverbal and verbal assess-
motor skills in their class work is why the visual
ments allowing them a variety of ways to convey
arts classes are so popular in boys’ schools.
their knowledge. At the same time, reading is emphasized so that the boys practice using and read-
Cognitive differences All children develop differently and individually;
ing words in different ways throughout their school day.
37
Verbal strategies: At Haverford in every division,
section in the middle allowing the words to
teachers devote most effort in helping boys develop
be seen through as though the words had been
verbal fluency. If you visit the Dining Hall at lunch,
highlighted.
you will witness the results. Every boy is talking and engaged, and in the Lower School, they are all
In fourth grade, the boys play “vivid verbs,”
talking at once.
a game in which they replace “telling” verbs with “showing” verbs, such as “yell” versus
Every class has time for silent, sustained read-
“tell.”
ing and the boys do not have to sit at their desks for this activity. The boys are allowed to
In library, fourth-grade boys select an author,
lie on the floor, drape themselves across their
research that author, devise three questions
desks, or find any position in which they are
to ask, draft a letter asking the questions, and
comfortable. In some Lower School rooms,
thank the author for reading their letter. After
teachers have developed reading nooks com-
sending the letters, they are often delighted
plete with beanbag chairs or soft pillows. Al-
with the replies.
lowing boys freedom of movement during this reading time respects their individual learning
A Middle School English teacher has the boys
style, improves their focus, and encourages
write a short narrative using the first-person
their pleasure of reading.
singular pronoun only. Then the boys rewrite the same piece using the second-person pro-
In Lower School, teachers disregard the twen-
nouns and once again using only third-per-
tieth-century admonition “Don’t move your
son pronouns. This exercise reveals how the
lips when you read.” In developing language
change in person alters the story.
fluency, many little boys achieve success in subvocalizing the written words. As they be-
In a Middle School English class, each boy in-
come more confident with their reading skills,
vents the first sentence of a story. The teacher
the subvocalization disappears.
writes the sentences on cards and deals them out randomly to the students who continue
In third grade, the class engages in a read-to-
the story with someone else’s sentence or
gether unit in which the boys use special rul-
idea. This creative exercise again exposes the
ers to train their eyes to stay on a single line of
students to different verbal expressions and
print. These rulers have a transparent yellow
viewpoints.
38
One Upper School English teacher gives each
In first grade, each morning begins by add-
pair of boys the same text, which has been
ing a straw to a container. When ten straws
separated into chunks of lines or paragraphs.
accumulate, a bundle of ten straws is placed
They have to reassemble the text. This exercise
in a container to the left of the first. When ten
teaches boys to read carefully and to pay atten-
bundles of ten straws accumulate, a very large
tion to the flow or transitions of the passage.
bundle representing one hundred straws is
One of the hardest verbal tasks boys have is
placed in a container to the left of the second
learning to proofread. This lesson helps boys
one. The boys experience the place value of
discover cues in what is written as they put the
numbers before the teacher formally presents
passage together, and strengthens their ability
the concept.
to identify incoherencies in their own writing. In second grade, students are given both cenUpper School English classes are primarily
timeter and inch rulers, and they measure all
seminars, and students engage in large and
sorts of objects with both to find length and
small group discussions.
area, investigating various oblong objects, such as playing cards, pattern blocks, and
Spatial strategies: Because boys generally have
small pieces of paper as tiles. Accordingly,
good spatial skills, it works well to begin a les-
the boys have a mental picture of length and
son with some strategy involving pictures, graphs,
area before the teacher begins to teach these
or tables. Using the visual framework to organize
concepts.
the material before moving on to the verbal content helps many boys remember the information.
In Lower School art, students learn to make mono prints of a drawing of the human face by
The Junior Kindergarten cuts out shapes to
creating grooves in a foam plate. The students
make a Santa Claus. They use a triangle for
ink the plate and use a press to make a print
Santa’s hat and another triangle for his face.
of their drawing. Because the plates are dis-
They use a long rectangle for Santa’s belt and
posable, boys can practice with several plates
cotton balls to make a beard. They reinforce
before they get the print they want. The draw-
their knowledge of shapes as they create the
ing on the plate will be backward on the print,
familiar figure and see the individual parts in
and this exercise helps boys practice mentally
a different way.
reversing the orientation of the drawing.
39
A Lower School science teacher has boys
same information two-dimensionally, three-
build robotic hands using a cutout of their
dimensionally, and four-dimensionally (time
hand, straws, string, and vinyl caulk. This task
is included in the living version as the elec-
requires a great deal of troubleshooting; how-
trons move around the nucleus).
ever, the teacher does not provide answers but encourages the student to solve their problem
Middle School math determines the relation-
with the device. Here again, the boys practice
ship between size and diameter of the circle
translating objects into other forms of expres-
using different sized circles that students draw
sions.
with a compass. They cut a piece of yarn the length of a diameter of each circle and then
In Middle School, the boys construct atoms
see how many pieces of yarn can be glued to
three different ways. They draw an atom, they
make the circumference of that circle. Finally,
build one using a marble board, and they work
each group of six boys is given a real pie and
with classmates to act out how an atom looks
must figure out how to divide it evenly before
and functions. Therefore, they express the
eating the pie.
40
An Upper School English teacher projects a
A lesson on the United States Constitution in
sonnet on the board and asks boys to find the
a fourth-grade class has the boys divided into
pattern of the rhyming words. Then they high-
four hypothetical states. Each “state” has to
light groups of words that rhyme with each
produce its own laws, symbols, and industries.
other using different colors, delineating the
Then the “states” meet to form a country, and
quatrains and final couplet. This visual pars-
they discover the need for a federal system.
ing helps students appreciate poetic form and
The boys elect representatives to head various
structure.
federal committees composed of four boys, one from each “state.” These committees then
Learning styles
examine parts of the Constitution to see how
Verbal skills involve material that is read, auditory
this document affects them personally. The
skills involve material that is heard, kinesthetic skills
boys actually experience the formation of a
involve material that is manipulated, and iconic
governmental system.
skills involve material that is presented as pictures, charts, or graphics. In general, boys learn best when
In fifth-grade social studies, students make a
a lesson requires kinesthetic or iconic skills. Edu-
timeline of the three empires that controlled
cation’s bias towards verbal and auditory skills cre-
Mesopotamia, and then they outline each of
ates problems for many boys, for they are still more
the empires on a map. They complete a chart
comfortable with moving and visualizing.
indicating reasons that living in a particular region was an advantage or a disadvantage. In
In introducing a research project, a third-grade
pairs, they list the achievements of the three
teacher has each boy write a report on a famous
empires. This exercise requires kinesthetic and
woman and on what makes their own mother
iconic skills to acquire verbal information.
famous. A poster outlines the research process, guiding the boys through the steps. One
In fifth grade, boys learn the art of parsing sen-
result is a “book” made of a number of 3 x 5
tences. They label all of the parts of speech and
index cards clipped together with “O” rings,
identify clauses and phrases, as well as types of
which asserts four facts that make their mother
sentences. This exercise examines the “mechan-
famous. Other products are an oral report on
ics” of the sentence in a more logical and struc-
their chosen famous woman and a drawing of
tured way than diagramming. It has the chal-
their mother. This project combines kinesthetic
lenge and lure of a puzzle but at the same time
activities to produce a verbal product.
helps them to read and write more precisely.
41
In Upper School history, students have a number
ments, cross-examinations by both the panel
of experiential activities that also serve as assess-
of judges and the other teams, and a closing
ments:
argument. The boys compete intensely for the ruling by the judges of being deemed the
For the III Form (freshmen) Archeological
country least guilty of causing the war.
Project, the boys work in two-man teams to research and identify a real artifact from a re-
The capstone activity of the study of V Form
gion of the world. They compete to produce
(juniors) American history is the Madison
the most accurate presentation of what the
Meetings. The boys are divided into pro and
artifact is, who used it and for what purpose,
con teams for researching and debating im-
when it was made, and where it is from. An
portant United States government polices.
archeologist from the University of Pennsyl-
They are structured to simulate what might
vania judges their findings.
have occurred during the Madison administration. Sample topics for 2008 were (1) The U.S.
The III Form (freshmen) also participates in the
government should end the subsidies for corn,
Jerusalem Trials. Building on what they have
(2) the U.S. government should withdraw all
learned about Judaism, Islam, Christianity, and
combat forces from Iraq within one year, and
the history of the region, boys work as teams
(3) the U.S. government should prohibit the
(consisting of Israel, Palestine, the United States,
use of torture on suspected terrorists. Follow-
and the United Nations) to debate who should
ing extended research, the teams spend one
rule Jerusalem today. The boys simulate an in-
day in debate as an alternate form of assess-
ternational forum where the interested parties
ment for their second-semester exam.
attempt to resolve a vital issue.
Emotional differences The major experiential activity in the IV
Recent research on the developing brain asserts the
Form (sophomores) is the World War I Trials.
likelihood that two parts of the brain involved with
Three-man teams represent the major Euro-
memory and emotion develop at different rates in
pean combatants in the Great War. The World
males and females. One of these is the hippocam-
Court has charged each country team with
pus, a component long understood to be responsible
having caused World War I. After extended re-
for turning short-term memories into long-term
search, the teams appear before the Court for
memories. Connected to the verbal center, it devel-
a week of trials, which include opening argu-
ops earlier in girls than in boys. The other part is
42
amygdala, which is now thought to play a role in the formation of emotions. This portion of the brain is not connected to the verbal center and develops earlier in boys. The realization of these two different developmental patterns explains why young girls are able to talk more readily about what excites or frightens them, and why young boys find verbalizing their emotions more difficult. Through stories, modeling, and role play, Kindergarten teachers teach the boys to use the “I message” as a way to resolve conflict. Rather then blaming others, they learn to express their feelings by saying “I don’t like it when
allows the boys with white shirts to sit but insists
you cut in front of me” or “It makes me sad
that those with shirts of other colors must stand.
when you won’t let me play a game.”
The boys object throughout this exercise until the teacher points out that they have just taken
In first grade, boys gather on the rug first thing
part in a lesson on segregation. Finally, the boys
in the morning to talk about their day. The per-
talk about how it feels to be denied privileges
son of the week selects the method that the
just because of the color of one’s shirt.
class will use to greet each other, such as high fives, shaking hands, or creating a “wave.”
Fifth-grade computer science students study a
This exercise is designed to foster a sense of
book called The Courage Zone. The teacher
community and respect.
provides a graphic that shows the boys how to move from their comfort zone to the cour-
As part of a unit on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a
age zone. They write stories about their expe-
second-grade teacher tells her class going to re-
riences in reaching their own courage zone.
cess that the boys wearing white shirts will line
The boys create first drafts on the computer,
up first and boys wearing other colored shirts
and the teacher helps them revise to produce a
will line up behind the boys in white shirts. Af-
final version. Boys find it easier to write about
ter recess, the boys with white shirts are allowed
their emotions before they read their stories to the class.
to get drinks of water first. In class, the teacher
43
In Lower School, boys often work in groups
masculine identity. Haverford has a good number of
to strengthen their social and verbal skills as
male teachers, and they serve as healthy models for
they learn to express themselves in many dif-
the boys. Both male and female teachers appropri-
ferent ways.
ately use the curriculum to encourage the boys to think about what it means to be a man.
A Middle School English teacher asks her students to read a short narrative and distinguish
In an Upper School lesson on Hamlet, the
the difference between the narrator and the
teacher asks the boys to see the main charac-
author. The boys must decide who owns the
ter from different perspectives. Is he a pirate
emotions – the narrator or the author. If the
or a commando? How is Hamlet different if
character is scared, the narrator has the emo-
played by Russell Crowe or Johnny Depp?
tions; if the passage describes a scary situaIn a close reading of The Autobiography of-
tion, the author has the emotions.
Benjamin Franklin, the boys compare Franklin A Middle School English class studying The
to modern politicians and examine Franklin’s
Masque of the Red Death considers the power
morals and ethics. The boys are fascinated to
of masks and the perils of Halloween for very
learn that one of our country’s founding fa-
little children. Why are masks so scary? This
thers was not always a shining example of eth-
discussion about emotions encourages the
ics and morality, but at the same time, a man
boys to talk easily about feelings they often do
of amazing creativity, energy, and purpose.
not articulate. In Middle and Upper School, teachers use peer review as a way to help boys learn to edit and review their work. This technique requires
Many boys find it difficult to learn historical details but have no trouble learning a vast number of facts about favorite sports figures. Haverford teachers engage their students through humor and interesting material.
good communication skills from both the re-
A fifth-grade science class studies volcanoes,
viewer and the student being reviewed. The
and their explosive properties raise interest
collaborative strategy helps the boys share
immediately. The boys are asked to name ten
ideas and emotions.
volcanoes that can be presently active or long dead, then they are directed to double-check
One essential difference between a coed school and
their answers on a Web site that happily in-
a school for boys is the emphasis on developing a
cludes clips of erupting volcanoes.
44
A Middle School Latin teacher shows boys
The resulting precipitates were very colorful
the chariot race scene from Ben Hur. The boys
and delighted the boys.
use their Latin to identify objects and events in the scene that they have studied. The boys
In an Upper School history class, after dis-
have no trouble naming the parts of the fight-
cussing Martin Luther’s nailing his ninety-five
er’s armor.
theses to the door of Castle Church in Wittenberg, the teacher gives the students an article
In a Middle School English class, the teacher
from an e-zine reporting on a man who had
introduces personal pronouns by playing the
nailed ninety-five comment cards to the door
comic routine “Who’s on First?” The boys
of a chain restaurant in protest of what he saw
have copies of the script so they can pay close
as the falling standards of the food at the res-
attention to what is said. After much amuse-
taurant.
ment, the teacher draws a diagram of a baseball field and the boys label the positions with
Discipline: Another factor in sexual differences in
the appropriate pronouns.
emotional development is the recent finding that males and females do not always respond to fear
The Middle School drama teacher teaches the
and excitement in the same way. It has long been
boys about lazzis – comic bits that are usually
known that when stressed, males respond with “fight
sight gags. She has them view a scene from
or flight.” Their blood floods into their muscles and
the movie The Princess Bride and asks them
brain, their heart and breathing rates increase, their
to identify as many lazzis as they can.
pupils dilate, their blood sugar level rises – all in an attempt to prepare to fight the perceived threat or
In Upper School English, students read and
run from it. Some girls, on the other hand, do not
comment on their writing and lead discussion
produce this response to stress, but go into what has
on assigned parts of the text. This active learn-
been termed “tend and befriend.” This physical re-
ing encourages the boys to take ownership and
sponse is the opposite of the male response and the
increases their interest.
female’s blood goes to the center of her body, her heart rate slows down, and she is unable to move
An Upper School science teacher asks stu-
quickly. For boys, stress can help the educational
dents to predict whether or not a reaction will
process; whereas for girls, stress can make learning
occur if two solutions are mixed together. Will
more difficult.
a precipitate form after mixing the chemicals?
45
In fifth-grade math, boys work standing at the
the blocks – he counts five. She asks the boy
board, a public forum that may cause a little
how many people are allowed to play with the
bit of stress. They each have their own spot at
blocks at one time. He responds “four” and she
the board and know exactly where to go. They
nods saying he will have to play with some-
do the practice problem, circle their answer,
thing else until someone leaves the blocks.
and step aside. If it is correct, they erase their
The boy participated in invoking the rule and
work and receive a star. If they have trouble,
understood clearly what he should do.
the teacher works with the student. When a boy accumulates three stars, he may sit down.
In several Lower School classes, the boys
The boys who finish early help their neigh-
work with their teacher to develop rules for
bor who may be having more trouble with the
the class. In one class, the list has a closing
problem.
statement: “The goals and expectations were thought of, written by, and approved by the
In a Middle School Spanish class, boys stand
students in this homeroom.” All of the boys
up to deliver their report on a Spanish-speak-
and the teacher signed the list in contractual
ing country. They prepared posters of their in-
agreement. There can be no excuse in this
formation and the class is encouraged to ask
class that a student did not know the rules.
questions of the student. Only one report is given per day to avoid monotony.
In 2003, after several years of character education and discussion, the Upper School stu-
In their attempt not to frighten young children,
dents wrote their own Honor Code – one based
teachers may not be very direct or straightforward
on respect, honesty, and courage – which they
when administering disciplinary correction. While
reaffirm every year by a whole school signing.
this approach works well with girls, boys may not
The Honor Council, an elected student group,
believe that a teacher is serious if the disciplinary
interprets and enforces the code. In particular,
approach is not firm and sticks to the rules.
they educate the Lower, Middle, and Upper School student body about issues of charac-
In a Junior Kindergarten class, one boy fights
ter and honor, adjudicate cases of honor in-
with others for the use of building blocks. The
fractions, and make recommendations to the
teacher moves to his side and asks the boy to
Headmaster.
count out how many boys are playing with
46
At every level in the School, teachers discipline
Throughout the school, teachers are very pa-
as if the boy simply needs to be reminded of
tient with boys who blurt out answers. In Up-
expected behavior. The assumption is that he
per School, one teacher said to an impulsive
is not bad, just making bad decisions. Since
student, “Thank you for volunteering, but the
2004, Haverford has partnered with the Deci-
question was for Mr. Smith.�
sion Education Foundation in order to teach good decision-making skills to faculty, staff,
An Upper School Latin teacher uses computer
and students. A central component of the pro-
software for his grade book and allows the boys
gram is to help students understand power and
access to their grades. Many boys will look at
responsibility as they exercise decision skills.
their last grade in a class as an indication of how they are doing rather than at all the grades together. Using the computer grade book helps
New research has indicated that there is a reason that
the boys to see the total picture and figure out
boys are impulsive. The part of the brain respon-
what they need to do to improve. They can see
sible for making reasoned decisions and controlling
clearly and quickly the effect that effort has on
impulses is contained in the prefrontal lobes. That
their total grade in the class.
part of the brain is the last to develop and research is indicating that in boys, that portion of the brain develops late; in some individuals, not until the person is twenty-five years old or older. In a Kindergarten class, the last boy to answer selects the next boy to be questioned. The boys are very respectful of that process and as a consequence, learn to control their impulse to blurt out the answer. A Middle School history teacher gives openbook, open-note quizzes as a binder check. This tactic provides short-term reinforcement of homework and notetaking.
47
Competition
These are just snapshots of what happens in Haver-
It is well-known that males are very competitive and
ford School classrooms. Teachers and students
in a single-sex school that competitive spirit can be
judge everything that happens in the classrooms for
used to motivate the students.
effectiveness. The experienced teachers are constantly finding new and different ways to present
At Haverford, the boys are divided into two
their lessons, and the boys are clearly excited to be
teams, the maroons and the golds, and those
in the classroom.
teams are used in intramural competitions throughout the school. This competition is
Teaching boys well requires understanding how
always good-natured and on Haverford/EA
boys develop and discovering what matters to them.
Day, they unite, coming together to face the
A good school will foster the excitement a first-
common foe.
grade boy has at discovering how something works, and the same boy will be just as excited as a VI For-
Most of the history teachers use war and con-
mer (senior) even if the subject under study is how
flicts as a way to focus the boys on the par-
a sentence works. Boys love to learn and they know
ticular time period being studied. One teacher
how powerful knowledge can be. Boys need school
assigns groups to report on a different war
environments, such as Haverford, in which they can
during Louis IV’s reign. The boys clearly en-
thrive and become lifelong learners.
joy exploring these conflicts and compete with each other to discover the most skilled at research and rhetorical argument.
Math teachers at all levels use games and competitions as part of their curricula and as rewards for work well done. An Upper School science teacher gives each team a complicated question to work on together before a test. That question will be on the test and figuring out the answer gives that team an advantage on that question.
48
Lower School Lessons
49
“I can say with confidence that we continue to head in the right direction as a beacon of leadership in boys’ education.”
- Todd Wolov ’88
50
LOWER SCHOOL LESSONS Todd Wolov ’88 In the winter of 1978, I visited The Haverford School for the first time. I was a scared secondgrader, overwhelmed by the sheer immensity of the stone and brick buildings of Wilson and Van Pelt Halls. What awaited me inside Van Pelt was both terrifying and wondrous. The place was teeming with energy and boys. Even in those days, when teachers were considered more strict, the students exuded confidence, a passion for learning, and a kinetic energy that had been foreign to me up to this point. As I sat in Mr. Boyer’s science class (a male teacher, unheard of in elementary school) and did hands-on experiments with magnets in a “real” lab, I knew I was hooked. Alas, later that same day
room that had once belonged to a teaching titan of
in math class I was called upon to answer a multi-
the Lower School, Mr. Charles Boning. As I went
plication problem. Unfortunately, I had never seen
about learning my craft as a new teacher, I felt like
multiplication before, so predictably I answered in-
an imposter in Mr. Boning’s room. How dare I try to
correctly, which led to a round of laughter and my
fill the shoes of this venerable master and influence
shedding tears. However, despite this ignoble be-
young hearts and minds like he did? There were
ginning I instinctively knew that as a boy who loved
moments of psychic dissonance, as I flashed back
both sports and reading, Haverford was the place
to times when I was the twelve-year-old sitting in
for me. So began my more than two-decade-long
class.
relationship with Haverford as a student, teacher, coach, and parent.
Mr. Boning was a sixth-grade math teacher, a World War II Navy veteran, and a firm discipli-
Upon coming back to Haverford to teach fifth-grade
narian. Needless to say, every Lower School boy
social studies in the fall of 1996, I was assigned the
was intimidated by him. However, we also all held
51
a healthy respect for Mr. Boning and his teaching prowess, and we viewed him as a rite of passage into the Middle School. Despite our trepidation about his iron grip, which he used to focus our attention, we were secretly thrilled to have Mr. Boning – the world’s toughest teacher. Whenever my friends and I discuss the Lower School, Mr. Boning is always the first name that comes up. He is fondly remembered as a demanding teacher who helped to mold the minds and character of twelve-year-old boys. Many of us laugh at the iron grip, a technique that would now be considered taboo – and rightfully so. However, each and every one of us agrees that
The first years of teaching are akin to trying to fol-
we were better kids, math students, and now adults
low a path through a dark forest with just a match to
because of Charles Boning’s influence.
light the way. The attrition rate of beginning teachers everywhere is astronomical, and during my first
I remember how my classmates and I would try to
two years there were times I felt I made a mistake
distract Mr. Boning from the math lesson by ask-
by not attending law school. However, Haverford
ing him questions about his war experiences. Many
has a wonderful support system of colleagues, and
times he would comply by launching into long sto-
as an alumnus there were still many of my former
ries about his experiences in the Navy. At the time
teachers who could mentor me as I began my teach-
it served as a diversion, but interestingly, years later
ing career. The first person I sought out for help and
it is these war stories and his personal experiences
guidance was Mr. Michael Cunningham.
that I remember, and not the math that he taught. Mr. Boning knew that his life stories could serve as
Mr. Cunningham was the center of my universe for
a catalyst in the classroom for his charges. He was
two of the most difficult years in any adolescent
one of my first teachers to really share of himself on
boys’ life, seventh and eighth grade. For two years
a personal level. He knew he was making important
he taught me English and coached me in Middle
connections, and to this day I thank him for giving
School football and basketball. He made such a
so freely of what was sacred and personal. It is also
huge impact on me because of his good-natured
a lesson that I try to remember and take to heart as
personality. He was the type of teacher who made
a teacher of boys.
me feel comfortable and secure. I remember him as
52
a teacher who students could joke around with, but no one would take it too far or disrespect him. It was not out of fear, but rather because we did not want to disappoint him. This situation is rarely the case in Middle School. Mr. Cunningham was also one of my first teachers whom I considered both a scholar and an athlete. Having played football at Princeton, he could easily talk both sports and literature. I vividly recall him teaching the finer points of a Wing T sweep and sharing his opinions of American hero Atticus Finch, with the same amount of passion. What a valuable role model for early teenage boys! Mr. Cunningham went out of his way to get to know each of his students personally, and to make them feel valued, loved, and respected. He knew that boys were crying out to connect on an emotional level, and whether it be through sports or books, he was able to foster that much needed connection. In the beginning of my career Mike and I had
The list of Haverford teachers who touched me and
many conversations about the art of teaching. Just
shaped my future is exhaustive. When I reflect on
like when I was a student, he asked me to work
those who inspired me as a student and now as a
hard and to trust myself. Yet again, I found my-
teacher, many great Haverford teachers come to
self inspired by his ability to connect on a personal
mind. Mr. Tom Worth taught the art of storytell-
level. Many years later I have learned the lesson of
ing, and mesmerized his sixth-graders while study-
connecting with boys personally and emotionally.
ing The Trojan War and Treasure Island. He had
Making them feel valued, loved, and respected is
an ever-present smile and larger-than-life persona,
essential to the art of teaching boys. I was lucky to
which were both always on display in his classroom.
have such a role model as a student and a mentor
Another influential teacher was Mr. Donald Brown-
as a young teacher. As I continue my work here,
low, who personified living history. VI Formers (se-
I hope that I am living up to Mr. Cunningham’s
niors) who were lucky enough to have Mr. Brown-
standards and legacy.
low quickly realized his passion and dedication to
53
They knew, by both instinct and experience, that being great went beyond knowing their subjects. To these teachers, and fortunately for their students, being great in the classroom meant knowing their kids. It meant knowing how to motivate, cajole, and comfort when necessary. The common thread that links every one of these sage masters was their ability to connect intimately with the educational, soscholarship and the material that he taught. My trip
cial, and emotional lives of boys.
to Europe with “Brownie” after my senior year was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and motivated me
As a teacher and current parent, I am reminded dai-
to become a history major in college. Mr. Brownlow
ly of the challenges that face our boys today. How-
was always gracious enough to come down to my
ever, watching my colleagues and friends work here
fourth-grade class once a year and share some of
has heartened and inspired me.
his time and treasures. Finally, there is Mr. Edward Hallowell, who tried in vain to teach me to write a
My three young sons have all had remarkable teach-
thesis statement and an expository essay. His les-
ers who have overseen their emotional and academ-
sons during III Form (freshman) English about the
ic growth. Despite the dramatic differences in my
“loss of innocence” are etched into my memory. I
boys’ personalities, all three have thrived due to
fondly recall them as I am teaching versions of this
the diligence and care of their teachers. They have
theme in many of the books in my own curriculum.
been treated and respected as individuals, and their
I am very lucky to have been taught by these masters, and I try to emulate many of the characteristics that forged their teaching. It is apparent that these men all understood the art of teaching boys. Every one of these dedicated professionals made it their life’s calling to educate boys. Charismatic figures in the classroom, they had an intimate knowledge of their subject matter. More importantly, though, each and every one of these men built personal relationships with their students.
54
and added many wonderful programs. However, one of the biggest and most important changes has been our dedication to the science of boys’ education. Even as the experts decry the nationwide crises in boys’ education, there has been a decade’s worth of research into the best methods of educating boys. At Haverford, we have embraced these methods and incorporated them into all aspects of our curriculum. We are a leaders in the education of boys not only because we understand and incorporate the art of our mission, but also the science behind it. The 125th anniversary of The Haverford School is a perfect opportunity to take stock of where we have come from and where we are going. I can say with confidence that we continue to head in the right direction as a beacon of leadership in boys’ educateachers have gone to great lengths to foster an in-
tion. Now not only are we guided by inspiration and
tellectual spark and a social consciousness. Despite
intuition, but by intention as well. As you read the
changes in curriculum and methodologies over the
following lesson plans, you will be struck by how
years, one thing that remains constant is that these
often our teachers have built both aspects into their
teachers understand the art of connecting to and
teaching. While reading about the different modali-
teaching boys.
ties and techniques used in teaching boys, you will see the personal and meaningful connections that
The Haverford School has made many improve-
teachers make with their students. On our 125th
ments throughout my tenure here. The physical
birthday, we impart these lessons as a gift to inspire,
transformation and revitalization of the campus has
entertain, and teach anyone who holds a stake in the
been nothing short of miraculous. As I gaze out my
future of boys.
window from the Lower School, I see the new stateof-the-art Upper School. The students here are truly blessed to be able to take advantage of our facilities. We have made important changes in the curriculum
55
King of the Mountain Lower School Music
mic elements that they are currently studying in their curriculum. The students are also given a card with their ranking in our “kingdom.” The boys sit
Objective: This lesson reviews
in a circle, ranked from King all the way down the
the rhythmic elements we are
societal ladder to the Royal Guard in charge of the
studying in class. The students
Royal Prisoner, who holds the Royal Bucket, which
will aurally recognize four-
is filled with the last and least in the kingdom, the
beat rhythms and play them on
Royal Pond Scum. Throughout the year each boy
rhythm sticks.
will be given an opportunity to be the King.
Valerie Case
The King always starts the game. First the King
Narrative: King of the Mountain is a game used
plays his rhythm on his rhythm sticks. Immediately
to review rhythmic elements for the boys in first
following his rhythm, he plays, without missing a
through third grade. Each student is given rhythm
beat, someone else’s rhythm in the circle. The per-
sticks and a four-beat measure made up of rhyth-
son whose rhythm was performed then plays their
56
own rhythm and someone else’s rhythm until a mis-
down. Some boys are so accomplished that they can
take is made. A boy is out when he either plays a
look at one boy while playing another’s rhythm.
rhythm incorrectly or does not realize his rhythm
King of the Mountain gets to the heart of our boys’
was performed. The boys may not play a rhythm of
competitive spirits, while being tempered by an
a student seated next to him. Also, a student may
ever-present focus on good sportsmanship. The
not choose the same classmate’s rhythm and repeat
playful nature of “royal assignments” even makes
them to the same people over and over. We call this
getting “out” fun for the boys. Everyone experienc-
last error “ping-ponging.” If a student makes one
es failure and success in a comfortable, supportive
of these errors, they instantly become “Royal Pond
environment.
Scum.” They must take their rhythm sticks to the card and rhythm of “Royal Pond Scum,” and the
Valerie Case has been teaching for sixteen years.
other students can then move up in their rankings in
She joined The Haverford School faculty in 2000.
the kingdom. Reflection: The boys’ imaginations are sparked by this rhythm game. They enjoy determining who has a particular “role” such as that of the Royal Chihuahua or the role of the Royal Food Taster. During the game, one can hear a pin drop, except, of course, for the rhythm being played. Each student is actively engaged in order to determine if their rhythm has been played. The boys also want to figure out whose rhythm has been played because they have a vested interest in another’s error. One mistake can affect everyone’s rank in the kingdom. Since the students are seated in a circle, and their rhythm is facing each individual boy, they literally are reading rhythms backward, forward, and upside
57
Making Snow in Junior Kindergarten Lower School Science
Objective: The purpose of this lesson is to teach students how snow is formed in the atmosphere. The students will discover how a model can replicate
Bill Palmer
the entity we are studying.
Narrative: As soon as the weather turns colder (and the classroom teachers are studying the letter “S”), I buy dry ice and use it in my Water Cycle Model to teach about the water cycle and how snow is made. Asking specifically directed questions, I discuss with the boys their concept of snow and the water
cycle. I inform them that they are going to discover how water gets into the clouds and how it changes to snow. If all goes well, we’ll make it snow in my room, (even on their heads). I take the boys over to the Water Cycle Model and load in some dry ice to make my cloud very cold like “real clouds.” This also gives me the opportunity to talk about models. Then I pour hot water over the model and put on the cover. I ask the boys to go to their seats to discover what happens to water when it warms up. I place a few drops of water in front of each boy on their desks, and I tell them to rub the water with their hands as fast as they can. Soon
58
the water is gone from the table, (which brings up
the water. They then go back to the experiment table
more questions), and I get explanations such as “It
where they see, feel, touch, and taste the snow. Af-
disappeared” or “I rubbed it into the table.” After
terward, we go to the rug for reflections. This con-
explaining the process of evaporation, we go back
stant movement seems to keep the boys engaged,
to the model, uncover it, and expose the ice crystals
as if pumping the blood back up to the brain keeps
on the underside of the cloud chamber. While hold-
it stimulated and focused. I have also discovered
ing it above the boys’ heads, I scrape off the ice
during my twenty-six years teaching boys at The
crystals and let the “snow” fall on their hands, heads
Haverford School that the more senses I involve in
and tongues.
my teaching, the more sense it makes to the boys. More often than not, these pathways to the boys’
Reflection: This lesson works well with boys for
brains seem to be more developed than the auditory
many reasons. Boys like the adventure of discover-
ones. Using an abundance of movement, multiple
ing as well as physical movements of any kind. This
senses, and the boys’ own search for adventure,
lesson is full of both. The boys report to my rug to
keeps the boys stimulated and focused until the very
gather, move to the experiment table, and relocate
end.
to their own tables. At their tables they rub “as hard as they can” to create enough friction to evaporate
Bill Palmer has been teaching for twenty-six years. He joined The Haverford School faculty in 1982.
59
Integrating Math and Service Learning
cally bring their cereal to the classroom. Our class covers a large cardboard box with paper and the
Kindergarten
boys decorate the box with seasonal artwork. The boys then estimate the total number of cereal boxes collected.
Objective: Students will be able to look at a classroom graph and
Pat Renehan
“read” it. The students will be able
There are five brands of cereal: Cheerios, Corn
to identify how many boxes we
Flakes, Life, Rice Krispies, and “other.” The class
collect and, which type of cereal
sorts the cereals into groups according to brand.
had the most and least amounts.
When they finish sorting, they count the number of
The students will be aware that
boxes in each brand. The totals of the five brands
graphs tell “stories.”
are added to reach the final tally.
Narrative: As part of the December service learn-
The boys transition to their tables to work on a
ing project, three classes of kindergarten students
classroom graph. A large graph is used as a visual
buy (preferably with money they earned or saved)
aid to record the number of cereal boxes. Before
large boxes of cereal for the Chosen 300 Shelter.
recording data, the boys review the numbers on the
For a period of two weeks, the children enthusiasti-
left hand side of the graph. We then identify the
60
Reflection: Boys do well in Kindergarten when the core of the lesson mimics their life experience. This particular lesson is contingent upon the boys collecting cereal. Differentiation is incorporated into this lesson by asking higher level questions to boys who need a challenge. For example, when we count sixteen boxes of cereal, students are asked how many tens and ones are in the number sixteen. This lesson is multisensory – it is visual, tactile, auditory, verbal, and kinesthetic. Boys need to move, and accommodations for movement are made by transitioning within the lesson. This lesson incorporates connectedness with the greater community, and it gives young boys a sense of purpose. It reinforces The Haverford School’s strong emphasis on service learning. brands at the top of the graph. As a class we input the data on the graph. We count each type again and
Pat Renehan has been teaching for
fill in the appropriate boxes on the large graph.
twenty years. She joined The Haverford School faculty in 1997.
Each child then fills in his own individual graph. We regroup on the floor around the large classroom graph. Students analyze the data on the graph and tell a “story” about our cereal collection. Students survey their peers on their favorite brand of cereal and fill in the data. To culminate their December project, the boys view a slideshow given by the Director of the Chosen 300 Shelter.
61
Postcards
ries in postcard format. I introduce the book about two friends, one of whom decides to go off and see
First Grade
Jane Manns
the world. He then shares his adventures with his
Objective: After listening to the
friend at home, who enjoys his less adventurous
book Toot and Puddle by Hol-
life, but misses the companionship of his friend.
lie Hobbie, and participating in
Postcards provide the means of communication. I
class discussions, the students
bring in some postcards of my own and discuss the
will be able to visualize a past
travels of my friends, and the enjoyment I derive
vacation and write a facsimile of
from hearing of their adventures.
a postcard about their vacation to a friend or family member.
Each boy is anxious to share a travel story of his own. Since first-grade boys love to talk to each oth-
Narrative: Toot and Puddle by Holly Hobbie pro-
er, I divide them into small discussion groups with
vides us with an excellent tool for a lesson, which
clear guidelines as to how they can discuss their
focuses on reflecting and sharing vacation memo-
personal experiences. After their initial dialogue, I
62
provide each group with a 3’x 3’ piece of paper. I direct them to make a group plan to use words and illustrations to share their travel experiences with their classmates. Each group works to develop their poster. We reconvene as a class, so that each group can share the results and present their group poster. The following day, we review the story and the boys are given opportunities to discuss their favorite parts of the story. Once again, we talk about the fun of writing and receiving postcards. I give each boy a white manila card, with a line drawn down
As we share the final product, we discuss the limit-
the middle. The boys initially visualize their favor-
less possibilities of writing real postcards and send-
ite vacation and some of the activities they enjoy.
ing them during vacation to friends and family.
They then illustrate the front of their postcards. Af-
Reflection: This lesson works well for the boys be-
ter flipping them over, I model on the whiteboard
cause it incorporates a variety of activities: listen-
the way an address is written on a postcard and the
ing to a “read aloud,” class discussion, group work,
boys proceed to address their card and write the
and individual work. Each boy has an opportunity
message. Each boy receives a square sticker resem-
to express himself verbally, as well as in writing and
bling a stamp to place on his card.
drawing. The boys are able to present their poster to the class and answer questions from their classmates. Boys like to assume a place in the “spotlight” and the opportunity to address the class as a leader is always a treat. The follow-up activity allows each boy to personalize the lesson through visualization and the creation of a real postcard. Hopefully, a “seed” is planted that encourages writing during the summer. Jane Manns has been teaching for thirty-five years. She joined The Haverford School faculty in 1984.
63
Making Words First Grade
Objective: This lesson increases the students’ phonemic awareness and letter sound recognition, which helps to increase the students’ word recognition and vocabulary.
Cheryl Saunders Narrative: Entering first grade is a huge transition for most boys. At this stage, students are eager to learn to read. Teachers are excited to work with their students to help them become good readers. My objective is to create an environment where learning new ideas and concepts are enjoyable, fun, and exciting. During this early stage of development, children don’t all learn the same way or at the same pace.
Recognizing this fact, it is vital to provide instruction that is multileveled and systematic. Therefore, I find the Four Blocks Literacy Model of reading and writing to be a balanced way of meeting my students’ needs. Working with words is one of the components that my students enjoy the most. I engage the boys in an activity called “Making Words.” This multilevel, multisensory activity is an active, exciting, high-energy technique that provides hands-on learning for the students.
64
Each student receives five to eight letters, which in-
their ability to make new and challenging
clude one vowel. These letters can make eight to ten words. The final word in the activity uses all of
words. The boys readily welcome each challenge presented to them.
the letters to make one big word, which we call the secret word. As the students’ vocabulary increases,
Reflection: “Making Words� addresses the needs
the number of letters given to the students also in-
of all of the students wherever they are develop-
creases over time.
mentally in their learning. Students love this activity because it is hands-on, and they look forward to
Since research has shown the brain to be a pattern
manipulating the various letters to form new words.
detector, it is no surprise that students readily look
For the boys, it is like playing a game because it is
for patterns in words. They quickly recognize how
so interactive. At the same time, making words al-
changing one letter can change the entire word in
lows everyone to experience success!
this activity. The students participate in this activity for fifteen to
Cheryl Saunders has been teaching for thirty years.
twenty minutes each week. They are excited about
She joined The Haverford School faculty in 1999.
65
Story Sticks: Lessons from Zimbabwe A Collaborative Second-Grade Project
Narrative: This cross-curricular project’s inspiration comes from a wood carver in Zimbabwe, Rainos Towanameso, and the story-telling walking sticks that he creates. His most famous work, the Nyaminyami stick, portrays beautifully carved images related to the struggle of a culture tragically impacted by an erected dam. Initially the lesson focuses on the effects of the construction of the Kariba Dam – loss of life and livelihood of the Batonga people and the destruction of the ecosystem surrounding the site of the dam.
Lower School Computers Mondo Murage
Lower School Art Jenny Waring
An authentic Nyaminyami stick is shared with the boys after reading the historic tale. The boys relish listening to the tale and inspecting the impressive
Objective: To create and reinforce writing skills
walking stick, but they are usually anxious to begin
and to engage students directly in the African art of
writing their own stories. The boys then embark on
carving story sticks.
a six-week creative writing journey.
66
Students construct walking sticks in art class. Using their stories as inspiration, the young artists make newspaper/masking tape forms that represent main characters and objects of importance within their stories. They mount these representations on a wooden stick and then embellish with papier-mâché. After completing their sticks, the boys share both their colorful walking sticks and their written stories. Students take pride in the stories that they conjure, and their walking sticks function as representations of objects and characters contained within the tales. Current research on boys and writing suggests that “boys write to give information; they like to write
Reflection: There are several reasons why this les-
stories that have meaning, humor, and intention”
son works so well with boys. It requires their fo-
(Ralph Fletcher).
cused presence, openness to sharing and receiving experiences, and a willingness to invest in an in-
All of the students’ learning styles are challenged
tentional, creative community. According to Parker
throughout the writing and creative process. Each
Palmer, just as learning has the most impact when
imaginative step is self-initiated – though the idea
the above qualities are present, teaching is most
comes from outside, the product and the sense of
purposeful when “it comes from the identity and
discovery come from within.
integrity of the teacher.”
Mondo Murage has been teaching for sixteen years. She joined The Haverford School faculty in 2000. Jenny Waring has been teaching for nineteen years. She joined The Haverford School faculty in 1996.
67
Decision Education: Squanto, Friend of the Pilgrims Third Grade Objective:
Combine
What is a good decision? We consistently review the words “stop,” “think,” and “decide,” in both academic and social areas of the school day.
Deci-
sion Education, comprehension skills, and an understanding of the words prejudice, stereotyping, and equality while reading Squanto, Friend of the Pilgrims.
Kate Thorburn
What is a decision? How do we make a decision?
I want to help give the boys the tools necessary to make mean-
ingful decisions both academically and socially. Narrative: What constitutes a good decision? Boys often make impulsive decisions that have a direct impact on their social behavior and academic abilities. My goal is to educate each third-grade boy on
We study the vocabulary words prejudice, equality, and stereotyping, and we discuss the boys’ prior knowledge of these words. Then, we transition to the book The Other Side, stopping as the boys recognize situations that connect to their new vocabulary. Our class discussions reflect on The Other Side. I pose the question: Did the judgmental characters in the book make a good decision? When I introduce the book Squanto, Friend of the Pilgrims, we examine the book’s front and back covers, table of contents, and pictures. We read chapter one aloud as a class. I explain how to identify the
decision making. I feel decision making must be woven into daily classroom conversations and highlighted in literature by understanding characters’ traits, in mathematics by problem solving, and in history where decision making has determined the survival of civilizations for centuries. Studying decision making at this stage of a boy’s development is unique. By educating boys at The Haverford School early in life, my goal is for them to form a solid foundation for better decision making that will be essential as they grow older and the decisions become more complicated.
68
most meaningful decision made in the chapter and
Reflection: There is ongoing assessment each day. I
how to identify which character makes the decision.
evaluate group behavior, group discussions, choice
Next, on a traced leaf, we write the chapter number
of decision, sentence structure on their leaves, and
followed by the most important decision. Then, the
their oral presentations.
students explain in writing why this decision was chosen, and if they agree or disagree with the char-
The boys learn two very important life skills
acter’s decision. Once the leaf is finished, the boys
throughout this project, decision making and com-
present their decision findings to the class. Finally,
prehension skills. My goal is to have the boys
their leaf is added to the de-
apply the concept of “stop, think, and de-
cision tree growing in the
cide” to their reading
classroom.
of
Squanto,
Friend of the The boys
Pilgrims
complete
and then
the Squan-
transfer
to Decision
the same
Tree in book buddy groups. After each
concept
chapter, the book buddy group converses
into their daily
about the most meaningful decision. Each
life decisions. It is fas-
boy has a job as a tracer, cutter, writer, or
cinating to hear the boys use
oral presenter (on occasion, groups have
decision making language in book discussions,
felt more than one meaningful decision
in their daily conversations, and in their writ-
requires attention; therefore the group
ing. Decision making is an important com-
will construct more than one leaf). When
ponent in boys’ education. Equipping my
all groups finish, the entire class meets to hear each
third-graders with the vocabulary and skills to make
group read their leaf, which is followed by questions
good choices is extremely rewarding.
or comments. All leaves are added to the Squanto Decision Tree. As the boys progress through the book, they improve on many skills – comprehension, discussion, decision making, writing, oral presentation, and artistic – as they watch their decision
Kate Thorburn has been teaching for thirteen years.
tree bloom.
She joined The Haverford School faculty in 1996.
69
Alternatives to Bullying Fourth Grade
Objective: The objective of this lesson is to provide a forum for the students to discuss bullying honestly in a safe environment. Narrative: Two major themes
Todd Wolov
that we discuss during the students’ academic and social lives
in Lower School are friendship and bullying. I have found that by the time the boys reach fourth grade, many of the challenges that they will struggle with throughout the rest of their school years begin to arise in earnest. In fourth grade, the boys have started to become aware of a fictional “social status” often based upon athletic ability, size, grades, or sadly enough, their families’ economics. This newly found awareness often leads to the establishment of a pecking order, which can then ultimately lead to various forms of bullying behavior. Therefore, my plan to help boys is an interactive lesson that identifies these issues and addresses them directly through a variety of means. I begin by having three of my former students (cur-
The second skit involves two friends who have identified a target and bully a third student. The final skit involves two friends who are about to take their teasing of a third student too far, when they are told to stop by their intended victim. They then work to seek a solution instead. After each skit we stop and have brief class conversations about what we have witnessed. It is important that everyone recognizes the differences in these scenarios. We also discuss the ramifications of the decisions that these characters have made. My next step in the lesson is reading two picture books, Just Kidding by Trudy Ludwig and Say Something by Peggy Moss.
rent fifth-graders) come in and present a series of three short skits, which I have previously written.
I use these books as a springboard for further class
The first skit involves two friends who are able to
conversations, in order to understand our issues and
tease each other without crossing the line and caus-
recognize some of the roles we are playing through
ing any repercussions.
the characters’ actions. The conversations around
70
these books also emphasize the potential solutions
this segment of the lesson. Finally, after these larger
that lay within them. Then, the class is divided into
group debates, we come back together as a class for
six groups. Each group is presented with a specific
closure.
question such as, “Do you and your friends tease each other? If you do tease each other please ex-
Reflection: This lesson is important for boys for
plain why.” “How can you tell if your friends like
many reasons. It encompasses many learning mo-
it when you tease them? How can you tell if you
dalities, helping to reach boys of varying learning
are hurting them?” After the groups discuss their
styles. It also provides boys with a safe atmosphere
specific question, we come back together as a class.
to express themselves openly and honestly about
I then divide the class into three groups consisting
difficult subjects. In this lesson, each student is giv-
of one member of each of the original six groups.
en the opportunity to become a leader and facilitate
Each person acts as “the expert” for their previously
part of the conversation. The ability to give boys a
discussed question, as they present to their larger
voice and a forum is one of the aspects that makes
groups. These presentations serve as a catalyst for
this lesson so powerful.
further debate and discussion. I move around the room and help facilitate ideas. It is also helpful to
Todd Wolov ’88 has been teaching for thirteen years.
have another teacher or counselor in the room for
He joined The Haverford School faculty in 1996.
71
The Need for Speed (CO2 Dragster)* Fourth-Grade Science
Objective: The students will work collaboratively in small groups to build dragsters in order to explore and demonstrate prin-
why this lesson works so well for boys. This is a
ciples of physics and motion.
hands-on, minds-on, scientific inquiry where the boys learn to reason, think creatively, make decisions, and
Cheryl Joloza
Narrative: This lesson comes
problem solve.
from a fifth-grade physical sci-
ence unit. The boys spend about three weeks wrap-
Reflection: The hands-on, minds-on scientific par-
ping their minds around Newton’s laws of motion
adigm gets the boys both physically and intellec-
and other principles of physics through the lens of
tually involved in learning. The physical nature of
sports and toys. The boys explore these science con-
the task is a welcomed challenge. They are working
cepts and apply them to a sporting event or toy dur-
in various spaces in the room, using an assortment
ing class time. The culminating lesson is one where
of tools, and can be seen and heard collaborating
the students apply all of the principles investigated
with other boys. The boys are constantly moving
throughout the unit and use the information to create,
throughout the science room during the various
design, build, and test a high performance, carbon di-
phases of the project. The intellectual involvement
oxide powered vehicle. The boys are given a block
is almost immediate. It takes on many forms, but it
of balsa wood and some tools. They also receive the
is definitely a powerful experience for the students.
challenge to create a high performance CO drag 2
racer that must meet certain specifications (weight,
The boys who are naturally drawn to science and
aerodynamics, and rolling friction). The excitement
math tend to rely exclusively on their knowledge
begins!
base to create their vehicles (usually top speed cars). The students that are attracted to the arts and
I first came across this lesson during an enrichment
language tend to produce the most visually appeal-
course in a coed setting. Twenty participants regis-
ing vehicles (not necessarily the fastest). Regardless
tered and all but one was male. I immediately knew
of the end product, the boys are fully engaged in
I was on to something. There are numerous reasons
this endeavor.
72
Another alluring aspect of this lesson for boys is the
begin to question their surroundings. Is it an intel-
open-ended charge of scientific inquiry. The boys
lectual think tank, or perhaps an advanced physics
are always interested in a mission, adventure, ex-
class? No! It is a class of fully engaged fifth-grade
ploration, or fantasy. This project brings all of these
boys!
concepts to life. As soon as the students enter the building, they instinctively want to start working on
*Lesson adapted from: The Science of Speed, Pits-
their cars. The boys are fully engaged during class
co Inc., Pittsburg, Kan.
time and any other available moment. Cheryl Joloza has been teaching for fourteen years. The nature of scientific inquiry provides the space
She joined The Haverford School faculty in 2000.
that boys need to be interactive with a project over a period of time. Throughout the lesson, the boys assume the various roles of scientist, engineer, computer technologist, artist, and so on. The only role that sometimes disappoints them is when they return to reality (fifth-graders) and the project ends. The boys love working on long-term tangible projects. The lessons learned are not all science based, but they concern themes that the boys encounter in other dimensions of their lives. Reasoning, creativity, decision making, and problem solving are a few of these themes. Boys need concrete ways to apply these otherwise abstract concepts. Building cars is one of a myriad of ways to tackle this. Their voices can be heard building cases as to why various designs may or may not perform well. Compliments and constructive criticism fill the room. Troubleshooting takes place in the corners of the classroom. In the back of the science room students discuss proper sawing techniques. After a while, one may
73
Hit-Miss-Close Fifth-Grade Math
Subsequently, ask the class to begin to guess the number. If a student’s guess comes within two digits above or below each place value unit, each place
Objective: Students will be able
value unit is considered Close. If a student guesses
to use mathematical reasoning to
more than two-digits above or below each place val-
make conjectures based on logi-
ue unit, each place value unit is considered a Miss.
cal reasoning and test conjec-
If a student guesses the exact number for each place
tures by using counter-examples.
value unit, it is considered a Hit.
Students will be able to develop a plan to analyze a problem,
Carol Ann Luongo, Ph.D. identify the information needed
The class has the option for one student to guess the number or to involve everyone in guessing the num-
to solve the problem, carry out
ber. Each student in the class has the opportunity
the plan, check whether an answer makes sense, and
to lead a session. As the game proceeds, the class
explain how the problem was solved. The goal is to
has an option to change the number to a three-digit
improve/strengthen number sense skills and critical
number or higher.
thinking ability in mathematics problem solving. Students will be able to recognize, describe, extend,
Reflection: There are several reasons why the dy-
create, and replicate a variety of patterns including
namics of this game intrigues boys so much that
attribute, activity, and number.
they never tire of playing it and investigating alternative game rules.
Narrative: This is a mathematics mini-lesson with the intention of having students use their acquired problem-solving skills. The lesson requires the students to communicate with each other and with an adult to solve a problem. While the students ask questions of each other, they solve the problem and think critically. Throughout the years that I have used this simple game with students of all grade levels, they are repeatedly intrigued at how they can manipulate numbers to outsmart their classmates. Game Rules: Mentally select a two-digit number.
• The game gets the boys out of their chairs. • For boys, developing problem-solving skills is effective when the problems are both genuine and interesting. In order to create this atmosphere, the problem is one boy’s decision. • This game provides an avenue for the competitive nature of boys and a positive and creative approach to mental math. The boys consistently try to choose numbers that will stump their classmates. • Boys acquire information easily though visual methods.
74
Therefore, providing the opportunity to enter the
This game incorporates an alternate perspective to un-
numbers and codes on the board gives the boys
derstanding place value, mental math, logical reason-
enough visual and physical stimulation to keep
ing, and making choices. It involves cooperative and
them attentive, but not so much as to interfere with
collaborative learning experiences in the classroom.
the learning process.
All of which appeal to the learning style of boys.
Usually, mathematics does not pose a problem for
Effective teaching is about offering the male develop-
boys. However, many times boys need to learn how
ing brain high-quality information based on real expe-
to look back over their work, which is the final step
riences. This is the great challenge for all educators.
in famous mathematician George Poyla’s method of problem solving. By looking back, students will
Carol Ann Luongo has been teaching for twenty-
examine the solution, check the result, and check if
eight years. She joined The Haverford School fac-
they can use the result for another problem.
ulty in 2007.
75
Freeze-A-Mania
Lower School Physical Education
one is in maroon. If they cannot decide mutually,
they
can do Rock-PaObjective: To allow the boys to
per-Scissors
work together during a variety
decide who gets
of interactive games in order to
to choose their color.
develop and practice the skills
Before the game be-
involved in fitness, movement,
gins, eight colored
and sportsmanship.
balls are spread out
Bob Castell
to
in the playing area – an equal number of ma-
Narrative: The boys warm up with “Blob-Tag”
roon and gold balls.
first. While the boys enter the classroom, teachers
The boys are only al-
observe which boys do the best job of coming in
lowed to use their feet
quietly and finding their spots in their designated
to direct the balls toward the players in opposite
class lines. We reward those boys (two from each
colored shirts. They may only kick the balls that
class) to be our first “blobs.” These boys start the
correspond to their shirt color. If an opposite col-
game by holding hands: they are the blobs. When
ored ball touches them, they must exit the playing
the game begins, all the other boys are free to move
area and run a lap around the cones in the adjoining
around the area while trying to avoid being tagged
gym before they can rejoin the game.
by the blobs. When they are tagged they join the blobs by holding hands with the existing blobs.
The main activity is Freeze-A-Mania. For this ac-
When the blobs get to be four boys, they split into
tivity we have the boys choose a new partner with
two smaller blobs and continue to tag more single
the opposite colored shirt. In this game the boys
students. The game ends when all of the students
work exclusively with their partner. One of the
have become part of a blob, or when the teachers
partners comes up to get a ball to begin. The part-
feel it is time to change activities.
ners are asked to demonstrate proper technique for overhand throwing and catching with their partners
Another warm-up game we play is “Kick-Tag.”
from about ten feet apart while music is playing.
To begin, we have the boys choose a partner. They
When the music stops, the student who has control
change their shirts so that one partner is in gold and
of the ball must chase after their partner and try to
76
tag him before the music begins again. If the music
without having to worry about being eliminated
starts before the partner has been tagged, they stop
from the games. We try to develop some of these
running and begin to throw and catch with one an-
skills, so the boys gain confidence in their abilities
other.
and don’t become intimidated when they are asked to participate in similar games outside of our class.
Once the activity has been completed, we collect the balls and bring the boys around the middle cir-
I have found this particular lesson to be one of the
cle to discuss which groups worked well together
best teaching plans to allow the boys to develop
and why. We also discuss with the boys what they
their skills, and improve their fitness, while having
liked about the activity. This discussion allows the
fun.
boys a chance to settle down before we bring them back to their classrooms.
Bob Castell has been teaching for twenty-two years. He joined The Haverford School faculty in 1992.
Reflection: This lesson plan has always been a favorite for Lower School boys. The boys are in constant motion, which allows them to challenge themselves and their skills. The students cooperate with each other to find new partners, to decide which color shirt they will compete in, and to display how they work together with partners and with a larger group. While the boys are having fun, they are becoming physically fit. Boys love to compete, and this lesson allows them to test their skills without having any winning or losing teams or players. The boys are encouraged and rewarded by competing fairly and displaying good sportsmanship during the activities. The players like these activities because they enjoy the freedom to try new techniques and strategies,
77
Middle School Lessons
79
“As
educators we foster achievement and creativity; as coaches we make improvement possible. We serve as mentors who guide boys through a pivotal period in their mental, physical, and spiritual growth.”
- Andrew Grossman ’96
MIDDLE SCHOOL LESSONS Andrew Grossman ’96
to all teachers, particularly my college professors. He described education, experiences, and life as a journey;
The middle school years are the
he valued personal interac-
crossroads for boys. What hap-
tions as the ultimate learning
pens there and the decisions one
experience.
makes affects what happens later in high school, college, and life. The crossroads are the situations,
In this Middle School, we give our boys many op-
choices, and actions that define a boy as a jock,
tions. As educators we foster achievement and cre-
thespian, artist, scholar, slacker, leader, follower,
ativity; as coaches we make improvement possible.
none, some, or all of the above.
We serve as mentors who guide boys through a pivotal period in their mental, physical, and spiri-
As a “lifer” at The Haverford School, my middle
tual growth. We as faculty and staff thrive on our
school years were a crossroads for me. There, I found
experience. I am continuing my education, but my
my love of the guitar and musical performance. The
experience teaching, coaching, and traveling has
corridors of Crosman Hall served as my first public
been my most valuable tool. As an undergraduate
stage; Mrs. Grad’s music room as my first recording
at Saint Lawrence University, I lived in East Africa
studio. My friends and family could be a receptive
and taught health education in the refugee camp
and supportive audience, but they could also be the
in Kakuma, Kenya. In Dave Eggers’ book, What
harshest critics. I recall feeling the rush of sharing
is the What, he explains that to Kenyans, Kakuma
my talents, only to have them sneered at and dis-
translates to “nowhere,” but it is a crossroads for
missed by other Middle School students. Yet some-
many refugees from Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia,
how I still play guitar, I still perform, and I still love
Uganda, Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, and others. Af-
music. The adversity that I met, which I would have
filiated with the National Council of Churches of
experienced at any school, only fanned my creative
Kenya (NCCK), my teaching focused on sexually
embers. Knowing that the Haverford School faculty
transmitted diseases to refugees of the many Afri-
was there helped in supporting my decision to make
can nations in conflict. Some of my most rewarding
music a major part of my life. The support of the
work involved my experiences with the youth of the
faculty continued through my Upper School years
camp. The youth group that I observed was made
at Haverford, specifically from my friend and men-
up of people of several nationalities who produced
tor, the late, great Rafael Laserna. As a model of the
theatrical workshops and puppet shows aimed at
effective, mild-mannered teacher, he prepared me
educating fellow young refugees on the dangers of
to be a college student as he taught me how to relate
promiscuous lifestyles, HIV/AIDS, and other sexu-
81
ally transmitted diseases. During my stay, I assured
many years, Steve brought his sixth-grade students
these young people at their own crossroads that
to CIMI. Throughout the week he would share
despite any other messages they received from the
some appropriate and relevant information with our
western world, I cared, and I was not the only one.
instructors about certain students who were at their academic, social, and even emotional crossroads.
Although my experience in Africa was that of a stu-
During the final campfire Steve would highlight an
dent, an observer, and an intern, my journey to be-
accomplishment of each student during the week
come a teacher took form in the ocean. As a recent
and relate it to previous school experience. I was
college graduate I worked as an outdoor educator
amazed at his perceptiveness, but even more, I was
for the Catalina Island Marine Institute (CIMI) at
astounded that he recognized a child’s crossroads
Toyon Bay on Catalina Island, Calif. The major-
as such a vital part of the education process. I now
ity of my students were of typical middle-school
challenge myself to foster the developing talents of
age and ability. For many students, this trip was a
all my students and use it as a tool to push them in
crossroads. Some had never been away from home,
the right direction.
while others felt at ease in less comfortable accommodations as their dormitories contained bunk beds
I have the privilege of working with Middle School
and communal bathrooms, and lacked climate-con-
boys and observe them at their crossroads. Haver-
trolling and entertainment devices. Many students
ford’s Middle School boys and teachers have a
found their long awaited niche snorkeling among
wide range of height, weight, talent, personal back-
a dense kelp forest, de-
ground, background knowledge, global awareness;
spite their shortcomings
and some of them struggle to take advantage of
in the school yard or on
what is around them. The Middle School introduces
the playing field. The
many of the boys to their first experience with for-
experience gave many
eign language. With Spanish and Latin available,
students an opportunity
the boys may experience learning a language that is
to form a bond with
either practical for the day and age, or fundamental
new
teach-
in understanding the roots of many other languages.
ers, parents, and other
In all three grades of science, boys are challenged to
people from their local
create projects and presentations based on their in-
community. I worked
dependent research. The math courses of the Middle
on two occasions with
School use the boys’ already attained skills as well
Steve Keithly, an edu-
as their application to “real world” situations for fu-
cator from a southern
ture success. Our history teachers guide the boys to-
friends,
California school. For
ward a better global perspective; the Middle School’s
82
English teachers use poetry, prose, and literature to hone the boys’ command of their language. Our art program offers the boys’ opportunities to express the thoughts, feelings, and talents in many varieties of two-dimensional and three-dimensional media. Middle School drama and music allow our boys to express their penchant for the thespian and melodic arts in a safe but exciting environment. In addition to challenging curricula, the boys participate in an inter-grade community program called “house” and faculty sponsored elective activities.
portunity. Our athletic philosophy in the Middle School, whether or not it is mentioned in any hand-
For some boys, the athletic field is the ultimate
book, is that of working in the interests of our boys
crossroads. Our physical education program teach-
at their athletic crossroads.
es the boys fair play, healthy intra-class competition, and the need for appropriate attire and gear.
I speak of students at their crossroads so frequently
The boys have the opportunity to use the skills
because it is such a crucial part of the education ex-
instilled in them from their instructors in the real
perience. I have seen the products of both success-
athletic setting, interscholastic competitive sports.
ful and failed decision making. I am thankful for
Our Middle School teachers are expected to lead an
Haverford’s role in shaping my decision making as
exciting double life of teacher-coaches, this expec-
I was once at my crossroads here, and I am thankful
tation has unquestionable value. We have the ability
for the opportunity to positively influence the boys.
to observe our learners on a different plane than the
Many of their needs are neglected; as a culture, we
classroom setting. Although our teams are competi-
sometimes assume that boys will live through these
tive with other schools and stacked with talent, they
years regardless of our guidance. I am a believer
offer the boys a chance to experience new sports as
that our focus on them and their needs, in a setting
the seasons come and go. Like many other activities,
that is as challenging as it is nurturing is critical in
sports gain and lose popularity; we encourage our
boys’ education. The Middle School faculty pro-
boys to try new sports when there is available space
vides lessons that serve boys needs while focusing
on the various squads. As enrollment has increased,
on the importance of this vulnerable stage of their
certain teams have been forced to cut players. In
progress and success. Among our diverse styles of
many cases, the boys endure the disappointment of
guidance and instruction, we share the common
the event and are counseled and mentored by their
goal of helping boys make the appropriate choices
teacher-coaches into making the best of their op-
at their crossroads.
83
Sir Francis Drake Sixth-Grade History
ly, they learn about Elizabeth’s support of pirates and privateers, and hear her speech to the people. Economically, the story of Sir Frances Drake ad-
Objective: The boys learn and
dresses trade routes and sea power giving the ability
practice a variety of study skills
to build colonies.
and note-taking skills. The Cornell note-taking system, de-
The film Sea Hawk starring Errol Flynn, class and
veloped by Walter Pauk, is the
online notes, class readings of original documents,
foundation for class notes. This
and class discussion are used to tell the story in a
system facilitates organization,
variety of modalities, which the boys listen to and
summarization, and student re-
talk about with excitement. This is the story of Eng-
sponsibility for learning. One of the best lessons for
land’s entry as a world power at a time when naval
boys to practice these skills in context is by study-
power was closely connected with national wealth.
ing Sir Francis Drake.
Drake’s achievements include redesigning the Eng-
John Suter
lish navy and circumnavigating the globe. This lesNarrative: Every sixth-grade student at The Haver-
son also shows how history is connected through
ford School takes Early American History. The
the ages. Ships in England’s Navy still have pieces
course broadens students’ understanding of our
of ship connecting them to Drake.
nation’s past and teaches students the tools needed for future success in reaching their academic poten-
Notes from primary sources and history books are
tial within the college preparatory curriculum. This
projected onto a team board. During this lesson,
classroom is a place where students find challenge,
students summarize to review the previous day’s
a safe place in which to be risk takers, and where
notes, and scan the current notes to preview the cur-
every student has the opportunity for success.
rent topic. The boys then watch Sea Hawk. After going through the notes and watching the movie,
The story of Sir Frances Drake is a memorable les-
the boys are guided through the process of analyz-
son of one man’s important impact on history. This
ing the material in relation to the overarching his-
lesson is a microcosm of the whole course, touching
torical themes: economic, social, political, and re-
on each of the historic themes covered throughout
ligious. The students must consider the nine causes
the year. Politically, students study marriage pro-
of warfare, the three parts of communication, and
posals for Elizabeth and the King of Spain. Social-
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.
84
Reflection: The boys are challenged to look at his-
ownership in their learning. As they tackle con-
tory with a critical eye, thinking as historians. The
cepts, they are encouraged to practice the note-tak-
notes in this course are a richer, more detailed narra-
ing and study skills modeled in class. This lesson is
tive than what is offered in textbooks the boys have
good for the boys because they are practicing new
used in the past. The boys are not simply working
skills in an environment where they are given the
with facts. They learn about the concept of story,
support necessary to be successful. Upper School
reflecting on our country’s history, and their own
boys often comment that they continue use the
stories. In the process, the boys develop a sense of
note-taking, decision-making, and critical-thinking skills they learned in sixth-grade history, and that the course provided scaffolding for future academic success (even if they did not realize it in sixth grade). These student tools will help the boys throughout their academic careers and in the future as they measure and consider new information and predict outcomes to make sound decisions about history and their world.
John Suter has been teaching for twelve years. He joined The Haverford School faculty in 2002.
85
Illustrated History I Form (seventh-grade) History Objective: The purpose of this lesson is to educate the students about child labor during the industrial revolution by challenging them to use their back-
William Strong
write a short poem that captures the mood and feelings of the children in the picture. After the groups have completed their analysis, we show each picture on the wall screen and each group presents its analysis of the picture and reads its poem. The class gets an opportunity to make comments afterward in case the group seems to have missed an important element of the picture.
ground knowledge of the subject
Reflection: This activity generally works well with
creatively.
the boys for a number of reasons: 1) They enjoy working in groups. Each boy has an opportunity
Narrative: One of the themes we cover in the study
to participate in the analysis and share the group’s
of the early 1900s is the issue of child labor. For the
work to the class. As boys learn best by doing, this
lesson, I divide the class into nine groups (usually
hands-on activity engages them well. 2) They seem
two or three to a group) and give each group an au-
to enjoy the “detective work” involved in figur-
thentic picture of children (ages eight to eighteen)
ing out what is going on in their picture. As boys
involved in some type of work activity from that era.
are naturally competitive, most are motivated and
Each group has its own picture so there are nine dif-
challenged to accurately decipher the picture. This
ferent pictures. Some of the jobs are relatively me-
tests their conceptual thinking, which fuels active
nial and innocuous, but others involve real dangers
engagement in the task. 3) Although there is a com-
and very unpleasant, unhealthy working conditions.
mon assumption that boys do not have a “sensitive
Along with the picture comes a question sheet that
side,” this project taps into their ability to feel empa-
directs each group in its analysis of the picture. The
thy for the boys/girls who performed those difficult
boys must determine what job is being performed,
and dangerous jobs. This has “real world” relevance
which isn’t always obvious.
in increasing their awareness that they are very well off by comparison. 4) The activity provides struc-
They then identify possible hazards and unhealthful
ture in that the boys know what they need to do and
work conditions, and observe whether the children
when/how they need to do it. 5) They seem to enjoy
seem to be enjoying their work. They speculate
the creative and social aspect of working as a team,
about whether those children would be willing to
reporting their findings, and sharing their poems
trade lives with the average boy or girl today and
with the class.
86
I have observed the boys engaged in this project
doing those hard jobs.” “It really made me realize
during the past few years, and, invariably, there
how good we have it when I compare my life to
is a positive, energetic buzz as the boys analyze
how those kids lived.” “It is difficult for boys to be
their pictures. They also listen attentively as the
sympathetic sometimes, but those pictures made it
other groups present their pictures/analysis, and
possible. Girls probably have a much easier time
additional observations are typically offered by the
with this.”
class. When asked about the value of this project, a few boys have commented: “This was a new and fun activity. It was much easier to understand the
Bill Strong has been teaching for 31 years. He
concept of child labor when we could see real kids
joined The Haverford School faculty in 1979.
87
Cultural Stereotypes: An Introduction to Japanese Culture
II Form (eighth-grade) History Objective: The intent of this lesson is to introduce students to the culture of Japan while juxtaposing the stereotypes and preconceived notions they have.
Chris Avery
Narrative: I begin the class by asking what word or phrase comes to mind when you think
of Japan. As usual, students start with sushi, samurais, Nintendo, Sony, and other superficial descriptions of a complex culture. Fortunately, for some sections, students heard their peers from Far East Asian nations, other than Japan, describe their parents, dislike and sometimes hatred for Japan. This sparks intense discussion about some of the core themes of my class: American and other biases and perspective. Also, as often when II Form (eighthgrade) boys engage in group think, individuals in the room feel more comfortable “pushing the envelope” as the discussion continues. Thus, various students state stereotypes, like “play the violin,” “really smart,” and “great at math.”
describe my wife’s life dealing with the expectation and pressure of living up to the “Asian stereotype,” which may or may not naturally be who she is. I then share my 5’7” daughter’s frustration with other players or parents stating that because of her height she must be good at basketball. After recognizing that she is taller than the majority of students in the room at age twelve, they realize how this “positive” stereotype negates her hard work during practice and the off-season. The tall students in the class immediately begin to recount stories of being expected to be good at basketball and the feelings of not always living up to the expectations that other people have for them. We cover the impact of stereotypes and that “positive” stereotypes do not actually exist. From there, I use the Smartboard to take notes. I have the students read from the textbook and place notes on the board. Each student has the opportunity to place what they feel is important on the board, which prompts a conversation about note taking and distinguishing the relevant material. Many students express that they still struggle to find the most relevant material and either put too much or too little information. This leads to a reintroduction of note taking and the critical information that should be placed in their notes. At the end of the class and the reading, we have a
Most students feel that the stereotypes of being smart
brief conversation about the portions of the read-
and talented at math are “positive” stereotypes. I
ing that most surprised them. The majority of the
88
conversation revolves around their disbelief that Ja-
discussion sparks a discourse about positive versus
pan is actually considerably behind most of the Far
negative stereotypes.
East, in terms of government structure, economy, and technology. They describe how their stereo-
Chris Avery has been teaching for eight years. He
types of Japan are not always true, which in turn,
joined The Haverford School faculty in 2000.
makes them question whether stereotypes ever are! Reflection: It takes time for boys to feel safe to share their true feelings on subjects, especially when they feel they are inappropriate. This deeper
89
Fantasy Football Middle School Math
rushing and receiving yards, and touchdowns; they lose points for throwing interceptions and losing fumbles. Once the season is over, they analyze the
Objective: This project incor-
data they collect to determine which players were
porates multiple skills including
good values and which were fantasy busts.
using formulas, reading and un-
Nick Romero
derstanding box scores, opera-
After a few weeks of manually computing the scores,
tions with decimals (although the
the students are allowed to use the calculator to find
formula can be adjusted for use
them. Many boys are used to computing operations
with whole numbers, integers,
one at a time on a calculator and are surprised that it
fractions, etc), using the order of
can compute multiple operations in one line.
operations, and creating and analyzing graphs with Excel. I also use this project as a
Reflection: This project is successful because it in-
way to introduce students to the TI-84 calculator.
volves something many boys are excited about anyway – football and fantasy sports. Choosing a team
Narrative: My most successful lesson with stu-
becomes very serious business for many of them.
dents has been Fantasy Football Math. I read about
They spend a lot of time evaluating a player’s statis-
using fantasy sports in math classes in the Septem-
tics and cost while trying to assemble the strongest
ber 2006 issue of NCTM’s publication Teaching
team and remain under the salary cap. Boys have
Mathematics in the Middle School.
also spent ample time coming up with just the right team name. Naming their team allows them to show
I have adapted some of these lessons into an eight-
where their allegiances lie, and also taps into their
week project. Within a salary cap, each student
sense of humor. One of my favorite names was “The
drafts a fantasy team. He keeps track of his players’
Jake Mullin (’13) Fantasy Football Team For Math
statistics, and computes each player’s fantasy points
Class That Resembles The Pittsburgh Steelers.”
over a period of six weeks of head-to-head competition with his classmates. The salary cap helps
The competitive aspect of this project also engages
level the playing field, so that even boys who are
many students who like to see how they fare against
not too familiar with football have a chance to do
their classmates. There is a healthy amount of dis-
well. Also, players can be selected for more than
course among students as they compute scores to
one team so that even a football novice has access to
figure out who won. Once the weekly scores are
all the best players. Players gain points for passing,
turned in, students are anxious for the results. Of-
90
ten, they stop me in the hall or visit my classroom
Many told me they wish it was longer, some said
to check if the scores are updated.
they wanted me to make the formula we use to calculate points more challenging, and others enjoyed
I enjoy hearing the boys’ comments and seeing how
it so much they asked that we do other fantasy sports
invested they are in the project. Monday mornings
like basketball or baseball.
are generally full of boasts about how well their team played or groans because of sub-par performance by the players. Another part of this project that I enjoy is listening to and incorporating stu-
Nick Romero has been teaching for nine years. He-
dents’ ideas of how the project could be improved.
joined The Haverford School faculty in 2007.
91
Casino Mathematics
I Form and II Form (seventh- and eighth-grade) Mathematics Objective: This lesson is designed to provide “real world” examples of probability. Narrative: There are few topics that stir the interest of boys and
Andrew Franz
afford the opportunity to gain hands-on experience than one
dealing with probability. Give a teenager a pair of dice, a handful of coins, or a multi-spaced spinner, and soon the classroom is transformed into a mini casino.
– five, fifty, or five hundred? The investigations take off and the discovery is endless. When the students are challenged to invent their own casino game, the issue of fairness is discussed and dissected. Is “How
it important that each player has an equal chance
much do you want to
of winning and losing? What could make the game
bet that I can toss these three coins in the air and
more fun or more attractive to players? The prob-
get three heads?” When they discover that their
ability that an event will occur is soon discovered
chances are one-in-eight that that result will occur,
to be only a theoretical representation. The students
the challenge is on! “I wonder what number comes
quickly find out through experimentation that the
out most often when two dice are rolled.” Give it a
toss of a coin or the selection of a playing card does
shot – and report back to the class. How many times
not always follow the laws put forth by the prob-
do you have to roll the dice to get a proper sample
ability gods.
92
For the superstitious of the group, discussion shifts
animated discussions take place that incorporate
to good or bad luck. For the practical participants,
math skills and understanding with personal beliefs
they might explore the shuffle of the cards or coin-
and attitudes. The enthusiasm of fourteen-year-old
flip techniques. Either way, a valuable dialogue can
boys is harnessed and directed toward a concept
take place that allows the students to reveal some
with which they can identify. And the fascinating
understanding of the mathematical concept of prob-
thing about all of this is that the obvious link be-
ability and how it is linked to experiences in each
tween the fun and the math does not turn them off
of their lives. When I challenge the boys to figure
completely – much to my pleasure.
out the probability of drawing two cards that have the same value in succession from a standard playing deck, their experience with watching the World
Andrew Franz has been teaching for seventeen
Series of Poker clouds their minds, and they express
years. He joined The Haverford School faculty in
very high probabilities. I suggest that ESPN edits
2007.
the program to eliminate all of the unexciting hands from the telecast, showing all of the hands where pocket aces were dealt to players. The students begin to realize that not everything is as it seems. In actuality, drawing like-valued cards in succession from a standard deck of fifty-two cards is one out of seventeen, and back-to-back aces are one out of 221. Reflection: It is no surprise that Middle School boys thrive on competition, and this is one lesson where competition can be incorporated into the scheme of the classroom in a healthy, fun way. By allowing the boys to explore, extend, discover, and invent, this lesson combines theoretical learning with experiential discovery. Each student participates in the learning process and is afforded the opportunity to take center stage in explaining the reasons why a particular event did not occur as expected. Positive,
93
Narrative Poetry
I Form (seventh-grade) English
songs. Music is an important part of the unit, and the boys usually become excited about poetry when they discover that many of the songs they listen to
Objective: The purpose of this
on a daily basis are narrative poems in disguise. The
lesson is to teach narrative and
boys do a lot of teacher-directed peer editing, and
peer-editing skills through the
they also decorate the final draft of their narrative
mechanics of poetry.
poems for display.
Narrative: I have the boys write
I allow them a great deal of freedom in terms of the
a personal narrative to begin the
topic, and they do a lot of brainstorming to select
unit. They have been studying
the correct moment from their lives. Some of the
and writing short stories since the
boys write about serious events, like the death of a
beginning of the year, and the students use a story
family member or pet; many of them write about an
map and other brainstorming devices to construct
illness or injury; others write about an amusing or
personal narratives. We also study poetic devices,
frightening incident.
Pat Gately
poetic structure, rhythm, and rhyme by reviewing dozens of student-submitted narrative poems and
It is impossible to simply ask I Form (seventhgrade) boys to write a narrative poem, even about themselves. They need to have the story firmly in place before they can begin to add poetic devices and structure. They don’t feel as pressured to write a poem right away. They feel safer within the known structure of the short story. They begin to realize, through our study of other narrative poems and songs, that they can write a poem once the narrative is in place. It is the best way I have found to help the boys write poetry. They follow a carefully constructed peer-editing handout through which they are able to offer each other constructive, positive feedback. It’s not enough to ask them to read each others’ poems; they have to work through a set of
94
questions and answers about their classmates’ work.
way to get the boys to raise the bar with their writ-
The boys cannot just say, “This is a good poem or
ing. If the boys know that a classmate is going to
story.” They have to pick the stories and poems
read their work, they actually spend more time pre-
apart for elements of fiction, narrative structure, po-
paring something of which they can be proud. Peer
etic devices, poetic structure, and readability.
pressure can have a positive impact on I Form (seventh-grade) boys too!
Reflection: Boys are somewhat self-centered – they love to tell stories about themselves. They like this
Pat Gately has been teaching for fourteen years. He
assignment because it combines poetry and story-
joined The Haverford School faculty in 2002.
telling within the context of their own lives. The final decoration of the poems also becomes an opportunity for them to share photographs or illustrations of the moment from their lives. These decorated poems, which hang in a section of my classroom for the remainder of the year, are by turns touching, funny, heartbreaking, and impressive. I Form (seventh-grade) boys are very interested in listening to and sharing music, and they enjoy being able to share their favorite narrative songs with their classmates. I have dozens of CDs that students have burned for me throughout the years. For the I Form (seventh-grade) boys, there is something liberating about being able to share a favorite song or artist. Every day during the unit, the boys are allowed to listen to music in class, which is another different and exciting part of the lesson. The fact that the boys already have a story (the personal narrative) makes writing the poem a lot easier. Their topic and narrative structure are already in place when they begin writing their poems. Peer editing is a great
95
The Market-fresh Squid Dissection
I Form (seventh-grade) Science Objective: The intent of this lesson is to give students a multisensory experience while exploring marine invertebrate morphology. The students also gain an appreciation for marine fisheries and the prepara-
Andrew Grossman ’96
tion of a popular seafood item.
Narrative: This activity is meant to be the epitome
Some background information … Loligo opalescens
of hands-on learning. It begins with a combination of
is a small squid in the family Loliginidae, order
background information, a short video clip, and dis-
Octopoda, Class Cephalopoda, Phylum Mollusca,
cussion on topics such as commercial fishing, marine
Kingdom Animalia, also commonly known as the
habitats, and environmental conservation. I may ask
restaurant or market squid. This species lives in the
some probing questions, allow the boys to engage in
Eastern Pacific Ocean from Baja, Mexico, to Alas-
discussion, and share some relevant experience with
ka. They tend to live within two hundred miles of
squid. The boys are given a lot of time to touch, smell,
shore. The life cycle of L. opalescens has four stag-
and look at their squid with the only guideline of not
es: eggs, hatchlings (called para-larvae), juveniles,
mutilating the squid or letting it leave the students’
and adults. These squid live for four to nine months:
workspace. The squid are market-fresh, not frozen,
they are born, they breed, they die, thus they are
nor are they preserved in any chemical agents. The
known as terminal reproducers.
boys are encouraged to leave their comfort zone, but are given the option to step back from some of the
The squid’s external features … The students are
more invasive techniques. All aspects of this lab, from
asked which features are the most noticeable. In-
the acquisition of their animals to the cleaning of the
evitably, I guide them in the exploration of the arms
squids and workplaces, are done in an extremely orga-
and tentacles, beak, eyes, siphon, mantle, finlets,
nized fashion to avoid any contamination of the stu-
and chromatophores. The beak and eyes should
dents or the classroom. The boys are instructed how
be removed by hand and examined, and the finlets
to properly sauté a raw seafood product at the end of
should be removed and set aside for subsequent
this lesson.
cooking.
96
“You may now cut your squid …” With scissors
Over medium heat in canola oil, the sliced and ten-
the students make one cut the length of the squid’s
derized slices of mantle, finlets, arms, and tentacles
mantle, siphon side up. When finished, the students
are sautéed until the pieces curl and are a solid
place the scissors on the newspaper to be collected
white color.
by the instructor. I ask these questions: Which or-
Were they paying attention … While the boys are
gan seems to be the most prominent? What do you
enjoying a treat that they may never have tried be-
think it is for? The gills, hearts, sex organs, pen,
fore, I ask the following questions:
and ink sac are to be identified. Using the pen and broken ink sac, the boys draw temporary tattoos on
•Where are you most likely to find these squid other
their hands and arms.
than on a menu at Red Lobster? •Describe how squid move.
**These directions are written and verbal as
•How do squid defend themselves?
they are the most hazardous.
•Was your squid male or female? How could you tell?
Cleanup … Once I have the edible portions of the students’ squids, the boys roll their newspapers into a tight ball and dispose of them in the waste basket. They wipe down their tables with disinfectant towels and dispose of them as well. I value the pro-
•How was my cooking? •Could your recreate this activity with your family?
Reflection: Many boys have little to no experience with ocean invertebrates or much of the foods that they eat in the raw/recently killed form; this activity covers both. Boys also benefit from seeing
cess of the boys cleaning up after their own
these processes in their entirety, as it
mess. They may now rinse their hands
will challenge them to see the big
in the appropriate basin and await their
picture in future experiences.
snack. Cooking … Although breading and/or
Andrew Grossman ’96 has
flouring the squid pieces produces a
been teaching for six years. He
classic calamari, I like to be creative
joined The Haverford School
with soy and oyster sauces, garlic,
white pepper, and other exotic ingredients to create a marinade that might be reminiscent of the Far East.
97
faculty in 2002.
The Human Calculator Middle School Spanish
Objective: The purpose of this lesson is to increase the students’ aptitude in the expression of quantities in Spanish. The boys are challenged not only to speak, but to think in Spanish.
Gerhard Reich, Ph.D.
Narrative: This is an exercise we do at the beginning of the I
Form (seventh-grade) Spanish class. The boys have just learned the numbers one to twenty. They are able to count in Spanish, and they know the simple task of basic mathematic operations: addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division in their new language.
First, the students count in consecutive order from one to however many there are in the class. Each student has to remember his number and represents that number for the game. Then I ask them simple math questions: What is five plus seven? The boys who represent number five and seven have to stand up. The solution to that problem, number twelve, has to stand up as well, restate and solve the problem: “five plus seven is twelve.” This is much more difficult than it sounds. It requires the memorization of all the numbers and the vocabulary for basic mathematical manipulation. It also requires the ability to hear fine nuances in language. For example: “dos mas doce” (two plus twelve) are very hard to distinguish, since they sound almost identical. This makes the boys pay close attention, and it trains their ears in a way that a regular exercise would never accomplish.
98
Reflection: There are several reasons why this exer-
novices. The Human Calculator lets the boys ex-
cise works. Each and every boy has to pay attention.
perience the sequence of numbers with a physical
Since it requires the “numbers” to stand up, each
response and creates a spatial memory. They will
boy is on alert. They have to hear and recognize the
never forget the difference between “dos” (two) and
numbers in the problem and know the mathematical
“doce” (twelve) since these numbers are situated on
manipulation, since any one of them could be the
totally different spots in the classroom. The boys
solution. This creates funny situations in the class-
also learn teamwork and develop a strategy to solve
room: you might have four or five boys standing up
a problem together.
because some might have misunderstood the math part and others the numbers. The boys then correct one another until they come up with the right trio, restating the problem and solving it. This exercise
Dr. Gerhard Reich has been teaching for sixteen
evolved in one of the classes and the process was
years. He joined The Haverford School faculty in
perfected by several Forms of Haverford Spanish
1999.
99
Liechtenstein Project
The students work in teams of two or three to create
Middle School Art II Form (eighth-grade)
one large comic book frame. They work in teams so that they can collaborate and combine their skills with other students. The students base their comic
Objective: The boys explore
still on a faculty member. They use digital camer-
technical aspects of Liechten-
as to capture a photograph of them “caught in ac-
stein’s work, such as primary
tion” and work from the photo for their final piece.
color use, optical mixture, and
The photo should reference the style of the stills in
illustrative/simplified
Liechtenstein’s art and more general comic book art,
contour
where the character is engaged in their activity, and
lines.
not posing for the camera. They learn a grid tech-
Joyce Chan
nique to enlarge and render the fundamental contour
Narrative: In one of my most dynamic projects, the
lines of their subject. After the subject is rendered,
boys study the work of Roy Liechtenstein and cre-
they create a setting for it. Here they can reference
ate large format comic-book style frames depicting
other Lichtenstein and comic-style elements, such
faculty members. The project works particularly
as text/thought bubbles, action symbols, onomato-
well with my II Form (eighth-grade) students. They
poeia, and background simplification.
experiment with optical mixture in an exercise using primary color strips of paper that are arranged
Reflection: The project works well with boys for
and “mixed” on a page to create new colors when
several reasons. It allows them to interact and be in-
viewed at a distance.
volved with faculty, their peers, and the contemporary art world in new ways. The students are excited about the opportunity to select a faculty member for their subject and get them involved in the project. The project becomes a vehicle for them to use art as a way to show their appreciation and also connect with their teachers outside of the classes that these teachers teach. Unlike more traditional projects, this one also allows the students to work together on a single piece since the grid technique allows different students to be working on different areas of the large piece simultaneously. The scale of the project
100
also engages the boys. It is a lot larger than what
In addition to new media, it is important for boys
they are used to working with, and this brings them
to interact and be exposed to modern art through
a new challenge. Working in teams, along with the
contemporary and controversial artists. They are
large scale, results in a final piece that looks im-
able to engage with Liechtenstein’s work quickly
pressive and more sophisticated than a lot of them
since many are familiar with comic books. More-
thought they could complete. They take pride in
over, their familiarity with the style as a commer-
the finished work. Because the faculty is already
cial art form allows them to begin asking pertinent
involved, positive feedback is generated across the
questions regarding what defines “art.” Beyond the
school community, which reinforces the boys’ con-
art world, they learn to promote their intellect and
fidence and excitement in their work.
think critically by learning to question and analyze what is in front of them.
Getting to use digital cameras in the beginning is another selling point for the boys who jump at the opportunity to use gadgets. But more importantly, and beyond a digital photography assignment, this
Joyce Chan has been teaching for three years. She
project shows the boys a way to use technology as a
joined The Haverford School faculty in 2006. She
useful tool in art but not a replacement for it.
is currently on sabbatical at La Sorbonne.
101
Fortune Cookie Playwriting Middle School Drama
ing from plot and action. After they complete the written plot outline, they can eat their fortune cookie – a quick reward. They then perform their idea
Objective: The intent of this
on stage under the stage lights. The special lights
lesson is to introduce the boys to
are also a motivating reward for them. The lesson
the playwriting process and its
continues through the next class period where I
mechanics. The lesson employs
have them create their own list of beliefs that they
challenging concepts, the use of
feel are important. For example, a boy may state, “I
contemporary samples, healthy
believe no one has the right to bully others.� It is a
competition, and quick, tangible
timed, silent writing exercise. The boys that give a
rewards. These methods inspire
strong effort are rewarded with the opportunity to
the boys to incorporate new and difficult ideas into
share their main belief with the class. As a group
their work.
they begin to brainstorm about how they would in-
Lori Reed
corporate their main belief into a play. They include Narrative: An early part of the playwriting process
a character and a situation.
is to create a theme or a central idea. The I Form (seventh-grade) playwriting class lesson begins
Reflection: This lesson works because we use con-
when the boys are reminded that every individual
temporary samples that the boys are interested in,
has a unique voice. They each have something that
quick rewards, and light competition. They are able
only they can get across to an audience. They are
to write, perform, and speak their ideas and that
given our working definition of theme: the central
helps the boys discover their own voices. It gives
idea that emerges from the dramatic action of the
them confidence to reach the yearlong goal of writ-
play. The first theme-based exercise is to have them
ing an original one-act play.
create a sketch with improvised dialogue and a written plot outline based on the fortune from a fortune cookie. In small groups, the boys work to spin the fortune of their cookies into a theme for their sketch. They must have the theme emerge from the dramatic action and not be simply stated in the dialogue. We talk about movies they know and plays they may have seen that have their core idea emerg-
102
This lesson is best pitched to boys because it takes a
moods and hopes in dialogue that he may have never
difficult, challenging concept and breaks it down so
felt comfortable to express in a group. The other boys
every boy can understand it. I believe boys are more
responded with appreciation and acted it out on stage
apt to commit to a lesson when they know it is a
quite convincingly. I really saw that boy begin to open
challenge; however, it needs to be a challenge where
up as he directed the others, and the other young ac-
every boy has a chance to be successful. I have no-
tors commented on how they also could relate to the
ticed that boys need a creative way to engage them
protagonist’s need for a deeper connection with fam-
in deeper conversation. Nevertheless, once involved
ily and friends. They feel especially safe when it is
in the activity of sharing they feel proud of what
a single-sex environment. Once the stage lights go
they have to say to the class.
on, they become free to create. This lesson allows everyone to have a chance to be in the limelight and
This year a reserved boy shared with the class his
it gives the boys a lot of room to be successful, cre-
belief statements. He took a risk and pronounced that
ative, and to have their voices heard.
every boy has the right to have a true friend. He went on to create a play based on that theme and was voted
Lori Reed has been teaching for sixteen years. She
by his peers to act out his work in class. He expressed
joined The Haverford School faculty in 2002.
103
Upper School Lessons
105
“Haverford’s teachers remain focused on what is best for boys, and they continue to light the fires of intellectual passion in their students.” - Tom Stambaugh ’90
UPPER SCHOOL LESSONS Tom Stambaugh ’90
to cling to – something that might provide structure
“A Sturdy Spar to Cling to …”
All is not golden in the misty hues of my memory.
and meaning to one losing his way. Members of the Haverford faculty provided that stability.
Many of the darker corners of an all-male commuThe first sentence in my yearbook
nity existed then – verbal harassment, bullying, ho-
paragraph reads, “I cried when my mommy dropped
mophobia, misogyny, and intolerance in its many
me off in front of Van Pelt Hall.” On the opening
forms. But the brighter spots of my memory are
day of the 1980-81 school year, this eight-year-old
filled with teachers who made an effort to introduce
watched his mother drive away and abandon him
me to the world of ideas.
to what seemed a cruel fate. As I started to climb the stone steps moments later, I was greeted with
Steve Dall widened for me the world of classical
an exceptionably warm smile by Mrs. Liddell, my
mythology that had been opened by Tom Worth
new third-grade teacher. She welcomed me heartily,
years before, Jeff Erskine exposed me to the won-
helped me brush back the tears, and led me to my new home. With the exception of seven years of study and teaching elsewhere, I haven’t left that home. Teaching at Haverford is, of course, much more than a job to me. My work here is deeply personal. I am compelled to work with young men joined by the spirit of camaraderie and in pursuit of intellectual, artistic, athletic, and moral growth. Recollections of my experience as an Upper School student largely center around confusion. Not yet focused on academic success and lost in the sea of adolescent uncertainty about self, friends, love, family, and the future, I was searching for a sturdy spar
107
ders of Shakespeare in our study of Macbeth – a text I currently teach to our IV Form (tenth grade). Sam Heed and Steve Reilly offered the complexities of American and European history. Edward Hallowell and Bob Peck sealed the deal by showing me that reading literature closely and reflecting on its lessons could enliven and sustain a rich life. These teachers lived their subjects. All indulged in the art of digression, leaping from the topic at hand to analogies in other literary forms or from their own personal experience. They offered themselves to their charges, and we paid attention to what mattered most. They also knew how to run a tight ship. Classroom discipline with the best of Haverford’s teachers was rarely a problem – they gave us enough structure to work toward success. As a teacher now working on his second decade in the classroom, I have the pleasure of being a colleague of some of these exceptional teachers. Our faculty has grown
community has happily grown much more tolerant
to include a much more diverse group of educators
of difference; there are now many ways to be a suc-
who endeavor to keep the best of the school’s tradi-
cessful man here at Haverford.
tions and to strive ever onward in refining, revisiting, and redefining what it means to be a Haverford
I am honored to serve as a member of this faculty.
School graduate.
I am enriched by the experience of working with young men whose confusion is, perhaps, equal to
Students often ask me what has changed since
my own at their age. They, too, are looking for the
my student days. While the physical world of the
sturdy spar to cling to, awash in the sea of adoles-
School has altered considerably, the essence of the
cence, threatened by the storms of an uncertain
place has not. Haverford’s teachers remain focused
world. While no Upper School student cries on the
on what is best for boys, and they continue to light
first day of school as his parent drives away, he is
the fires of intellectual passion in their students. The
still afraid of his place in our community and in the
108
world. The job of The Haverford School teacher is
to reflect on their development as scientists. Latin
to help him brush back that uncertainty and mount
teacher Sarah Adkins helps the young men summon
the steps with confidence to find a lively, engaging
their muse in rewriting the ending of Jason and the
home at school.
Argonauts. Gerry Rooney has his engineering students design an “ideal car” that requires them to ap-
The following sampling of Upper School “best les-
ply their understanding of the subject to perhaps the
sons” provides diverse snapshots of the innovative
most important possession in their lives. Andrew
teaching firing the minds of the current generation of
Poolman makes grammar study more palatable by
Haverford students. Mark Fifer’s approach to Chi-
changing scenery and employing a Spanish-only
nese history makes use of debate – a frequent choice
approach to verb forms.
for teachers eager to use low-level competition to bring out a hunger for excellence on the part of our
Veteran music teacher Michael Stairs delves past
boys. Ben Rein’s study of practical economics is a
the notes to help students see how the psychology
“life-changing lesson” – one that our VI Form and
of Beethoven in his later years is reflected in his
alums comment upon as an eye-opening experience
famous “Symphony No. 9.” Edward Hallowell’s
about the challenge of managing personal finances.
comparison of two characters from the III Form
Rob Upton takes his boys to the field to measure
(ninth-grade) English curriculum displays his wide-
ideal trajectories of the shotput, wedding math and
ranging intellect and an approach finely honed in
sport in ways sure to engage his students.
the classroom during the past several decades.
Brett Boham’s unique presentation on the Weird
Each of these lessons provides a window into
Sisters of Macbeth helps his students understand
Haverford classrooms in which professional educa-
that canonical work in new and interesting ways.
tors craft their lessons toward what they know will
Rebecca Smedley’s creative take on major charac-
work best for boys. Many of these lessons are now
ters from American literature helps the young men
keystones in the curriculum, the kinds of lessons
take ideas out of their original context for lively
students remember clearly because they were cre-
comparisons.
ative and effective.
The theremin project of Jamison Maley allows students to share practical application of electronics. Carol O’Brien’s revisiting of the egg drop project
Tom Stambaugh ’90 has taught for fourteen years.
for VI Form (twelfth-grade) students allows boys
He joined The Haverford School faculty in 1997.
109
Era of One Hundred Schools: The Debate
in a society, and the role of military in a society. Each group has the opportunity to present their views (based on their assigned philosophy) on the
Upper School History
selected debate topics. In addition, for each debate
Objective: The unit mainly focuses on Taoism, Confucianism, and Legalism, three of the most prominent philosophies that emerge during the Chou dynasty also known as “The Era of
Mark Fifer
One Hundred Schools.� In order to get my students more famil-
iar with the basic concepts of these philosophies, I have them engage in a debate.
topic there is a rebuttal period in which groups have the opportunity to refute and/or challenge the statements of other groups. After the central debate topics, students are exposed to a variety of modern-day images (projected on the whiteboard) and must comment on them in accordance with their assigned philosophy. The images are representative of significant issues facing our modern world: global warming, welfare, current military conflicts, economic policy, social program-
Narrative: During a III Form (ninth-grade) survey of Ancient China, I present a unit on the various philosophical developments that emerge during the latter part of this period. I split the class up into
ming, as well as many others. This portion of the lesson allows students to apply the core ideologies of their philosophy to modern issues. The debate ends with concluding remarks.
three groups and assign each group a philosophy. Students are then expected to research the central belief system of their philosophy. Students must argue that the belief system is the most productive way to organize a society. The opening statement requires students to provide a broad overview of the core concepts of their philosophy and present main arguments as to why their philosophy is the best way to manage a society. Students then debate on three topics: the role of government in a society, the role of education
110
Reflection: Structured, yet creative This lesson works because it presents clear parameters with the predetermined debate topics, while also allowing for innovative and improvisational commentary during the rebuttal period. Not only does this combination accommodate different learning styles, but it also fuels the competitive nature of the activity. Coercive engagement I have found that if boys feel as though they are not playing a primary role in an activity then they are prone to disengage. This lesson does not allow students to be passive; active participation by all team
day issues. This activity traditionally elicits some
members is required and rewarded.
great post-debate discussions on how some of the concepts of each philosophy relate to our modern society.
Comparative Requiring the students to become “experts� on one philosophy provides them with a foundation
Competition
of knowledge that they can use to identify how the
The competitive nature of this lesson is undoubt-
other two philosophies differ. This technique is es-
edly the driving force behind its success. Boys are
pecially effective with boys who often need a clear
energized by the possibility of finding flaws in the
point of reference in order to comprehend complex
analysis of other group members. Witnessing a
subject matter.
group of students enthusiastically debating the relative advantages of adopting a Taoist belief system
Relevance
as opposed to a Confucian belief system proves the
Boys especially need to feel as if the informa-
benefit of integrating competition into this activity.
tion that they are learning is relevant to their lives. Asking students to provide commentary from the perspective of their own philosophy after viewing modern-day images allows them to apply the ab-
Mark Fifer has been teaching for six years. He
stract qualities of their school of thought to present-
joined The Haverford School faculty in 2004.
111
Personal Finance Project Upper School Economics
Personal
Objective: Students should learn
Finance
to use basic Excel spreadsheet
Project is an
skills, develop an understanding
offshoot of this
of the basic “cost of living” on
student’s ques-
their own as an adult, and write a
tion.
reaction to the “content thought”
Ben Rein
for the project in light of their work and research. In other words,
they must learn a practical skill with a real computer application, put meaning behind the money we are discussing, and then reflect on this work in order to think more critically about the life they currently live and think they will live in the future.
The lesson starts with the following content thought written on the board and on the assignment sheet: “Money should be an important consideration as you make your life/career choices.” The content thought is intentionally written to not project a certain answer/outcome for the boys. There is no “right” answer, only a conclusion that each individual must draw based on their work and
Narrative: One of my best students did “A” work all year, yet it was the question he asked on the last
reflection. Next, the purpose of the project is explained to the boys.
day of class that made me rethink how and what I teach in the course. Smart, articulate, and thought-
They are to imagine that they are twenty-seven
ful, in many ways he was the model of what we
years old and single. They must look forward and
hope to produce at Haverford. After covering all
choose a career, a place to live, and then analyze
of the nuance and detail of micro and macro eco-
and project their monthly and annual costs of liv-
nomics for two semesters, on the last day I asked
ing and organize these on an Excel spreadsheet. All
the boys if there was anything else they wanted to
of the calculation formulas on the spreadsheet must
know. This student raised his hand and said, “How
work, the inputs and outputs on the spreadsheet
do you write a check?”
must be based on sound research. Once they have researched and completed their initial spreadsheet
Here was a successful eighteen-year-old Haverford
model, the young men are instructed to add new as-
student, and he did not know how to write a check.
sumptions and “life events” to observe the impact.
It made me wonder what other “practical” econom-
The boys work as a class and individually to de-
ic realities were escaping the boys in our care. The
termine monthly inputs and monthly outputs for a
112
twenty-seven-year-old single male with a career of
They live on the Main Line of Philadelphia. Both of
their choice. The boys do this during a week of class
the children attend independent high schools (assume
time, and every day we project one student’s work
$23,000 a year each), they have a second car, a four-
on the board to serve as the basis for questions and
bedroom house with three-and-a-half bathrooms (us-
discussion. They justify their inputs/outputs with
ing realtor.com to search this price point). They take
independent sources, and they use them to calculate
one family vacation for at least ten days a year, and
the estimated cost of their lives at twenty-seven.
both of the children attend six weeks of summer programs/camps etc. They are members at a pool club
Then the students are asked to create two new spread-
or country club. They think about how much more
sheets. On the first, they make only a few changes.
they would have to spend on food, clothes, heat, etc.
The young men keep all outputs on the spreadsheet
and make the adjustments accordingly. They observe
the same, but go online and find the average income
what happens to their annual savings/debt.
for a family of four living in their “home” city in the United States. They put this amount into the salary
Reflection: The lesson is framed on what works
bar of the spreadsheet and zero out any investment
best for teaching boys. It is intentional, practical,
income, second jobs, gifts, etc., from the initial input
and involves tangible, hands-on, independent re-
box. They observe what happens to their annual sav-
search with clear guidelines for the work, expecta-
ings/debt. On the second update, the students keep
tions, and outcome. The purpose of this assignment
their original salary from page one, but add the fol-
is to give the young men a “real world” appreciation
lowing outputs. They now have two kids and a wife.
for the value of money and the cost of living. The final written evaluation of these three spreadsheets and the discussions in class about the cost of living, trade-offs with life choices, the sacrifices parents have made, and the world of privilege they already inhabit are invaluable and probably the best part of the entire class. This project gets the students fully involved not just in their education, but in their lives, and with its clear structure and tangible, hands-on activities, it promotes the best practices of how to be effective and intentional when educating boys. Ben Rein has sixteen years of teaching experience. He joined The Haverford School faculty in 1996.
113
Projectile Motion Lesson for PreCalculus Upper School Math
Objective: The point of this lesson is to show the students that we can gain a better understanding of how things work through math. They learn how to create a mathematical model for motion
Robert Upton
in two dimensions using parametric equations.
Narrative: Parametric equations are used to compute an x and y coordinate based on another variable, usually time. This allows us to model the mo-
After a short demonstration on proper shotput tech-
tion of something both horizontally and vertically
nique, each student is coached through some prac-
as a function of the time the particle has traveled.
tice with the shot, and then we film two attempts by
Parametric equations are frequently used to create
each student. A meter stick is placed vertically next
a graph for the motion of a thrown or fired object
to the shotput circle for scale. The distance of each
such as a ball or a rocket. In this lesson the projec-
throw is also measured for an additional data point.
tile we use is a high school shotput weighing twelve
The film is then downloaded to a computer and, by
pounds, and each student creates a mathematical
using the software program Videopoint, each stu-
model for the path of his throw.
dent creates a series of data points for his throw.
After we’ve introduced the concept of parametric
The Videopoint program displays the path of each
equations and worked through a few examples, we
throw, and the position of the shot in each frame of
then determine mathematically what should be the
the film is given an x and y coordinate. These points
“ideal” angle of release of the shot to achieve the
are then downloaded into the student’s calculator so
greatest distance. With this information in hand, we
they can do an analysis of the data to create a math-
head out to the shotput circle.
ematical model of the throw.
114
Once the model is created, we can analyze the throw
the “real world” situation is not what is “optimum”
to determine the angle of release, the initial velocity
from the mathematical perspective.
of the shot, and the distance of the throw. We then compare the angle of release and distance of the
Reflection: There are a number of things that boys
throw both from the predictions of our model and
love to do, simply because they are boys. They like
direct measurement from the video. Often the pre-
to compete, they like to throw things, and they like
dicted and observed values do not match perfectly.
to use technology. This lesson allows them to do
This usually leads to a
all of these things
good discussion of er-
while we learn to cre-
ror within mathemati-
ate a mathematical
cal models and how to
model for motion in
deal with discrepan-
two dimensions using
cies created.
parametric equations. The young men enjoy
This is usually the
this project because
third or fourth model-
it brings mathematics
ing project we work
into a very real situa-
on, so the boys have
tion for them. It stokes
a good sense of where
their competitive fire
errors creep into a
during the data gath-
mathematical model.
ering, but they work
Because of the use of
cooperatively to help
the videotape, this project usually has very little er-
each other create their own mathematical model. It
ror due to the large number of data points.
gives them a chance to see that even in something as ancient as the shotput, mathematics may lead us to a
The final part of the project is to create a model from
better understanding of how things work.
the winning throw in the shotput for the most recent Olympic Games. In analyzing this model, the boys discover that even the best shotputters do not throw with the “ideal” angle of release. It is interesting
Rob Upton has thirty years of teaching experience.
for them to learn that often the best performance in
He joined The Haverford School faculty in 2001.
115
Witchcraft and Terrorism in Macbeth
“Witchcraft and Terrorism” begins with a student performance.
Upper School English
Three students perform
Objective: To teach the importance of cultural and historical context in the interpretation of Shakespearean drama, as well as to stress the continuing relevance of Shakespeare to contemporary
Brett Boham
audiences.
the first half of Act 1, Scene 3, in which Macbeth encounters the Witches for the first time. The students are encouraged to make decisions based on their reading of the scene (i.e. to portray the Witches in a way that reflects their understanding of the character) – and they are graded on the creativity and sincerity of their performance. This is followed by a brief discussion of both the
Narrative: In order to maximize the potential of
scene itself and the students’ performance of the
Macbeth for a classroom of teenage boys, it is es-
scene, during which the young men are encour-
sential to plug them into the story through active
aged to speak to each other rather than solely to the
involvement, to challenge them with thought-pro-
teacher. The primary focus of the discussion is the
voking units that bridge the gap between Renais-
characterization of the Witches: How are they por-
sance London and post-Modern America, and, fi-
trayed? How do they act? What do you think they
nally, to balance the inevitable abstractness of the
look like? Are they comic? Fearsome? Dangerous?
classroom discourse with concrete instructions on
Pathetic? Powerful? Weak? In addition, the discus-
assignments and examinations that allow them to
sion focuses on Shakespeare’s use of wordplay,
structure their work time and measure their devel-
most notably his use of puns. Following the discus-
opment. The lesson of mine that best exemplifies
sion, five different students perform the remainder
these three principles is a two-day exploration of
of the scene during which Macbeth and Banquo
the complex relationship between witchcraft and
encounter the Witches for the first time. They are
terrorism in the early seventeenth century and its
graded according to the same rubric. A brief discus-
influence on Shakespeare’s portrayal of the three
sion follows according to the same structure men-
Witches in Macbeth. The lesson combines perfor-
tioned above, after which the students are asked to
mance, discussion, close reading, and secondary
write down five adjectives from their vocabulary list
source analysis.
that describe the Witches.
116
Homework
cerns, but are political terrorists devoutly devoted to
• Read News from Scotland by King James I. In
the overthrow of the government, at least according
this reading, James I, King of England in the early
to people in positions of power. I ask them to write
seventeenth century, argues that a recent outbreak
a brief response in their writing journals to the fol-
of witchcraft in England and Scotland is directly
lowing question: Are the Witches in Macbeth por-
tied to, and even responsible for, acts of political
trayed as terrorists? After the writing assignment,
anarchy and revolution, including numerous assas-
the class concludes with a group discussion sharing
sination attempts on the King himself.
their answers to this question.
• Write down five adjectives that James I would use
Reflection: This is a great lesson because it is di-
to describe witches.
verse without being confusing. The type of instruction changes several times throughout the course of
Next day, in class
the lesson, but never lacks clear directions or ob-
After the students have finished reading the text,
jectives. Second, it allows for physical expression
I ask if anyone wrote down “terrorist” as one his
within clearly-defined boundaries. The content is
five words. Then, I make a proposition: in Shake-
designed to be interesting, relevant, and provoca-
speare’s cultural context, “witches” are not creepy
tive. Macbeth is an ideal text for IV Formers (tenth-
forest creatures detached from “real world” con-
grade), holding their attention with its suspenseful, blood-drenched narrative long enough to allow thorough explorations of such complex concepts as gender, power, justice, mortality, and free will. When I was a young man, Macbeth made a significant impact on my intellectual development, demonstrating the potential of an early modern text to feel vital, powerful, and engrossing. As a teacher, I now hear the same reactions from students, many of whom discover in Macbeth a dynamic magnetism that they had assumed nonexistent in Shakespeare. Brett Boham has been teaching for three years. He joined The Haverford School faculty in 2006.
117
Literary Talk Show
have to come to class prepared to answer questions
Upper School English
“in character”; they have to know themselves well enough to respond in a convincing manner, consis-
Objective: To help the boys pre-
tent with all that they have said or done in their piece
pare fort their midterm exam,
of literature. They bring in a typed outline of their
by revisiting the texts we’ve
character traits, with supporting textual evidence
read and demonstrating an un-
outlined in detail. They also bring in one specific
derstanding of the characters in
question for every other guest on the show. David
those texts.
Letterman has to come to class with two questions
Rebecca Smedley
prepared for each guest. His questions can address the guest’s feelings toward another character in his/
Narrative: V Form (eleventh-grade) English at
her own novel or in another text; he can also so-
The Haverford School is a survey of American lit-
licit his guest’s views on contemporary American
erature. We read One
life (religion, politics,
Flew Over the Cuck-
war, health care, gov-
oo’s Nest, The Scar-
ernment,
let Letter, selections
freedom of speech,
from Emerson, Tho-
gay rights, etc.).
education,
reau, Whitman, and Douglass out of The
The boys have a week
Norton Anthology, A
to prepare for this ex-
Streetcar Named De-
ercise, and each stu-
sire, The Great Gats-
dent is graded on how
by, and The Adven-
truthfully and thor-
tures of Huckleberry
oughly he represents
Finn. For the mid-
his assigned character
term exam review, I
(Letterman is graded
assign each young man in the class a character from
on the thoughtfulness and appropriateness of his
one of our first semester texts. In addition, I assign
questions). Each student has a name placard and
one student to be David Letterman. The assignment
cup of water at his desk, to simulate a formal talk
is to prepare for The Late Show where David Let-
show environment. Many choose to come in cos-
terman interviews his literary guests. The “guests”
tume: Hester Prynne wore her scarlet, embroidered
118
“A” on her blazer lapel, and Arthur Dimmesdale
specific strengths and preferences. Boys like to be
had his “A” hidden on his undershirt. I sit as an
active and engaged in class; this talk show allows
“audience member,” taking notes on how well the
them to “act out” literally and be actively engaged
students represent their assigned character in their
“in character” throughout the class. Boys also enjoy
questions and answers. What ensues is a lively and
being irreverent and indulging their humor; this les-
entertaining discussion, with every member of the
son allows for the spontaneous, competitive, “one-
class involved. Because the students have to inter-
upmanship” of appropriate humor in the give and
act with other characters from the other texts, they
take of the discussion on our “show.” Boys need
are well prepared for the exam; they have to know
structure with some degree of latitude; this talk
their assigned text well enough to impersonate their
show provides that. They know the “rules” ahead
character and they have to know the other texts well
of time, they have to take the assignment seriously
enough to ask and answer questions from those oth-
because it is graded, yet there is room for the spon-
er characters.
taneous and the irreverent. Ultimately, the talk show offers a thorough, effective, and fun review of the
Reflection: The talk show works particularly well
exam material.
with boys because it is hands-on and allows them to be active participants in their learning process. In addition, it showcases their spontaneous wit and
Rebecca Smedley has been teaching for thirteen
includes a certain level of competition in the ques
years. She joined The Haverford School faculty in
tion-and-answer format, playing to some gender-
2004.
119
The Theremin
Upper School Science Objective: To teach the boys the process of building circuits of greater and greater complexity until they arrive at the final project of constructing a working theremin
umph of electrical engineering and physics, and relies
– no easy task.
on several essential concepts of the sciences.
Narrative: When I was a boy of
Reflection: Boys, as kinesthetic learners, learn by
ten or eleven, electronics fascinat-
doing. As the young men build various types of cir-
ed me. Looking back on those early days spent build-
cuits to accomplish certain objectives in the course,
ing circuits, assembling and re-assembling radios,
“learning by doing” is at the very heart of what we
and causing general mischief, the memories of those
do. Through the act of building the theremin piece by
activities remain as distinct snapshots of true Ameri-
piece, section by section, the student can witness each
cana, a classic part of an American boy’s experiences
of the concepts coming to life on their circuit boards.
to which many young people today are tragically los-
While the notion of a “Colpitts oscillator” may be
ing access. A large part of the success of this course
challenging as an abstraction explained on the chalk-
and of the theremin project, is the fact that the very
board, there is no substitute for the satisfaction as well
nature of the subject keys directly into the marrow of
as the deeper understanding the boys garner as they
boys’ learning while the project relies on those skills
physically design and install their Colpitts oscillator
that resonate viscerally with boys.
through their mettle and newly acquired skills.
The theremin is the last circuit project of the year in
Boys like to feel that they have some input, some voice
electronics. It was invented by Léon Theremin and is
in the direction of the class. Electronics class operates
a musical instrument that can be played without actu-
by a fairly democratic process. Last year, after scour-
ally touching it – the pitch and volume are controlled
ing the Internet, two of my students opted to work on
by the distance of the operator’s hands from the two
a much more sophisticated theremin model than the
respective antennae. While once considered a legiti-
already challenging schematic I had given. This year,
mate addition to the classical realm, the theremin un-
two more students decided that they wanted more of
fortunately took a detour into the high camp of 1950s
a challenge as well. As musicians, they wanted to be
sci-fi films and that is where it resides in the minds of
able to take the instrument home with them to use in
most people. Regardless, the theremin remains a tri-
their own compositions! I felt that it would be quite
Jamison Maley
120
formidable to solder such a complicated circuit and was concerned that the boys would never finish it in
tary called Theremin – An Electronic Odyssey, which details the history of the theremin.
time. It was important to the boys that they were given the chance. Boys need “real world” relevance, content that has an immediate application. This is a fact that is met with every circuit the students build during the course. In terms of the theremin, the concepts underpinning the instrument can be found everywhere in the lives of our young men. Whether it is the premise of a metal detector, the automatic changing of a traffic light, or literally anything involving radio transmissions, there is some facet or building block of the theremin at work. Boys need structure and must be given manageable chunks. The introductory lecture systematically builds on the concepts in class until the greater picture of how the instrument works slowly begins to emerge. Once the boys are presented with the content, they set to work on their circuits – a process that is also highly structured. Our building chronology epitomizes the notion of “manageable chunks” as students are encouraged with a high-lighter to build the circuit in sections each day using their own self-generated timeline.
Boys need to be challenged by content requiring higher order and conceptual thinking. The boys must not only digest sophisticated concepts in electrical engineering and physics, make unique forays into calculus, and recognize different types of oscillator designs, but they must also use their imaginations to put all of it together in such a way that a musical instrument can emerge. Boys need to cultivate mutual respect with other students and learn social and cooperative skills. By the time the boys arrive at the Theremin project in December, they have already worked through challenging circuit projects. In that time, the boys have bonded with their lab mates and have learned to recognize and appreciate each other’s specific skills. I have never seen a better example of teamwork, cooperation, and gumption than when the boys prepare themselves to build their theremins. The collective pride, high-fiving, and loud declarations of affirmation that come from groups as they slowly bring a circuit to life is a wonderful thing to witness. Jamison Maley has been teaching for eight years. He
Boys need to be given a range of teaching techniques.
joined The Haverford School faculty in 2005.
The building component of the theremin project aside, the lecture preceding the build draws on various approaches to guide the students through fairly challenging terrain. While most of the information is passed on through lecture, there are prop demonstrations, video demonstrations, and a riveting documen-
121
Egg Drop Revisited
data collection and analysis are much improved.
Upper School Science
They are more prepared to present their ideas in a cogent and cohesive fashion. Most significantly,
Objective: The challenge – de-
they are no less enthusiastic about the potential suc-
sign a vehicle to carry two eggs
cess of the vehicle they design and, perhaps, more
down a three-story drop to a con-
excited about the execution of the flight.
crete landing – intact. They are to justify design, collect data to
The boys build their vehicles at home on their own
predict outcome, and then ex-
and the vehicles are tested in class. This requires
ecute the drop. The purpose, as
cooperation and invites comparison. There is no
stated by a former student in his
“best” criteria, but the boys thrive on competition
final paper, “is to combine all of
and impose their own sense of contest. They strive
our understanding of previous physics topics that
to beat their “old” vehicle and each others’ new de-
were covered over the course of the semester and
sign. Paradoxically, they work together to collect
use that knowledge to transport two eggs within the
data that assures each boy has the ability to know
same vehicle safely from the third story of the gym
whether or not his vehicle is likely to succeed – and
to the ground in a single fall. In order to construct
they can’t help but offer each other advice for tweak-
Carol O’Brien
our vehicle, we are allowed to use forty straws, a reasonable quantity of adhesive, and the equivalent of two 8 ½ x 11 sheets of any paper product.” Narrative: The VI Form (twlefth-grade) students may elect to take a second physics course. One of the highlights of the III Form (ninth-grade) course is an egg drop project, in which the boys must engineer sufficient protection for an egg to survive intact from a drop of thirty feet. Those boys who elect the second course are given the opportunity to approach the project again – this time armed with a significant math advantage. The physics concepts learned during III Form have been reinforced and enhanced with mathematic clarity. Their skills in
122
ing the final product to make it just a little bit better.
presentation of data is exquisite in its detail. Graphs
The individual project becomes a team activity as
are labeled and analyzed. Calculations are detailed.
they work to make sure everyone has data. The in-
Reasonable predictions are made. Honest reserva-
dividual undertaking becomes a class enterprise as
tions are stated.
they approach execution – they want to be the group with the largest number of successful vehicles rath-
Reflection: The outcome of the drop does not in-
er than just the guy with the one that didn’t break.
fluence the project grade; however this in no way
They compete not only with
lessens the significance of
themselves and their class-
the drop for the boys – they
mates but also with classes
want a successful landing.
past and future.
This project requires imagination, follow-through, and
The students must both exe-
analysis. The boys must de-
cute and present their design.
sign and build independently,
They are challenged to make
collect and manipulate data
choices – which adhesive,
cooperatively, predict using
which paper product. While
prior experience and recently
there is no grade for aesthetic
acquired knowledge, pres-
appearance, they struggle to
ent their findings in a paper,
produce an elegant machine.
and finally test the vehicle in
Hands-on learning keeps the
a public forum that has been
boy invested in the process. The boys are called on
nothing but supportive in my experience at The
to actively demonstrate not only what they know,
Haverford School. The boys at once stand on their
but how they know it and to explain it in a manner
own, with a lab group, with a class, and with all
that shows intellectual ownership. The papers they
those who have accepted the same academic chal-
produce are exemplary in content and design. They
lenge in years past. They are quite open and delight-
provide extensive background information detailing
fully competitive with their desire to have their ve-
the essential physics topics: gravity, inertia, impulse,
hicle occupy a space on the “Wall of Fame.”
momentum, acceleration, velocity, terminal velocity, air resistance, force, kinetic energy, potential energy,
Carol O’Brien has been teaching for twenty-three
the theory of conservation of energy, and work. They
years. She joined The Haverford School faculty in
detail their procedure, often diagrammatically. Their
1999.
123
Automotive Design
The VI Form (twelfth-grade) engineering class, in
Upper School Science
teams of two, is asked to design the perfect car for an eighteen-year-old male. Once the groups have
Gerry Rooney
Objective: Through this lesson
designed their car, the entire class agrees on six im-
the boys learn:
portant criteria to compare each team’s car. These
• Creativity and teamwork in the
criteria may be safety, performance, fuel economy,
design process
style, initial cost, “tricked out,” storage, comfort, etc.
• How to create and use a deci-
The class then divides one hundred points between
sion-making matrix
the chosen six criteria with more points assigned to
• To articulate their ideas to a
those attributes that are deemed more important. I
skeptical group.
do the same but, as a parent, obviously assign the points differently.
In this lesson, points are assigned by consensus process. When the boys see my attribute ratings and
Each team then presents their design to the class.
consider how different my ratings are from their
The rest of the class debates and assigns a number
own, they understand that success depends on the
of points to the car for each criterion. The class be-
features valued by consumers and that you must be
gins to see what customers might value and how
able to determine who your customer is.
their earlier design choices impacted their success.
Narrative: A truism for boys is “tell me and I will
Reflection: I could have constructed the same les-
forget it; show me and I will remember it; involve
son, only instead of a car, the boys would have to
me and I will understand it.” After a lifetime in the
design a washing machine – but that would fail.
engineering business, I learned that the essence of
This lesson works because it taps into a subject that
good engineering is teamwork and the ability to
most young men are interested in: cars. It allows
make good decisions. Therefore, this lesson is de-
them to use their creativity to design something that
signed to involve the students creatively in a group
is both important to them and about which they al-
process. It also introduces them to how a formal
ready have opinions. It also introduces an element
process may be applied to make complex decisions.
of competition. Here, the seemingly boring deci-
If they understand how their future customer may
sion-making process becomes the delivery mecha-
make their decisions, then they will make smarter
nism for this competition. It works at a final level
choices.
of the presentation and point assignment process
124
because the students have to work together to drive
this up with a paper where they describe how they
for consensus when assigning points to the team
designed their car, how well it faired in the deci-
presenting.
sion-making process, and, most importantly, what they learned from that process.
Once this lesson is up and running, my role is to provide structure and guidance. The body of the
After 30 years in industry, Gerry Rooney joined The
lesson is driven by the students. The boys follow
Haverford School faculty in 2004.
Description Possible Point Team 1 Team 2 Team 3
Safety 15 8.5 13 9
Economy 10 6 5 8
Tricked Out 28 25 28 19
125
Storage 9 6 6 8
Power 14 10 8 10
Comfort 24 20 20 22
Total 100 75.5 80 76
Rank 3 1 2
Sports and Spanish
ing yo lanzo (I throw). When the student throws the
Upper School Spanish
ball back to me, I say ĂŠl lanza (he throws). With the new vocabulary, I construct basic sentences and act
Objective: To encourage the re-
out the sentence, and after, the students repeat the
tention of new vocabulary and to
sentence while acting it out.
get the students to practice their
Andrew Poolman
verbal skills through a fast-paced
When the students are familiar with this format, I
exercise that is interesting and
encourage them to create their own sentences. They
fun.
are given time to play each sport and are encouraged to say aloud and in Spanish what they are do-
Narrative: I employ rapid rep-
ing while playing the sport. After more written and
etition, full and frequent class
oral practice with the vocabulary and verb conju-
participation, and theatrical definitions to teach vo-
gations, the final assessment for this unit involves
cabulary for the unit.Using props like a soccer ball
each student acting as the Spanish commentator
or a baseball bat, I try to conduct the class outside
for a sports game while it is shown without sound
or in the gymnasium. I explain in English what we
on the screen. They don’t know what will happen
are going to do. From that point forward, the whole
in their two-minute clip of sports coverage, so the
lesson is in Spanish. I give the students a sheet with
boys must be ready to think quickly in the target
the vocabulary and sentences made from the vocab-
language and express their Spanish thought process
ulary. If the word is mano (hand), I point to my hand
immediately without losing their place in the game.
and I say in Spanish mano twice without using the
I grade the students on their vocabulary variety, cor-
English. The students repeat this as a class. I then
rect verb conjugations, pronunciation, fluidity, and
rapidly point to at least six students to repeat what
enthusiasm.
I have said while holding up their hand so that they may associate the word in Spanish with their hand without translating. We do this for each vocabulary word that the students can visualize, including verbs. When the time comes for the verbs, not only is a visual definition of the action emphasized but also the correct conjugation is highlighted according to different subjects. For instance, if the verb is lanzar (to throw), I act out a throwing of the ball while say-
126
word, the boy’s brain doesn’t have to translate from English, a step that sometimes serves as an unnecessary intermediary. The oral repetition while performing the action or watching the action also helps to make that association between language and image without translating.
When too much new information is presented to students at once, their minds can shut down and they don’t absorb new material. In this progression from basic vocabulary to full sentences, the new Reflection: As soon as I push the desks aside or I say
words and grammar are added gradually as build-
we are going to the gym, the students become ex-
ing blocks of the final product. By commenting in
cited because they can see that they will be on their
Spanish on their own play or the play of someone
feet, learning on the move. Some might not think of
else, the boys are encouraged to be creative. They
it as a class. Most boys enjoy learning about sports
understand that there is usually more than one cor-
because it is something that they constantly speak
rect answer in using the Spanish language. Consid-
about in English and is on their minds each day. It is
ering a sport in real time requires the students to
possible that the students make a subconscious as-
think and expound quickly in the target language
sociation to their time as a younger boy when they
– a difficult skill to acquire for a learner of a sec-
used to commentate as they played a sport in their
ond language. This lesson also brings the Spanish
backyard. The students also enjoy focusing on the
language to life and removes it from the context of
verbal part of the language and this lesson gives the
their textbook. I witnessed the success of this les-
boys a chance to use the language in an informal
son recently when I was giving an oral exam and
way, as they do in English. The sheet with the vo-
several students responded by pointing to a body
cabulary words gives some who don’t learn well
part as they identified the word in Spanish, show-
orally a chance to link the written words with the
ing the direct association between the object and the
actions and dramatic definitions. Each student can
language.
choose which way of learning the vocabulary works best for him. By visualizing what is happening and
Andrew Poolman has been teaching for six years.
associating the action or object with the Spanish
He joined The Haverford School faculty in 2007.
127
Jason and the Argonauts
boat falling upon the sleeping Jason’ somehow lacked the grandeur or at least imaginative quality of Jason’s previous exploits and adventures. The
Upper School Latin
task now falls to you, then, to rewrite, in the style
Objective: We begin the year in
of our translations of the Latin, the ‘boring’ demise
Latin III translating the legend of
of Jason. Using all your knowledge about Jason and
Jason and his compatriots, the Ar-
the full capacity of your creative genius, write a fit-
gonauts. The story enables us to
ting end to Jason and the story.”
review Latin grammar in context,
Sara Adkins
increase vocabulary, gain facility
Panic immediately ensues as the students, errone-
in translating, and follow the ter-
ously, assume that they are writing this conclusion
rific exploits of an ancient hero.
in Latin – deo nolente! Once they realize that they are writing in English and not Latin, they relax and
Narrative: The boys thoroughly enjoy the more
instantly have a million ideas on what Jason’s fate
“unbelievable” of Jason’s adventures and discuss
should be and how to tell it. Should it sound like
or, shall I say, argue about aspects of the adven-
their literal English translations of the previous Lat-
ture that they like and/or dislike. After almost two
in passages and therefore, actually, quite awkward?
months and approximately four hundred lines of
Or could it read with the flow and grandeur of a
Latin translated, the finale of the story includes
great classical epic? Some try to be as outlandish as
Jason’s wife, Medea, murdering their two sons and
possible, others gruesome, and others as true to the
then escaping in a chariot provided by the god of
basic story as possible. Before they actually begin
the sun. At this point the students are expecting
their own version, we review the stylistic elements
major fireworks from Jason and a gruesome end to
of the Latin stories. Armed with ideas and a frame-
either Jason or Medea or both. Oddly enough, the
work, they have two nights to write their story. In
story concludes with Jason being crushed to death
class each boy then reads his story with as much dra-
by his own boat.
matic flourish as he can muster. We conclude with a class vote on which were the best and worst stories;
The lesson requires the boys to rewrite the conclu-
each year the class determines what is meant by
sion to the adventures of Jason. The following in-
“best” and “worst.” (As might be expected of boys,
structions are given to them: “For several of you,
the title “worst” is almost more proudly carried!)
the ending to our story of Jason and his compatriots,
There is much pandering for votes and the winners
the Argonauts, was not very satisfying. A ‘beached
are awarded prizes – usually replica ancient coins or
128
miniature Roman soldiers, which are much coveted
death by his own boat,” they pursue humor to great
and add to the competitive atmosphere.
lengths with their own stories. There is a competitive component, actually two – write a better ending
Reflection: There is choice involved – boys re-
than our Roman author and the rest of the class, and
spond particularly well when they get to make the
then persuade the class to vote on it as the best or
decision about an assignment. There is creativity
worst as the case may be. And finally a reward is in-
involved – they can make the ending become what-
volved – it often doesn’t matter what the reward is,
ever they feel is appropriate and with as many twists
just that there is one, and you are the one getting it.
and turns as they can create. There is an opportunity to use humor. Inspired by the unintentional humor
Sara Adkins has been teaching for twenty-five years.
they find in the actual ending, “Jason is crushed to
She joined The Haverford School faculty in 1999.
129
Beethoven and the Heiligenstadt Testament
We then discuss the brotherhood of man that is set forth in the “Ode” as contrasted to the personal despair Beethoven noted in the famous Heiligenstadt
Upper School Music
Michael Stairs
Testament. Doctors had treated his deafness with all
Objective: To give the students
sorts of medicines, oils, and herbs. As a last resort,
meaningful insight into the life
he thought his hearing would improve if he left Vi-
of one of the world’s most cel-
enna for six months and went to the quiet village of
ebrated composers and to draw a
Heiligenstadt. But this did not help at all. The fol-
connection between themselves
lowing excerpts are then read from this letter, virtu-
and Beethoven.
ally a final will and testament:
Narrative: The lesson starts with a handout of
“All you who think I am hostile, peevish, or un-
Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy” from Symphony No. 9.
friendly, how greatly you wrong me. You do not know
The recorded music starts with the chaotic, dis-
the secret cause which makes me seem so to you …
sonant, ominous tones of the last movement. The
For six years now, I have had an incurable condi-
translation of the baritone soloist’s text states: “O
tion, made worse by incompetent doctors, from year
friends, not these tones! Rather let us sing more
to year deceived with hopes of getting better, finally
pleasant and more joyful ones.”
now forced to accept the prospect of a lasting infirmity … I soon had to withdraw myself, to spend my life
The students then sing the popular theme in German,
alone as an exile … It was impossible for me to say to
singing on scale degree numbers first, then the German
people ‘Speak louder, for I am deaf.’ Ah, how could
of Schiller’s poem: “Freude, schöner Götterfunken, Tochter aus Elysium, Wir betreten feuertrunken, Himlische, dein Heiligthum!” Translation: “Joy, beautiful spark of the gods, daughter of Elysium: we are intoxicated with fire, heavenly being, as we enter your sanctuary! Be embraced, millions! This kiss to the entire world. Brothers, above the starry canopy, a loving father must dwell … Run, brothers, run your race; joyful, as a hero going to conquest. Above the starry canopy, a great God will reward you.”
130
I admit weakness of the one sense which should be
emphasis the “loving Father who dwells above the
better in me than others, a sense which I once pos-
stars?” 2. What reasons did Beethoven have for the
sessed in the greatest perfection, a perfection such
bitterness in his life? Is it not ironic that the end of
as few in my profession have ever had? Forgive me
Schiller’s poem states that “joy moves the wheels in
if you saw me draw back when I would gladly have
the universal time machine?”
mingled with you. What humiliation for me when someone standing by heard a flute in the distance
Reflection: Like Beethoven, teenage boys can often
and I heard nothing. A little more such despair and
be rough and gruff in their outward appearance and
I would have ended my life. But only my art held me
behavior to others, yet inside, they are caring and
back. Ah, it seemed impossible to leave the world un-
sensitive as the lonely Beethoven we see revealed in
til I had produced all that I felt was within me. With
the Heiligenstadt Testament. Music and drama tend
joy I hasten towards death. Would not death free me
to bring out the inner feelings of young men that
from an endless state of suffering? Farewell, and do
other disciplines fail to reach. Bad news from col-
not completely forget me when I am dead.”
lege admissions, a pimply complexion, a breakup with a girlfriend, or a divorce at home can spark a teen to exhibit gruffness and anger. Music, drama, and poetry provide emotional outlets for their troubled souls. They also provide some built-in friendships and soul mates who share the same passions. It is important to have live performance presented by fellow classmates. After these presentations, respect and admiration for their friends’ hard work and talent often soars. They are all engaged in the music in a much deeper way than if the same thing
The lesson concludes with one student performing
is simply played on the stereo. Inspiration from this
a section of a Beethoven violin sonata and another
lesson can be life-changing for many lovers of the
student playing a movement of a Beethoven piano
performing arts.
sonata. Michael Stairs has been teaching for thirty-eight Questions for the boys: 1. Why do you feel it was
years, He joined The Haverford School faculty in
important for Beethoven, in one of his last works to
1986.
131
A Favorite, Enduring Lesson
Edward Hallowell
text that their creators, John Knowles and William Golding, are their secret admirers. Attracted by risk
Upper School English
taking, by daredevil acrobats, and just as compelled
Nothing gives me greater pleasure
dict, boys are curious, then, to observe the intel-
than playing advocate for two of
lectual gymnastics they think must be required to
contemporary literature’s odd-
justify my claim that, in the most important sense
balls, Leper in John Knowles’s A
imaginable, Simon and Leper are the sharpest boys
Separate Peace and Simon in Wil-
in their books.
by an allegiance to fairness, to rendering a just ver-
liam Golding’s Lord of the Flies. To healthy-minded, optimistic, teenage boys, each of these charac-
In A Separate Peace John Knowles provides a pow-
ters, if not a candidate for the loony bin, is certainly
erful scene that justifies a related claim, one just as
the kind of odd-man-out adolescents dismiss as a
extravagant: the fool can be wise; what looks like the
“nerd” or “geek.” For one thing they are both lon-
mindless ravings of a lunatic can actually transcend
ers. Neither is varsity material. Leper spends his
normal human perception and gain access to deep
time collecting snails, drawing pictures of birds, and
truth, to a reality grasped only by seers, prophets,
cross country skiing in search of beaver dams when
and other heroes of the spirit. Having fled the army,
he should be working with his classmates shovel-
Leper invites Gene to meet with him at the family
ing snow to clear the tracks to help the war effort.
home in Vermont, where he has sought refuge after
Simon, another “nature freak,” an epileptic, has the
going AWOL. There, in the dining room, a place
odd habit of wandering off into the jungle, which
of safety because its purpose is stipulated (unlike
frightens everyone else, and going to a little hideout
that of the living room, the place where, Leper says,
where he sits and – of all things – thinks! Neither
people have “problems”) Leper shares with Gene
of these characters is the sort of boy other boys ad-
the nightmare of his experience in basic training,
mire. They are tolerated, but consistently viewed
one replete with hallucinations from the madhouse:
with barely concealed irritation and suspicion. They
the face of the corporal changing to those of friends
are what Thomas Mann called “wallflowers,” crea-
and neighbors, then to Leper’s own face, and then,
tures of the margin who “fall down” in the dance of
most disturbing of all, to a woman’s face. For teen-
life. What vigorous, sports-playing, outgoing, col-
age boys it is time to vote for conviction. Leper is a
lege-aspiring boys’ boy would want anything to do
nutcase; worse: he is unmanly, a coward who could
with them? I love playing defense lawyer for Simon
not make it in a man’s world. Guilty as charged.
and Leper, citing on their behalf evidence from the
Their English teacher, Leper’s lawyer, now invites
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them to take a really close look at Leper’s hallucina-
in which Simon, in his hermit’s forest cell, meets the
tions. The corporal, a trained killer whose job is to
“Lord of the Flies,” Beelzebub, Satan, the force of
train others to kill, suddenly becomes a friend and
evil in the universe. One central set of ideas emerg-
neighbor; then his face becomes Leper’s own; then
es, and it is the voice of the “Arch Interferer” that
that of a woman. All of a sudden Leper’s tortured
proposes it, a voice every teenage boy hears from
sight begins to look like insight: “my friends and
time to time, most of all when school and life be-
neighbors can become killers; I can be trained to
come difficult: “Run away … go back to the others.
kill; even a woman, the bringer of love, the bearer
It was a joke really – why should you bother? You
of life – she, too, can be taught to kill.” Leper may
were just wrong, that’s all. A little headache, some-
sound deranged, but he has discovered man’s terrible
thing you ate, perhaps. Go back, child …” And then
duality. First angel, then beast, we are always both.
a bit later: “You knew, didn’t you? I’m part of you?
If Leper’s dark, tormenting visions almost cost him
Close, close, close! I’m the reason it’s no-go? Why
his sanity, they also reward him with a profound un-
things are what they are?” I can scarcely describe
derstanding of human nature, with rich insight into
the thrill I get as I read these sentences and then ex-
the relentless, inexorable aggression which throbs
plore them with my students, fifteen-year-olds who
like a pulse throughout human history.
have started, perhaps, occasionally to entertain dark thoughts about life, to doubt that the world is the
The most important scene in Golding’s novel is that
great, exciting, but ultimately safe playground the
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Novels like A Separate Peace and Lord of the Flies are sometimes called “old chestnuts,” a designation that is a kind of unwitting praise, really, suggesting as it does that these books share enduring truths and offer nourishment. Boys respond to them for a variety of reasons, but most of all, perhaps, because these works mirror the profound and unsettling conflict going on in every boy’s soul: the ancient struggle between aggressive, primary desires, what Freud called the “id,” and the reflective, self-conscious, restraining actions of the soul, Freud’s “suDisney people celebrate. For boys such doubts, such
perego.” In reading these novels with my students
misgivings about the shadow lands and dark places
I get the chance to achieve two invaluable things:
in one’s own inner being, such first stirrings of anxi-
to help boys become more critically sensitive read-
ety and pessimism, seem wrong at first, feel like a
ers and thinkers, and to accept the Lepers and Si-
failure of nerve. Part of them suspects, as Golding
mons – not only those in a school community, but in
knew it would, that learning to think, to reflect, is
themselves. Puberty and popular culture make them
a difficult, even dangerous thing. They sense, even
reluctant to do so at first, but reading both novels
if they can’t quite articulate their suspicion, that
gives them the precious opportunity to acknowledge
thinking means going off somewhere alone, en-
the drama enacted in their own natures and to learn
tertaining strange notions, exploring peculiar feel-
to honor and nurture that part of themselves, the re-
ings. Most of all, they worry it means risking being
flective, thoughtful, contemplative part, on whose
taken for an oddball, a nerd, someone like Simon or
integrity, vigor, and wise expansion their own suc-
Leper. At the same time, however, they also sense,
cessful journey to manhood depends.
and are then reminded, that to run away from the challenges of thought is to remain a “child,” to “go back,” to regress, stop growing. And so, once again, my students learn that the Simons and Lepers of the world have something to teach them. It is Simon, after all, who first grasps Leper’s understanding and
Edward Hallowell has been teaching for thirty-
Knowles’s truth: the only real enemy we have is our
nine years. He joined The Haverford School
own nature.
faculty in 1974.
134
From the Archives
135
Art class circa 1940
Lower School dramatic recreation 1949
136
Beloved teacher Rakie Cleaves with third-graders 1958-59
Students oversee construction of Van Pelt Hall 1958
137
Library 1969
Cardboard boat race, physics lesson circa 1990
Philip Bishop Day tug-of-war mid-1980s 138
The Barn, circa 1930
Wilbur House Junior School 1936 139
EA Day 1988
Middle School track, date unkown Football 1979
140
Junior School playground 1936
141
Students at Merion Cottage circa 1890
142
French Club 1957
Students, faculty, and staff in a production of Pirates of Penzance 1980 143
Mrs. Smedley’s second-grade class 1938
144
Van Pelt Hall classroom 1959
Mrs. Oram’s preschool class 1939
145
The Haverford School campus 1959
Science Fair 1965
146
The Big Room, date unknown
The Big Room 1955
Williamsburg field trip 1969 147
Davis Parker as Abraham Lincoln, date unknown
Student wrestler with kids circa 1950
148
Opening day 1960
Faculty Faces
Herman S. Shaw
Stephen B. Knowlton
Robert U. Jameson
Charles C. Stone 149
Samuel Newhall Rafael Laserna
Tom Worth 150
Ron Brown
Paul Austin
Bob Peck 151
Donald McBride Frank Ewing
Robert Rugg Neil Buckley 152
Craig Dripps Peter Chamberlain
Mike Cunningham
153
Todd Pearson
Donald Brownlow
Charles Boning
154
Edward Hallowell Cheryl Straub and Sue Denious
Dick Duffany Stephen Dall
155
Terry Ertel
Bill Palmer
Sandy Mercer 156
Don Miller Jane Manns
The Haverford School faculty and staff 2008 157
Annotated Bibliography Compiled and annotated by Brad Adams, Mondo Murage, and Lisa Snyder. Adolescent Boys: Exploring Diverse Cultures of Boyhood. ed. Niobe Way, Judy Y. Chu, and Michael Kimmel. New York, N.Y.: New York University, 2004. Acknowledging that most of the research into boys’ lives is based primarily on middle class, caucasian boys, the editors Way (psychology, New York University) and Chu (lecturer, Stanford University) have drawn an excellent book on explorations into the lives of adolescent boys. The essays are rich in diversity – not only in the populations of boys studied – but also in their research methodology and theoretical perspective. It reflects some of the most important empirical research on the lives and behavior of boys from a variety of ethnic and class backgrounds. For an introduction into the research on boys’ experiences, this book provides an excellent resource. Teachers, parents, administrators, and others interested in boys, race, and class will be well-rewarded by reading it. Beausay, Bill. Teenage Boys: Surviving and Enjoying These Extraordinary Years. New York, N.Y.: Waterbrook, 1998. Beausay, a clinical psychologist and father of boys, writes a book for parents engaged in the never-dull business of bringing up teenage sons. His approach is friendly and informative, providing flexible (not prescriptive) guidelines for becoming involved in a boy’s life. And flexible is exactly the approach that Beausay takes; he believes that stringent and strict parenting techniques are not the answer to developing a deep and abiding relationship with sons. Primarily for parents, but important for those involved in boys’ research. Biddulph, Steve. The Secret Life of Men: A Practical Guide to Helping Men Discover Health, Happiness, and Deeper Personal Relationships. 1995. New York, N.Y.: Da Capo, 2003. Australian psychologist and political activist Biddulph continues and enhances the work of Robert Bly and others who realized that men were struggling with finding meaning and happiness in their lives. Beginning with the words, “Most men don’t have a life ...” Biddulph offers the “seven steps to manhood.” Among these are: fixing the father-son relationship, becoming a real equal to women, finding a job with heart, friendship, and being an engaged, genuine father. For men seeking greater satisfaction from life and for the women who want to understand them, this book will provide much instruction. Originally published in Australia in 1995 under the title: Manhood: An Action Plan for Changing Men’s Lives. Booth, David W. Even Hockey Players Read. Markham, Ontario.: Pembroke; dist. Stenhouse, 2002. Booth (education, University of Toronto) is a passionate reader, experienced educator, and a father of boys. He presents results from years of research that have been transformed into a comprehensive collection of ideas for how boys can be encouraged to read and to write. He suggests that, while there may not seem to be any, boy readers abound – reading magazines, newspapers, and anything but their required reading. He includes many easily implemented classroom practices and much helpful advice on how to encourage reading and writing by the boys in our classrooms, homes, or libraries. For teachers, librarians, and parents, this book will be an essential guide. Boyhood in America: An Encyclopedia. Ed. Priscilla Ferguson Clement and Jacqueline S. Reinier. 2 vols. American Family Series. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2001. Drawing from a range of scholars and sources, this reference work contains more than 150 articles on all matter of subjects pertaining to boys. Topics include historic and economic backgrounds, sports, and social development. The articles “focus on adult attitudes toward boys,” while also reflecting “the experiences and perceptions of boys themselves, as they work, play, interact with friends and family, and try to make sense of the world around them.” For the general reader, specialist, researcher, or practitioner, these articles are representative of the key issues in the history, development, and understanding of boys and young men, not just in America, but worldwide.
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Boys in Schools: Addressing the Real Issues – Behavior, Value and Relationships. ed. Rollo Browne and Richard Fletcher. Sydney, Australia: Finch, 1995. The editors present a range of accounts from a variety of schools that address the challenging issues facing schools and teachers related to boys’ education. Some of these issues include: bullying, school violence, homophobia, identity and self-esteem. These accounts come from teachers in primary and secondary schools and comprise a thoughtful collection of innovative approaches that schools can take to help change the ways that boys view themselves. For teachers, particularly those engaged in teaching boys, for parents, and for anyone interested in the area of boys’ education, this will provide an interesting addition to the growing literature on the subject. Bribiescas, Richard G. Men: Evolutionary and Life History. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University, 2006. Everyone is aware of the differences between men and women; much has been written to catalog those differences. Author and scholar, Bribiescas (Yale anthropologist) attempts to understand why such differences exist. By applying evolutionary theory, which explains the development of the species, along with life-history theory, which examines how organisms differentiate themselves in the face of limited resources and time, Bribiescas illuminates the discussion of sex differences with solid biological, social, and anthropological theory. Written in a lively and thoughtful manner, this book should appeal to teachers, parents, practitioners, and boys of all ages. Brinley, Maryann Bucknum. Oh Boy! Mothers Tell the Truth About Raising Teen Sons. New York, N.Y.: Three Rivers, 2004. Every parent, at one time or another, worries whether or not their children are within the norm. With so much interest in boys’ development and nurture, there is the possibility for even greater anxiety among mothers of sons. This collection of anecdotes from mothers of boys proves that boys’ behavior runs the gamut, discussing body odor, a messy room, or a dad’s untimely death. With insightful commentary from the author, this book will produce nods of recognition for parents, teachers, and boys themselves. Brozo, William G. To Be a Boy, to Be a Reader: Engaging Teen and Preteen Boys in Active Literacy. Newark, Del.: International Reading Association, 2002. Brozo (language and literacy, University of Tennessee) offers a solution to help boys become – and stay – engaged readers. Suggesting the idea of using literature with positive male archetypes to motivate boys to read, Brozo defines several such archetypes and shares instructional ideas in which teachers across the curriculum develop innovative strategies and activities using young adult books with these archetypes. Including an appendix offering a book list of about 300 titles to help identify archetypal literature, this book will appeal to classroom teachers of any discipline, librarians, and parents. Canada, Geoffrey. Reaching Up for Manhood: Transforming the Lives of Boys in America. Boston, Mass.: Beacon, 1998. The president and CEO of the Theedlen Centers for Children and Families, an award-winning child advocacy agency, Canada grew up on tough South Bronx streets, where he witnessed his friends dying by the handful. Recounting his childhood at mid life, he depicts what children face in today’s world, especially the crippling problems of African American boys. Asserting that we are facing a crisis situation with our young males, he emphasizes the necessity of building strong father-son bonds. Recommended for teachers, librarians, parents, and school administrators. Coates, Ta-Nehisi. The Beautiful Struggle: A Father, Two Sons, and an Unlikely Road to Manhood. New York, N.Y.: Spiegel & Grau, 2008. In searingly beautiful prose, Coates tells the story of growing up as the younger of two sons born to Paul Coates, Vietnam veteran, Black Panther member, old-school disciplinarian, and African American activist. It is a story of a father – with the help of family, teachers, and mothers – seeing his sons through the dangerous territory of inner-
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city adolescence and into the safety of Howard University, where he worked. At its heart, this is a story about a father and his sons, living the African American experience of the 1960s and ’70s. For teachers, parents, and anyone interested in a story of determination and love, this book will not disappoint. Conley, Dalton. Honky. Berkeley, Calif.: University of California, 2000. Conley is a sociologist (NYU) who began his vocation early, as a young boy growing up in an otherwise Black and Hispanic housing project on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. It is there that Conley began to understand the power of race and class. In his memoir, Conley conjures the worlds in which he moved; his parents were artists, living a bohemian lifestyle, presumably by choice. His neighbors, including his best friend, did not have the same choices available to them. This is a story of the boy who eventually grew up to study race and class and his memoir is filled with concerns about poverty and privilege. For teachers, parents, people of privilege, and the casual reader, this book takes an unflinching look at boyhood through the lens of someone who lived it and now analyzes it. Connell, R. W. Masculinities. 1995. New York, N.Y.: Blackwell, 2005. Connell (sociology, University of California, Santa Cruz) offers a reply to the “Iron John” notion of masculinity, suggesting that there are many more complexities to masculinity than Robert Bly or the men’s movement would have us believe. As one of the foremost voices in the new feminist scholarship by men, Connell provides a nuanced and incisive analysis of how our notions of masculinity have evolved in psychoanalysis, social science, and historically in the creation of the global economy. Offering portraits of dozens of men of different classes, Connell provides the first critical history of ideas and the most sophisticated theoretical analysis of masculinity to date. This is a book for everyone interested in the history of western masculinities and the sexual politics of the contemporary age. Connell, R.W. The Men and the Boys. Los Angeles, Calif.: University of California, 2001. Providing an analysis of what we already understand about masculinity, Connell continues the discussion by taking the next step in understanding the dynamics of contemporary masculinity – incorporating the international, crosscultural dimension. The book looks at masculinity and globalization and posits that changes in public policy must be made in order for men to create a more cooperative and peaceful world. Connell recounts cutting-edge research on masculinity and uses case studies to illustrate it. The case studies describe men coming to terms with their sexuality, childhoods, and experiences at school and work, revealing the price men and boys (across all cultures) pay for living in a patriarchal world. Connolly, Paul. Boys and Schooling in the Early Years. London, England: Routledge Falmer, 2004. With the spotlight on the gender gap in education, not only in the United States, but around the world, it is interesting to note that little attention has been given to how and when boys start to underachieve in the early years. Much attention, however, has been given to developing early intervention programs. In this work, Connolly presents the results of his own research examining the specific issues affecting boys and education in the first three years of schooling and the implications for teachers and other professionals working with young boys. For teachers and practitioners, this book offers a look at the “why” of boys’ underachievement and offers the “how” to overcome it. Cortes, Carlos E. The Children are Watching: How the Media Teach About Diversity. Multicultural Education Series. New York, N.Y.: Teachers College Press, 2000. Historian Cortes, one of the foremost voices in multicultural education today, argues that mainstream media has, unintentionally, created a diversity “curriculum” that is reaching our students in more powerful ways than we can imagine. Cortes argues that the media’s multicultural messages are not accurate depictions of multiculturalism and that, in order to understand those messages, rather than simply accepting them, we must become media literate. Cortes develops implications of his research for the school curriculum, including how teachers can help students become critical viewers of the mass media by looking for patterns as well as stereotypes, and becoming aware of
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the difference. For teachers attempting to develop a multicultural environment in their classrooms and for anyone interested in understanding the effect that mainstream media has on diversity and multiculturalism, this book will provide much food for thought. Cox, Adam J. Boys of Few Words: Raising Our Sons to Communicate and Connect. New York, N.Y.: Guilford, 2006. Drawing on clinical work conducted over a decade with boys between the ages of four and late adolescence, Cox (psychologist, Lehigh University) probes the reasons for and consequences of boys’ difficulty in communicating their feelings. The first part of the book examines the “psychological realities of boyhood,” how boys communicate and develop socially and emotionally, and the physiology of boys’ brains and their verbal and social development. Part two offers a look at the social pressures that discourage self-expression among boys, thus forcing them to turn to aggression and anger to express themselves. In the final section, Cox offers principles for developing child-centered families to foster boy’s self-awareness and communication skills. This book was written for parents, especially, but also for the professionals who work with boys. Dobson, James S. Bringing up Boys. Cambridge, Mass.: Tyndale House, 2005. Dobson, a psychologist, family counselor and noted Christian activist, has written a work primarily for parents that offers decidedly conservative advice for raising boys. Celebrating the natural differences between boys and girls, Dobson outlines biological differences, particular issues in disciplining boys, and the different roles of mothers and fathers. Celebrating the traditional family roles, Dobson is a heavy critic of feminists and offers a controversial view of homosexuality. Because of the book’s emphasis on conservative Christian values, this will appeal to a particular audience; other readers may take issue with some of the author’s observations. Downey, Michael J. Digging Deep: Fostering the Spirituality of Young Men. Winona. Minn.: Saint Mary’s Press, 2003. Written by a Catholic priest who works in schools, the book provides background and practical advice for developing gender-specific religious education programs. While emphasizing journaling and writing as a method for inner reflection, Downey also offers curriculum that provides effective guidance for adults working with boys in religious settings. Lesson plans include deep listening exercises, where boys are encouraged to listen to the stories of their peers. While primarily written for established religion programs in schools, this book may be useful for the secular boys’ school as well, by providing tools for boys to explore their inner lives. Drexler, Peggy. Raising Boys Without Men: How Maverick Moms are Creating the Next Generation of Exceptional Men. Emmaus, Pa.: Rodale, 2005. Assistant professor of psychology Drexler draws an optimistic portrait of nontraditional families headed by women, based on extensive research. She interviewed a variety of lesbian mothers, single mothers, sons of single moms and sons of two-mother families. Through a series of anecdotes, Drexler reveals that households headed by females are just as good for children as those run by males. Including descriptions of what these “maverick” moms do that makes them successful, this book is a necessity for mothers of sons in a single-parent or nontraditional household. Educating African American Males: Voices From the Field. ed. Olatokunbo S. Fashola. New York, N.Y.: Corwin Press, 2005. Fashola, the senior research scientist and research director of the Comprehensive School Reform Center at the American Institutes for Research, has collected and edited a series of papers that were originally presented at the Conference on African American Male Achievement. A departure from much of the existing literature on African American males in schools, this book does not focus solely on the dysfunction and failures of African American males in school. Acknowledging that this problem, while prominent in the media, is not as statistically significant
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as others might believe, the editors attempt to provide an honest look at African American male achievement in schools – both the successes and the challenges. Teachers, diversity leaders, and school administrators will find this informative. Engebretson, Kath. Connecting: Teenage Boys, Spirituality and Religious Education. Strathfield, Australia: St. Paul’s, 2007. Having spent four years researching the spirituality of Australian teenage boys (interviewing more than 1,200 boys, between fourteen and eighteen years old), Engebretson (religious education, Australian Catholic University) presents a solid examination of the spiritual lives of boys. The book includes a significant number of the boys’ responses to the questionnaires Engebretson used in gathering the data. The final chapter describes the seven characteristics of the types of spirituality: grounded in hope; inspired by others; challenging narrow definitions of masculinity; found and developed in friendships, existing in tension between individualism and social concern; seeking reflection and open to prayer; having the capacity to know and experience God. For parents and educators, a telling insight into boy’s spiritual lives. Failing Boys? Issues in Gender and Achievement. ed. Debbie Epstein, et al. Florence, Ky.: Taylor & Francis, 1998. Written at a time when the debate about boys’ underachievement in schools was based primarily on circumstantial evidence (however convincing), this book describes a detailed and nuanced case study of the issues surrounding boys’ achievement in schools in the United Kingdom. The book is divided into four parts: Boys’ Underachievement in Context; Different Constructions of the Debate and Its Undercurrents; Boys, Which Boys?; and Curriculum, Assessment, and the Debate. As one of the seminal case research studies conducted on boys’ underachievement, this book should be of interest to educators and parents. Faludi, Susan. Stiffed: The Betrayal of the American Man. New York, N.Y.: Harper Perennial, 2000. What is the genesis of the angry white male? Faludi explores the post-war “male realm” and finds ample reasons for anger and impotence in the twenty-first century man. Suggesting that the core of the problem can be traced to the restructuring of the economy during the post-Cold War period, the author believes that men have lost “a useful role in public life, a way of earning a decent and reliable living, appreciation in the home, respectful treatment in the culture.” The book offers an antidote to this malaise, suggesting that we start considering masculinity a part of a man’s humanity and not separate from it. Feig, Paul. Kick Me: Adventures in Adolescence. New York, N.Y.: Three Rivers, 2002. In his essays of the torture of growing up male, a self-described geek, in the 1970s and ’80s, Feig allows us into the world of the adolescent boy. The author, who wrote the situation comedy, Freaks and Geeks, shares humiliations in the locker room after gym class, anxiety about his first kiss, and geeky weekend pastimes. While Feig tells his stories through the eyes of a humorist, his agonies and triumphs are utterly realistic. This book is for teachers, parents, and especially for students – so that they will know they are not alone. Fletcher, Ralph. Boy Writers: Reclaiming Their Voices. Portland, Maine: Stenhouse, 2006. Citing Newkirk’s seminal work, Misreading Masculinity (see under Newkirk), Fletcher, writing teacher, author, and educational consultant, has written a guide for teachers designed to improve boys’ writing. Some “big ideas” that teachers can take from this book include: acknowledge students’ efforts and think of ways to improve their writing without judging; allow students to draw during the writing process to solidify ideas or create pictures to accompany the text; realize that not every draft is publishable; instruct how humor can be used to tell a story or make a point; allow students to type their pieces or have parent volunteers type student work; confer with boys to provide concrete ways to improve writing as well as give specific praise about their piece.
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Frosh, Stephen, Ann Phoenix, and Rob Pattman. Young Masculinities. New York, N.Y.: Palgrave Macmillan, 2001. What does it mean to be a man? What is masculinity? How can a boy be both academically successful and cool at the same time? In a landmark study of London school boys (ages eleven to fourteen) Frosh and his colleagues attempt to understand the answers to these questions through a “boy centered approach” to research that derives its data from extensive interviews with boys in public and private schools. The book focuses on a number of paradoxes that lie at the heart of understanding masculinity, particularly those tensions between idealizing and denigrating women and girls, and between “acting cool” and being authentic. The study finds that schools and teachers can be complicit in creating and encouraging boys’ notions of masculinity, for example, in legitimizing homophobia, overemphasizing sports, and encouraging social homogeneity. Providing some sobering analysis of how boys understand masculinity, teachers, practitioners, and parents will ultimately find hope in this account, which challenges our socially held beliefs about the “problem with boys.” Garbarino, James. Lost Boys: Why Our Sons Turn Violent and How We Can Save Them. New York, N.Y.: Anchor, 2001. In attempting to understand the trend of school violence, Garbarino (psychologist and Cornell University professor) examines the difficulties that boys face as they become men. Drawing on his own work with young men who have been involved with lethal violence, the author traces the trend toward violence to class and race issues, and other risk factors, including neglect and abuse, as well as a culture that validates violence through popular media. Garbarino provides a well-documented look at violence among young males within the context of statistical and psychosocial research. Well-written and researched, this will be of interest to teachers, parents, and researchers wishing to understand the world boys face and the impact it may have on their development. Gilbert, Rob, and Pam Gilbert. Masculinity Goes to School. New York, N.Y.: Routledge, 1998. Noting media reports claiming that gender reform in schools has benefited girls at the expense of boys, the authors offer an overview of the issues surrounding gender reform in schools and what influence that has had on boys and education. Gilbert, an educator, argues that popular constructions of masculinity affect boys in all parts of their lives while offering insights into key issues affecting boys at school, including literacy, sports, bad behavior, sexuality, race, and popular culture. He provides an examination of programs and approaches that have been successful in schools. For teachers and administrators, this book provides a cogent discourse on the issues of boys and education. Gurian, Michael, and Arlette C. Ballew. The Boys and Girls Learn Differently Action Guide for Teachers. San Francisco, Calif.: Jossey-Bass, 2003. Gurian outlines the brain-based educational theories and techniques that can be used to help boys learn better. The guide offers experiential learning techniques that teachers can use to create a learning environment and curriculum that takes into account the specific learning needs of boys. Based on the latest scientific scholarship on the differences between boys and girls’ brains, neurological development, hormonal effects, behavior, and learning needs, this book offers information on what all children need to be able to learn effectively. Primarily intended for the classroom teacher, this book will be of interest to parents as well. Gurian, Michael, and Kathy Stevens. The Minds of Boys: Saving Our Sons from Falling Behind in School and Life. San Francisco, Calif.: Jossey-Bass, 2007. Investigating the “male learning style” that is often at odds with current educational practices, which leave the mistaken impression that boys are difficult to manage and teach, Gurian and Stevens add clarity and practical advice on how to encourage achievement based on the particular strengths of boys. Included in this work are discussions of creating boy-friendly curricula in schools, appropriate discipline as boys grow older, and the phenomena of sudden bursts of attention and physical play. The authors emphasize that their strategies are aimed at boosting the learning
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and academic performance of boys. Parents and teachers concerned about teaching and disciplining boys will find this volume interesting and useful. Gurian, Michael, Kathy Stevens, and Kelley King. Strategies for Teaching Boys and Girls – Elementary Level: A Workbook for Educators. San Francisco, Calif.: Jossey Bass, 2008. Based on the work and research of the Gurian Institute, this workbook offers teachers a hands-on resource to build a solid foundation of learning and study habits that their students can use in the classroom and at home. It presents practical strategies, lessons, and activities that have been field-tested in real classrooms to harness boys’ and girls’ unique strengths. Recommended for teachers, parents, and others interested in gender differences as they relate to learning. Gurian, Michael, Kathy Stevens, and Kelley King. Strategies for Teaching Boys and Girls – Secondary Level: A Workbook for Educators. San Francisco, Calif.: Jossey Bass, 2008. With a focus on the upper grades, Gurian offers a work that builds a bridge between theory and practice. With solid classroom research results from the Gurian Institute, the authors present practical strategies, lessons, and activities that have been tested in real classrooms in order to appeal to the specific strengths of boys and girls. Like its companion volume for the elementary level, this workbook is an essential resource for all teachers. Guys Write for Guys Read. ed. John Scieszka. New York, N.Y.: Viking, 2005. Written to appeal to the young adolescent reader, Scieszka’s anthology of stories and illustrations about what it’s like to be a boy will appeal to any reader who is interested in the world of boys. With stories by authors including Lloyd Alexander, Stephen King, and Chris Van Allsburg, the overarching theme is one of encouraging reading in boys. It also contains a bibliography for each author in order to find more books. With wit, charm, and great fondness, the stories in this book comprise an excellent collection that celebrates the intellectual life of the common boy. Hall, Horace R. Mentoring Young Men of Color: Meeting the Needs of African American and Latino Students. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield, 2006. What can be done to help young minority males become valuable members of their respective communities? Hall attempts to answer this question by reminding us that there is a cultural practice that can sustain minority males’ value in society, namely, the practice of mentoring. This work investigates the value of school-based mentoring in the lives of adolescent men of minorities, as well as providing alternative and more positive ways in which our society can experience and embrace this social group. It is, however, the mentoring relationships between teachers and students that provide minority males with the academic and social support needed to realize their potential and their dreams. As a resource for information about mentoring in general, and the effects of it on minority youth, this book will be of interest to teachers, coaches, and practitioners. Hall, Stephen S. Size Matters: How Height Affects the Health, Happiness, and Success of Boys – and the Men They Become. Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin, 2006. Science reporter Hall, writing from his own experience (he was shorter than 99 percent of the boys his age), presents a broad and deep range of information that suggests just how much size matters in society, particularly during adolescence. Hall includes data on developmental fetal growth, the science of the human growth hormone, as well as research on the contemporary ideals of the manly body. Examining sociological studies on bullying, Hall shows that a person’s height as a teenager can have far-reaching consequences on an adult’s life. Written for the lay reader, his interpretations of complicated science are readily accessible, but academics and practitioners will find much to consider as well.
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Handbook of Studies on Men and Masculinities. ed. Jeff R. Hearn, Robert W. Connell, and Michael S. Kimmel. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications, 2004. Acknowledging that gender studies, at one time, addressed primarily issues about women in society, the editors have produced an anthology of research and areas of inquiry in masculinity studies. A wide selection of articles and papers, written by the leading names in the discipline of men’s studies, examines the construction of masculinities in five separate sections: Theoretical Perspectives; Global and Regional Patterns; Structures, Institutions, and Processes; Bodies, Selves, Discourses; and Politics. For anyone interested in masculinity studies, this will provide an excellent introduction to the field. Hartley-Brewer, Elizabeth. Raising Confident Boys: 100 Tips for Parents and Teachers. New York, N.Y.: Da Capo, 2001. While much research is being done to determine what factors lie at the heart of social, academic, and emotional differences between boys and girls, statistics that suggest boys are more at risk than girls continue to mount. To combat boys’ behavioral problems, increased suicide rates, and alienation, Hartley-Brewer contends that adults (teachers, parents, counselors) can have an impact on how boys become self-confident and productive men. The book teaches readers what makes boys prone to low self-esteem and provides practical, effective tips for adult intervention as problems arise. Hawkes, Tim. Boy Oh Boy: How to Raise and Educate Boys. New York, N.Y.: Longman, 2001. With humor, affection, and years of experience working in and overseeing a boys’ school, Hawkes (head, The Kings School, Australia) provides a resource that explains the roles that our social, political, and educational institutions play in helping boys fulfill their promise and live lives that develop their values and talents. This book answers questions that those helping boys on their way to manhood will find elucidating. Issues include improving school performance, literacy, friendship and relationships, bullying and aggression, and developing strong relations with parents. For anyone wishing to understand the needs of boys, this is an entertaining and practical resource. Hawley, Richard A. Boys Will Be Men: Masculinity in Troubled Times. Forest Dale, Vt.: Paul S. Eriksson, 1994. Hawley (former head, University School, Ohio) offers an unconventional look at the male experience. Setting aside prevailing concepts that men must conform either to the “macho” man mold or to today’s sensitive “new” man, Hawley urges men to search their boyhoods for their masculine being. He illustrates the heroic and tragic aspects of maleness with the tales of Percival, David, Hamlet, and other figures from myth and history. Hawley’s stories of the boys he’s taught and their unique senses of masculinity are entertaining and touching. For teachers, parents, and men, this book will educate, entertain, and illuminate. Hrabowski, Freeman A., Kenneth I. Maton, and Geoffrey L. Greif. Beating the Odds: Raising Academically Successful African American Males. New York, N.Y.: Oxford, 1998. Hrabowski, with two of his University of Maryland colleagues, describes the institution’s science program to enhance the higher educational prospects of high school-age African American men. The cornerstone of success, for anyone of any race, is family stability and support. For the nuances of this in the African American context, the authors interviewed sons and parents, representing about fifty families, enrolled in an intensive college-prep curriculum in math and science. They extensively quote their subjects’ experiences in child raising, separating those of the fathers, mothers, and sons. Summarizing their anecdotes, the authors endorse such time-proven attitudes as valuing achievement, reading constantly and widely, and working hard. The authors’ main audience is educational professionals, but students will be able to identify with the individual testimony that forms the bulk of this work.
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Iggulden, Conn, and Hall Iggulden. The Dangerous Book for Boys. New York, N.Y.: Collins, 2007. The Iggulden brothers have amassed a book of male “lore” – those things that are of particular interest to males (of any age), including knot-tying and instructions for coin tricks. Written in conversational prose, the book is intended for boys, but it is not without merit for parents, teachers, and anyone feeling nostalgic for their own childhood. Improving Boys’ Literacy: A Survey of Effective Practice in Secondary Schools. London, England: Basic Skills, 1997. Concern in England over boys’ underachievement led to the publication of this short report that indicates some ways to improve the performance of boys in literacy. The work focuses on case studies in secondary schools and is based on visits to fourteen mixed secondary schools in urban, suburban, and rural areas. Suggesting that there is no “magic bullet” to combat this problem, the editors make it clear that, by taking the proper measures to address the problem, these different schools were able to make a difference. With case studies and appendixes that provide further information, this volume should appeal to any teacher of reading. James, Abigail N. Teaching the Male Brain: How Boys Think, Feel, and Learn in School. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Corwin Press, 2007. James, educator and consultant, has written a book for teachers that provides the bridge between what we know about the science of boys’ learning and how to use that knowledge in the classroom to construct successful learning opportunities for boys. James draws from years of classroom experience to offer strategies that have been tested, refined, and used successfully in the field. This handbook provides helpful examples, case studies, and troubleshooting sections illustrating how to handle the concerns that can arise when teaching boys. For teachers, primarily, but parents of boys will find much of interest in James’ essential guide to teaching boys. Johnson, Rick. Better Dads, Stronger Sons: How Fathers Can Guide Boys to Become Men of Character. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Revell, 2006. Writing from a Christian perspective, Johnson, founder of a fathering skills program, offers insight into the special challenges and responsibilities of being a father to sons. Suggesting that, “being a good father isn’t so much what kind of parent you are as what kind of person you are,” the book provides fathers with the tools needed to create an intimate bond with their sons. There is also a section on how to avoid the top ten mistakes a father can make. For fathers of sons, Christians, and those interested in developing a healthy, nurturing, and satisfying relationship with a young man, this book can help in creating the conditions to achieve it. The Jossey-Bass Reader on Gender in Education. ed. Jossey-Bass Publishers. San Francisco, Calif.: JosseyBass, 2002. Is biology destiny? Are schools shortchanging girls or boys? If so, what can educators do to ensure that both succeed? These are among the questions confronting teachers of students of all ages. This volume, a comprehensive anthology that brings together a variety of perspectives on gender in education, attempts to answer those questions. Topics include the nature/nurture debate, gender achievement gaps, testing and teaching bias, the cultural context of gender, and sexual harassment. An excellent resource for educators and administrators, this volume provides a useful analytical framework for discussing gender issues in education. Keddie, Amanda, and Martin Mills. Teaching Boys: Developing Classroom Practices That Work. Chicago, Ill.: Allen & Unwin, 2008. Keddie and Mills (education, University of Queensland) have written a book devoted to describing best practices for teaching boys. Highlighting research in gender, masculinity, and pedagogy, the authors present successful and innovative strategies that demonstrate how and what teachers do in the classroom to encourage or constrain boys’ academic and social behaviors. The book includes detailed case studies from varied types of schools and age
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groups and is designed to help teachers support boys’ learning. For teachers and parents interested in their son’s classroom experience, this title offers a rich variety of techniques for helping boys find success. Kerr, Barbara A. Smart Boys: Talent, Manhood, and the Search for Meaning. Scottsdale, Ariz.: Great Potential Press, 2001. Kerr and Cohn (psychology, Arizona State University) continue their research into intellectual giftedness with this volume, which seeks to understand the conflicting ideals of masculinity that prize physical strength and ability over intellectual ability. In a follow-up study of an accelerated-learning class from St. Louis, Mo. in 1969, along with original research and literature review, Kerr and Cohn show how difficult it can be for gifted boys as they make their way through school. Findings reveal that intellectually gifted boys do not live up to their potential and suffer social isolation as a result. In addition to analyzing gifted minority boys, the book provides suggestions for guiding and parenting gifted boys in order to help them overcome their particular challenges. Teachers, parents, and mentors who work with bright boys will find this a useful and encouraging book. Kidd, Kenneth B. Making American Boys: Boyology and the Feral Tale. Minneapolis, Minn.: University of Minnesota Press, 2005. Beginning with historical overview of boy culture in America since the late nineteenth century, Kidd attempts to answer the question, “What are little boys made of?” From the “boy work” promoted by character-building organizations such as Scouting and 4-H to current therapeutic and pop psychological obsessions with children’s self-esteem, Kidd presents the variety of cultural influences on the changing notion of boyhood. With the eye of a sociologist, Kidd analyzes icons of boyhood and maleness, surveying literature, film, and parenting manuals, among others ,to provide a comprehensive history of what it means to be a boy in America. For teachers, parents, or counselors, Kidd’s study will shed historical light on the world of boys today. Kimmel, Michael S. Manhood in America: A Cultural History. 1997. New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press, 2005. Kimmell, a noted mens’ studies authority presents the first cultural history of men in America. He examines how the manhood experience has not only defined American males, but also shaped the culture and livelihood of its members. Kimmel suggests that the key driving force in man throughout history has been to prove their masculinity. He examines how this phenomenon has changed over time along with the masculine ideal. Kimmel describes the legend of the “self-made man” beginning with its origins prior to the Civil War and its continuing impact through the nineteenth century. Finally, Kimmel considers the contemporary crisis in masculinity. Scholarly, yet written in an accessible style, this book represents an important addition to the growing literature in mens’ studies. Kivel, Paul. Boys Will Be Men: Raising Our Sons for Courage, Caring, and Community. Gabriola Island, British Columbia: New Society Publishers, 1999. Drawing on twenty-seven years of experience as a social activist, Kivel offers a guide for parents and those who work with boys that will help them find the courage to reject the pressures to “act like a man” and learn to connect with each other and the wider world to promote a socially just, multicultural, and democratic society. The book begins with a discussion of what kind of boys do we want to raise and moves on to helping parents sort out the complex forces in our sons’ lives, including racism, homophobia, pornography, drugs, classism, and sex. The end result provides the reader a powerful vision of raising sons to become critically thinking, socially invested men. Kivel, Paul. Uprooting Racism: How White People Can Work for Racial Justice. 1996. Gabriola Island, British Columbia: New Society Publishers, 2002. Originally published in 1996, Kivel continues and updates the conversation he began with the first edition, in which he challenged fellow white people to learn to work together to fight racism. Offering stories, suggestions, advice,
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exercises, and approaches to combating racism, he discusses issues of affirmative action, immigration, institutional racism, humor, political correctness, and what it means to be white. At once gentle and provocative, Kivel helps readers strategically intervene against racism in schools, workplaces, and personal interactions. Teachers, administrators, and others interested in social justice and diversity will find this book useful and engaging. Knobel, Michele, Colin Lankshear, and Leonie Rowan. Boys, Literacies and Schooling: The Dangerous Territories of Gender-Based Literacy Reform. New York, N.Y.: Open University Press, 2001. Citing the growing evidence that boys are consistently underperforming in literacy, Knobel responds to the complexity of debates associated with boys, gender reform, literacy, and schooling by offering a comprehensive description of the issues and outlining practical classroom interventions designed for dealing with the boys and literacy crisis. For teachers, parents, and others interested in considering ways in which views of masculinity, gender reform, literacy, technology, and popular culture can influence what it means to be a boy, this book will provide insight into the question of why boys are at such risk. Knowles, Elizabeth. Boys and Literacy: Practical Strategies for Librarians, Teachers, and Parents. Westport, Conn.: Libraries Unlimited, 2005. What accounts for boys reading less as they grow into adulthood? Librarians and educators Knowles and Smith explore this phenomenon and provide strategies to reverse the trend. With chapters on genres such as adventure, humor, and sports, Knowles and Smith offer brief introductions, followed by lists of questions designed to stimulate discussion among boy readers. At the end of each chapter, the authors provide a list of about twenty titles, with complete bibliographic information, and annotations. There are also chapters for individual authors that provide a complete list of works by the author, as well as contact information (including e-mail addresses and Web sites.) The authors chosen are known to write back to students. For teachers, librarians, and parents, this is an excellent resource for improving literacy in boys. Lashlie, Celia. He’ll Be OK: Growing Gorgeous Boys Into Good Men. New York, N.Y.: Harper Collins, 2006. How do you raise boys to men in a world where trouble beckons at every turn? How do you make sure they learn the “right” lessons, stay out of danger, and find a path to follow? How do you ensure they’ll be OK? After years working in the prison service, and as a member of the New Zealand Good Man Project, Lashlie knows what can happen when boys make the wrong choices. Her insight into what makes boys become “good men” is based on hundreds of interviews she did with boys throughout New Zealand. With clarity and insight, she offers parents – especially mothers – practical and reassuring advice on raising their boys to become good, loving, articulate men. Leadership in Boys’ Education: 16 Case Studies from Public and Private, Rural and Urban, Primary and Secondary Schools. ed. Richard Fletcher, Deborah Hartman, and Rollo Browne. Callaghan, Australia: University of Newcastle, 1999. Concern about boys’ education in Australia and New Zealand led to the Leadership in Boys’ Education Conference in 1999. Contained within this volume are the papers presented at the conference, offering a selection of case studies that cover such topics as: academic achievement, school structure, discipline and bullying, broadening boys’ options, and building support. With contributions from many authors, this book provides an excellent library of case study research into boys’ education. Administrators of boys’ schools should find this volume to be of great value. Lesko, Nancy. Masculinities at School. Research on Men and Masculinities. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications, 2000. At the forefront of inquiry into gender and education, Lesko offers a collection of critical scholarship on the creation of masculinities in schools, relations among competing definitions of masculinity and femininity, and links between masculinity and school practices. With contributions from leading scholars in the field, the author presents
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results from her studies of schools in North America, Australia, and Great Britain, including all grade levels, and a variety of school settings from the computer lab to the football field. The study provides a thoughtful examination of how masculinities are constructed among teachers, students, and administrators, locating these analyses within broader social, economic, and ideological contexts. For its contributions to the understanding of masculinity in schools, this book is important reading for educators, and school administrators. MacDonald, Barry. Boy Smarts: Mentoring Boys for Success at School. Surrey, British Columbia: Mentoring Press, 2007. In response to mounting evidence about boys’ underachievement in school, MacDonald (educator, counselor) offers a compelling program for mentoring boys for school success. Acknowledging that boys and girls learn differently, MacDonald envisions an inclusive classroom, where none of the gains for girls diminish but where high male energy is recognized and accepted and rebelliousness becomes an opportunity for inquiry and exploration. An essential guide for parents of boys and for anyone who works with them. Martino, Wayne, and Maria Pallota-Chiarolli. Being Normal Is the Only Way to Be: Adolescent Perspectives on Gender and School. Sydney, Australia: University of New South Wales, 2005. This is a book for teachers and parents of adolescents. It is honest, colorful, absorbing, and illuminating, drawing on interviews and writings of teenage boys and girls that explore the perceptions of what it means to be an adolescent at school, what it means to be “cool” and “normal,” and the effects of these social constructs on learning and relationships. Martino, Wayne, and Maria Pallota-Chiarolli. So What’s a Boy?: Addressing Issues of Masculinity and Schooling. Buckingham, United Kingdom: Open University, 2003. Continuing his examination of boys at school, Martino focuses on the impact and effects of masculinities through interviews with boys from diverse backgrounds. Questions and issues addressed include: What does it mean to be a “normal” boy and who decides this? How do issues of masculinity impact boys from culturally diverse backgrounds? What issues of power impact these boys’ lives and relationships at school? For educators of boys, this title offers recommendations and indicates future directions for working with boys in school. Martino, Wayne, and Maria Pallotta-Chiarolli. Boys’ Stuff: Boys Talking About What Matters. New York, N.Y.: Allen & Unwin, 2001. Educator and researcher Martino, with colleague Pallotta-Chiarolli offers an honest and revealing look at the lives of teenage boys as they reflect, through interviews and their own writings, on their lives and confront some of the important and difficult issues they face today including sex, friends, sports, drugs, school, and family. They explain what the rules are – for there are spoken and unspoken rules everywhere – and confess how they break them. Their writing reflects the adolescent struggle with the mystery of what defines “cool.” For parents and educators of boys, this book will engage, interest, and delight. Marx, Jeffrey. Season of Life: A Football Star, a Boy, a Journey to Manhood. New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, 2004. When Pulitzer-winning investigative reporter Marx was a kid in the 1970s, he was a ball boy for the Baltimore Colts. One of the team captains was Joe Ehrmann, a larger-than-life party guy and the star defensive lineman. After the death of his younger brother, Ehrmann changed his life, working in Baltimore’s inner city and eventually becoming an ordained minister. Years later, Marx became fascinated with Ehrmann’s ministry and his work as a volunteer football coach at a Baltimore private school. This account of Ehrmann’s career is both inviting and inspirational, particularly the stories of the team Ehrmann coaches – a team where life lessons are more important than tackling fundamentals. A wonderful book, fathers and sons should read this; coaches, mentors, teachers, and mothers, too.
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The Masculinity Studies Reader. ed. Rachel Adams and David Savran. New York, N.Y.: Wiley - Blackwell, 2002. The Masculinity Studies Reader is a collection of previously published essays that have defined the interdisciplinary study of masculinity. Bringing together scholarship in the humanities and social sciences, this volume serves multiple functions as a teaching companion, introduction to the field, and scholarly resource. Showcasing key theorists, including Kimmel, Silverman, Halperin, Freud, Dyer, Boyarin, and Fanon, the book places the masculinity studies debate within the contexts of empire, borders, representations, the social sciences, and eroticism, as well as across such diverse fields as film, anthropology, women’s studies, and sociology. An introductory essay written by the editors frames widely read and cited work in a new context that is intended simultaneously to establish the contours of, and to raise questions about, masculinity as a field of academic inquiry. Intended primarily for students of gender studies, this volume will be of interest to educators, particularly those in boys’ schools. Mason, Christopher P. Crossing into Manhood: A Men’s Studies Curriculum. Youngstown, N.Y.: Cambria, 2007. Mason (principal, Oak Hill Academy, Va.), holds a doctorate in education and has worked in schools throughout his professional career. With a broad perspective on boys that includes the social, biological, and psychological conceptualizations of masculinity, he argues that in modern societies such as ours, we have lost the rituals surrounding rites of passage, leaving boys without a well-marked road to manhood. Mason offers an alternative guide to assist late-adolescent boys’ transition into mature masculinity, proposing a school-based curriculum and rite-of-passage paradigm that will facilitate the transition. While educators of boys will find this of particular use, parents and others will appreciate the broad-based approach to understanding masculinity. Men and Masculinities: A Social, Cultural, and Historical Encyclopedia. ed. Michael Kimmel and Amy Aronson. 2 vols. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2003. A specialized reference work of great quality, Men and Masculinities offers varying length articles on the current research into gender differences, the historical and cultural contexts of masculinity, and biographical essays of men and women who have had an influence on our understanding of masculinity. Included in the two-volume set are articles on James Bond, homophobia, bravado, and domestic violence. Each article contains a short bibliography for those interested in reading further. As a quick resource for all things masculine, or as a beginning for more in-depth study, this set will be of use to educators, practitioners, and parents. Miedzian, Myriam. Boys Will Be Boys: Breaking the Link Between Masculinity and Violence. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Lantern, 2002. Originally published in 1994 and updated in 2002, this work seeks to answer why some boys become violent men. While outlining the problems more than the solutions, Miedzian’s report cites the “masculine mystique” as contributing to domestic, criminal, and international violence. Her research also points to those cultural conditions that promote violence, including war toys, violent films and music, professional sports, and bigotry. Also included are descriptions of tested school programs for changing the “male mind-set.” Teachers, administrators, and those working with at-risk boys will find much of use in this work, both for its background information as for its possible solutions. Newberger, Eli. The Men They Will Become: The Nature and Nurture of Male Character. New York, N.Y.: Da Capo, 2000. Pediatrician Newberger offers a study of the development of character in boys that adds a significant perspective on the shaping of moral values. The book is not a how-to guide, although it can be used as such; rather it is a series of profiles, divided by developmental stages that provide anecdotes told from the perspectives of parent and child. Topics include honesty, self-control, identity and friendship, and discipline and punishment; showing how each
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relates to every stage of a boy’s childhood. For parents or any adult involved in helping boys become “more caring and connected men,” this book offers a wealth of information. Newkirk, Thomas. Misreading Masculinity: Boys, Literacy, and Popular Culture. Portsmouth, N.H.: Heinemann, 2004. Newkirk (English, University of New Hampshire) offers a refreshing, if not controversial, examination of popular culture and its effects on boys. He considers the ways in which we teach boys, particularly literacy. In a series of interviews, Newkirk comes to understand boys and their relationship to sports, movies, video games, and other venues of popular culture. He sees these media as resources for literacy – not the enemies of literacy. He learns from his interviews the ways in which young boys use visual narratives in their writing; rather than mimic violence, boys most often transform, recombine, and participate in story lines, and resist, mock, and discern the unreality of icons of popular culture. Newkirk encourages schools to ask questions about what counts as literacy and to allow diverse tastes, values, and learning styles in teaching boys literacy. For teachers and practitioners interested in understanding more deeply the connection between boys and pop culture. Nieto, Sonia. Affirming Diversity: The Sociopolitical Context of Multicultural Education. Boston, Mass.: Allyn & Bacon, 2003. Now in its fifth edition, this title continues to explore the meaning, necessity, and benefits of multicultural education all students. Nieto (language, literacy, and culture; University of Massachusetts) examines how personal, social, political, cultural, and educational factors affect the success or failure of students in today’s classroom. Case studies illustrate what it is like to be different and how the success of the students in the case studies is determined, in part, by the availability of multicultural education. New case studies with this edition include sexual identity and American Muslim experience in post-9/11 society. For everyone who works in schools or diverse populations of any kind, this work will be of interest. Nikkah, John. Our Boys Speak: Adolescent Boys Write About Their Inner Lives. New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s, 2000. Nikkah challenges the widely held belief that boys are not as sensitive or articulate as their female counterparts. A clinical psychology graduate student, the author contacted 5,000 schools across the United States, asking boys to write their thoughts and experiences in poems, stories, or autobiographical essays. The results, culled from more than 600 responses, are arranged thematically (peer pressure and cliques, family relationships, depression, violence, etc.) and constitute a revealing and often touching glimpse into the emotional lives of boys. While not a how-to guide for raising adolescent boys, this book provides a tool for understanding the mind-set of this population, thus offering insight for teachers, parents, and practitioners. Noble, Colin. Getting it Right for Boys and Girls. London, England: Routledge, 2000. Written at a time when conversations about boys’ underachievement in school was an increasingly alarming area for concern, this work offers educators practical strategies for encouraging boys to succeed in school. The author examines gender differences in learning styles and posits that, if boys’ achievement rises, girls will benefit also. Sounding an early warning signal about the long-term problems that arise when boys become disengaged from their learning, Noble offers not only a source book for teachers, but describes the larger context of boys’ underachievement. Written primarily for teachers, the book will also be of interest to administrators, and education students. Odean, Kathleen. Great Books for Boys: More than 600 Books for Boys, 2 to 14. New York, N.Y.: Ballantine, 1998. Caldecott and Newbery Award committee member Odean provides parents, teachers, and librarians with an exten-
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sive bibliography and strategies designed to keep boys reading into manhood. Titles are organized by reader age and genre. The bibliography includes titles with strong protagonists of both sexes, and an extensive list of nonfiction titles. Odean urges adults to provide boys with literature that reflects the widest possible range of emotions and experiences, from adventures to peaceful daydreaming. Ogbu, John U. Black American Students in an Affluent Suburb: A Study of Academic Disengagement. Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erbaum, 2003. Continuing and expanding Ogbu’s (anthropology, University of California, Berkeley) research on minority education, this volume offers an intriguing answer to questions of race, affluence, and achievement. Ogbu’s study examines why sons and daughters of wealthy Black professionals aren’t keeping pace academically with the children of wealthy White professionals in Shaker Heights, Ohio. The answer appears to be race – not economics. Eventually, Ogbu focuses in on the role of community forces in academic disengagement among this population at all social classes. Thought-provoking and informative, teachers, administrators, and anyone interested in diversity in boys’ schools, especially, will be fascinated. Pollack, William S. Real Boys: Rescuing Our Sons from the Myths of Boyhood. New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt, 1999. Harvard Medical School psychiatry professor Pollack dismantles what he terms the “Boy Code” – society’s image of boys as tough, cool, rambunctious, and obsessed with sports, cars, and sex. Yet the image does not jibe with the reality. Pollack tells us that boys are faring much less well; that many boys have remarkably fragile self-esteem. He points to the rising rates of depression and suicide in boys as evidence that what we imagine boys to be and who they are within are not terribly compatible. This is a thoughtful and interesting argument about what it really means to be a boy today. For parents, educators, and boys’ advocates, this book will challenge and illuminate. Pollack, William S., and Todd Shuster. Real Boys’ Voices. New York, N.Y.: Penguin, 2001. Drawing on interviews with young men across the country, Harvard clinical psychologist Pollack presents a candid, troubling, and occasionally humorous snapshot of contemporary American boyhood. In hearing boys speak about their loneliness, fear, anger, and their hopes and joys, placing it within the context of his ongoing research, Pollack draws a formidable case for what he sees as the straitjacket of the “Boy Code.” He outlines a fifteen-step program for mentoring boys and redefining boyhood. For parents, educators, practitioners, this is an engaging and thoughtful look at contemporary boyhood. Raising Boys’ Achievement in Schools. ed. Kevin Bleach. Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, United Kingdom: Trentham, 1998. Beach offers readers an insight into the range of strategies and good practices being used to raise boys’ achievement in schools. The contributors are educators with expertise in various aspects of boys’ education, including reading and literacy. Subjects explored include: reasons for underachievement (social, physiological, and economic); primary schools for boys; motivation and performance in school; different learning styles; and peer counseling. Teachers, parents, and anyone interested in gaining a solid foundation in this area for research. Ruhlman, Michael. Boys Themselves: A Return to Single-Sex Education. New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt, 1997. Ruhlman investigates whether boys’ schools are an anachronism or, at worst, dangerous places for boys by looking at a year in the life of a boys’ school. Ruhlman, a 1981 graduate of University School in Cleveland, Ohio, spent the 1993-94 academic year at his alma mater following students and teachers. Backed by his own experiences as a student, his sharp observations, and an excellent grasp of the research into boys’ education, Ruhlman paints a picture of a complicated institution, where the majority of boys would rather have girls in their classes and where the headmaster, Richard Hawley, became an object of controversy with the publication of his book, Boys Will Be Men
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(Eriksson, 1994), a Jungian-feminist study on masculinity. Anyone involved in boys’ education, as well as parents, will find this account enlightening. Salamone, Rosemary C. Same, Different, Equal: Rethinking Single-Sex Schooling. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2003. Salamone, a law professor at St. John’s University, examines the history of single-sex education and makes a convincing argument: voluntary single-sex education is a legally acceptable option that ought to be widely available in the United States, especially for disadvantaged children. Providing case studies, an overview of the contemporary canon of thought about gender identity, legal implications of single-sex schools, and a digest of the results of experiments in single-sex education, Salamone presents an objective and thorough review of all aspects of the debate. For its breadth and depth of coverage of the single-sex education debate, this book is an indispensable resource. Sargent, Paul. Real Men or Real Teachers: Contradictions in the Lives of Men Elementary School Teachers. Harriman, Tenn.: Men’s Studies Press, 2000. Writing for the “many men who would be wonderful teachers, parents, or caregivers but have experienced negative sanctions whenever they have attempted to lead gender-atypical lives,” Sargent (sociology, San Diego State University) shares the stories of men who teach in elementary schools. In the world of boys’ schools, this is a particularly interesting book because, not only does it describe how it is to be a man teaching early grades, it also tells the broader story of what it is like for these educators who, in many ways, do not fit the traditional stereotype of masculinity. For researchers, teachers, and anyone interested in the experiences of men engaged in nontraditional work. Sax, Leonard. Boys Adrift: The Five Factors Driving the Growing Epidemic of Unmotivated Boys and Underachieving Young Men. New York, N.Y.: Basic, 2007. Family physician and research psychologist Sax, in his follow-up to Why Gender Matters, presents the complete picture of boys’ underachievement in schools. Citing statistics that suggest boys and young men are less resilient and less ambitious than they were twenty years ago, Sax presents what he believes are the causes for this phenomenon. Combing scientific literature and exploring his own clinical experience, Sax proposes an entirely original view of why boys and young men are failing in school. He argues that a combination of social, cultural, and biological factors is creating an environment that is literally toxic to boys. Educators of boys, both in single-sex or coed environments, will appreciate Sax’s work and solutions for stemming this tide. Sax, Leonard. Why Gender Matters: What Parents and Teachers Need to Know About the Emerging Science of Sex Differences. New York, N.Y.: Doubleday, 2005. There was a time not so long ago when some gender theorists believed that children, for their own good, should be raised without gender stereotyping: girls could play with trucks; boys with dolls. Sax, pediatrician and researcher, suggests that gender types are not the construction of culture or society, but that boys and girls are, from the beginning, hardwired differently. Discussing these differences, Sax contends that understanding the inherent differences in gender can help teachers determine the most effective methods for teaching, disciplining, and understanding children and young adults. Sax is a well-known proponent of single-sex education and offers several compelling arguments in favor of it. This volume is an essential read for teachers, practitioners, and others working with children. Shaffer, Susan Morris, and Linda Perlman Gordon. Why Boys Don’t Talk – and Why It Matters: A Parent’s Survival Guide to Connecting With Your Teen. New York, N.Y.: McGraw Hill, 2004. Shaffer, an educator, and Gordon, a clinical social worker, explore the reticence of boys – both what it signifies and how to decipher the meaning behind the silence. Fearful of appearing weak or vulnerable, boys typically are unwilling to risk exposure of their feelings by talking and instead use competitiveness as an acceptable model for express-
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ing emotions. The authors provide strategies for enhancing opportunities to connect more deeply and emotionally with boys and explore the cultural conventions of masculinity. Parents and educators will find this work of great interest, both for its analysis and recommendations. Skelton, Christine. Schooling the Boys: Masculinities and Primary Education. Buckingham, England: Open University Press, 2001. Skelton responds to the charge that the one of the contributing factors to boys’ underachievement is the predominance of women teachers in primary schools, which has led to classroom management and teaching styles that ‘favour’ girls. She convincingly shows that primary schools produce a range of masculinities for pupils to draw on. The book aims to provide an understanding of the background literature on boys and schooling, an insight into “masculinity-making” in primary schools, and to offer strategies for developing gender-relevant programs. For primary educators, particularly those in boys’ schools, this book offers guidance in helping boys learn to become men. Sommers, Christina Hoff. The War Against Boys: How Misguided Feminism Is Harming Our Young Men. New York, N.Y.: Simon and Schuster, 2001. Well-documented, this book engages the feminist critics of education who suggest that girls are short-changed in the classroom and boys are simply emotionally repressed. Rather than patholigize boys, the author suggests that, “boys need discipline, respect, and moral guidance. [They] need love and tolerant understanding.” For teachers, parents, men, and women, this volume reframes the entire discussion of gender in education. Strong, Susan. The Boldness of Boys: Famous Men Talk About Growing Up. Kansas City, Mo.: McMeel, 2003. Following the publication of, The Greatness of Girls, Strong offers this work, the companion piece to her earlier title. In an effort to encourage and empower young men, the author solicited essays and anecdotes from famous men who share their personal insights about growing up. The list of contributors includes Colin Powell, Jay Leno, Lance Armstrong, and John McCain. Arranged thematically, chapter headings include school, parents, adversity, challenges, mentors, and perseverance. Because of its broad coverage and inspiring message, this book will appeal to educators, school administrators, parents, and boys. Sullivan, Michael. Connecting Boys with Books: What Libraries Can Do. Chicago, Ill.: ALA, 2003. Is reading just for girls? The answer is, resoundingly, no. But why then do statistics show that boys do not read as much as girls? Since reading is integral in developing vocabulary, self-expression, and higher-level thinking skills, it is essential that boys become engaged with books. Sullivan suggests that by developing boy-friendly library programming, such as including reading-related games, and providing an atmosphere in which boys are comfortable, teachers and librarians can encourage that engagement, particularly for preadolescent and adolescent boys. Tatum, Alfred W. Teaching Reading to Black Adolescent Males: Closing the Achievement Gap. Portland, Maine: Stenhouse, 2005. Eighth-grade English teacher Tatum suggests that we can tackle the dual challenge of how to teach students the academic skills they need and to invest them in learning at the same time by selecting relevant texts for boys to read. By doing so, he argues, the boys will be able to extract meaning from the texts and perhaps apply that meaning to their schooling, their lives, and their futures. With plenty of personal examples of how pertinent and empowering texts have transformed his students, as well as a comprehensive reading list, this will be of interest to English teachers, librarians, and school personnel charged with diversity/community responsibilities. Thompson, Michael, and Dan Kindlon. Raising Cain: Protecting the Emotional Life of Boys. New York, N.Y.: Ballantine, 2000. Kindlon and Thompson assert that boys suffer from a too-narrow definition of masculinity while they discuss the
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relationship between vulnerability and developing sexuality, the “culture of cruelty” boys live in, and the “tyranny of toughness,” among others. Their premise is that “boys will be better off if boys are better understood – and if they are encouraged to become more emotionally literate.” Kindlon and Thompson present, as a tool for change, “What Boys Need” – seven points to encourage healthy masculinity development. This is compelling and groundbreaking work. Anyone working with boys or parenting boys should read it. Thompson, Michael, Ph.D. It’s a Boy! Understanding Your Son’s Development from Birth to Age 18. New York, N.Y.: Ballantine, 2008. Addressing recent troubling studies about boys in the United States, psychologist Thompson underscores the developmental differences between girls and boys that often compel boys to underachieve in school and embrace destructive behavior. The author seeks to rectify this and suggests these steps: early unconditional love, strong maternal attachment, restraining of corporal punishment and sexist stereotyping, strong father participation, and safe places where boys can engage in undirected, outside play. Thompson visits each stage in a boy’s development, thus providing a very useful guide for parents. Thompson, Michael, Ph.D., and Teresa Barker. Speaking of Boys: Answers to the Most-Asked Questions about Raising Sons. New York, N.Y.: Ballantine, 2000. Psychologist Thompson encourages parents to help their sons develop the emotional intelligence necessary to succeed. The book seeks to answer parents’ questions concerning the complexities of raising a boy in today’s society. Addressing issues such as puberty, underage drinking, and increased violence in schools, Thompson reinforces the need to help boys attain an emotional intelligence that will allow them to cope with difficult and threatening situations. He asserts that in order to do this, parents must nurture compassion in their sons. Thompson’s book, as is true with his others, is well-written and thoughtful, making this title part of the core library in boy’s development. Traps: African American Men on Gender and Sexuality. ed. Rudolph P. Byrd and Beverly Guy-Sheftall. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 2001. Byrd and Guy-Sheftall have amassed a collection of writings by nineteenth-and twentieth-century African American men that shed light on the experience of living as a Black male in the United States. The essays speak of the powerful combination of race, gender, and sexuality and their impact on shaping African American men’s understanding of sexuality. Authors include: Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. Du Bois, Derrick Bell, James Baldwin, and Cornel West. Provocative and powerful, this collection will appeal to anyone interested in understanding the African American male identity. Understanding Masculinities: Social Relations and Cultural Arenas. ed. Mairtin Mac an Ghaill. Buckingham, England: Open University, 1996. This is one of the first texts to examine the range of theoretical and methodological approaches to the understanding of masculinity. It brings together overviews of the key theoretical debates with new empirical material, focusing on different social and cultural arenas, and the wide range of masculinities that exist. It discusses education, unemployment, sports, sexuality, and Black masculinities. For anyone concerned with broadening the understanding of masculinity. UNICEF. What About the Boys? The State of the World’s Children 2004. New York, N.Y.: United Nations, 2004. N. pag. In 2004, UNICEF published the results of a comprehensive survey, done to determine how children, in general, are doing worldwide. Owing to the success of new programs created to increase girls’ attendance in school, the report suggests that these initiatives may be having an effect on boys in school as well. Citing numerous statistics from around the world, the findings seem to support the notion that gender-sensitive teaching methods can improve all children’s learning. Filled with interesting data, this report provides much food for thought.
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Wallace, Maurice O. Constructing the Black Masculine: Identity and Ideality in African American Men’s Literature and Culture, 1775-1995. 1995. Durham, N.C.: Duke University, 2002. Originally published as a dissertation, Wallace (English, Duke University) offers a rich, well-researched history of Black men in America. With insight and empathy, Wallace draws on an impressive variety of material to investigate the survivalist strategies employed by Black men who have had to endure the disjunction between race and masculinity in American culture. Highlighting their chronic objectification under the gaze of White eyes, Wallace argues that Black men suffer a social and representational crisis in being at once seen and unseen. Invisible and disregarded on the one hand, they simultaneously face the reality of hypervisibility and perpetual surveillance. Wallace shows how, through all of this, Black men have sought to realize the ideal image of the American masculine. Warrington, Molly, and Mike Younger. Raising Boys’ Achievement in Primary Schools: Towards an Holistic Approach. New York, N.Y: Open University Press; McGraw Hill, 2006. Warrington and Younger (both professors of education in the United Kingdom) provide teachers with a rich, practical guide to helping boys achieve in primary school. Taking into account gender learning differences, and developmental differences between boys and girls, this book offers strategies aimed at keeping boys engaged in learning and school. For its practical nature, this book is aimed at the classroom teacher, but those involved in educating boys – either in coed or single-sex environments – will find it informative and useful. Warrington, Molly, Ros McLellan, and Mike Younger. Raising Boys’ Achievements in Secondary Schools. New York, N.Y.: Open University Press; McGraw Hill, 2005. Following their manual for primary grades, Younger and Warrington offer a guide for teachers that provides strategies for keeping high school boys engaged in learning and in their school community. Of primary interest to teachers, others who work in the field of boys’ education will find this book interesting and informative. West, Peter. It Ain’t Cool to Like School: Why are Boys Underachieving Around the World? And What Can We Do About It? Sydney, Australia: Men’s Health Australia, 2002. July 2008 Around the world, educators are worrying about boys in school. Surveying boys in more than 32 countries, West finds the statistics remarkably telling. Throughout the survey, common themes surface, suggesting that the problems boys are having in school are not just local. Boys’ difficulties are tied to many social issues: the decline of fathering and alienation of many men from families; the fact that jails are at least 90 percent filled with men; society’s tendency to see men as useless unless they are in paid work; and the demonstrably worse health outcomes that men experience. Churches, extended families, and older men (mentors) used to help raise sons into men, but with the worldwide decline in these traditions, schools have been expected to step in. For educators and administrators, this is an enlightening study of the world’s boys and their attitudes toward school. Wynn, Mychal. Empowering African American Males: Teaching, Parenting, and Mentoring Successful Black Males: Workbook. Marietta, Ga.: Rising Son, 2006. Educator and consultant Wynn offers a workbook that contains more than fifty activities and discussion questions that reinforce the concepts, ideas, and strategies outlined within each of the chapters in the book: Mission, Vision, Climate and Culture, Curriculum and Content, Instruction, and Assessment. Activities include developing your mission, vision, and core values; constructing a “web of protection”; understanding student demographics; creating cooperative groups; creating a classroom code of conduct; and helping students to set goals and develop futureoriented dreams. This workbook, for teachers, parents, and mentors, provides techniques to support the strategies outlined in the book.
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“We will share with you a chronology of the School, an analysis of educational best practices gleaned from observations of Haverford teaching by the leading expert on how boys learn, a collection of sample best lessons for boys assembled by three Haverford School alumni who currently teach at their alma mater, and an annotated bibliography of the most current thought on best teaching practices for boys. We hope that this book reflects The Haverford School’s years of concern and commitment to boys’ education and serves as a resource and guide for everyone who loves and teaches boys. We are justly proud of our 125 years of serving the educational needs of boys, and this book celebrates both our unique and distinguished history and our on-going efforts to become the premier school for boys in the country.” – Headmaster, Joseph T. Cox, Ph.D.