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VI-"My Year as a Teacher" - Emily Sachar - Newsday and New York Newsday
" . . . After I had decided to leave teaching, and after the school year had ended, I no longer felt self-conscious about looking into the home lives of my students. . . . "
Newsday and New York Newsday 1989-12-03
Postscript: "My Year as a Teacher" - Emily Sachar - Newsday and New York Newsday
"Five of Sachar's eighth-grade math students met last week with a New York Newsday editor to talk about their experiences in her classroom. The students, one from each of the five classes Sachar taught, were: Ilka Bent, Sabura Alexander, Karim Licorish, Fredeline Amedee and Natalie Rodgers. They were not students profiled by Sachar in the series.
Newsday and New York Newsday 1989-12-06
VIII-"My Year as a Teacher" - Emily Sachar - Newsday and New York Newsday
"One shelf in my den has workbooks. Another has bags of smiley-face stickers, and another has dice and protractors. Next to my computer is a filing cabinet filled with puzzles I used in my year as a teacher at Walt Whitman Intermediate School in Flatbush, Brooklyn. "They were my teaching supplies, and I haven't been able to throw them away. After teaching math for a year, I decided not to return. But I still feel like a teacher, and I often imagine I'll go back to the classroom someday. . . . "
Newsday and New York Newsday 1989-12-05
VII-"My Year as a Teacher" - Emily Sachar - Newsday and New York Newsday
" . . . I scanned the rows of students. Scattered about were several dozen who didn't know their times tables, couldn't write a simple essay or couldn't understand a short passage in an elementary textbook. Yet, in less than two months, they would be adorned in caps and gowns and graduated to high school. I felt like I was watching a heinous lie. . . . "
Newsday and New York Newsday 1989-12-04
IV-"My Year as a Teacher" - Emily Sachar - Newsday and New York Newsday
"October 16, 1989, I had phoned their parents. I had scoured their records. And I had read their essays. But in my year as an eighth grade math teacher at Walt Whitman Intermediate School, there was one line I did not cross with my students. I did not go to their homes. . . . "
Newsday and New York Newsday 1989-12-03
IV-"My Year as a Teacher" - Emily Sachar - Newsday and New York Newsday
"Like many teachers, Nobile's school day didn't end when the last bell rang. She took classes after school to work her way up the salary scale. In New York City, teachers must earn one master's degree within five years to retain their jobs, and they must earn a second master's degree to get to the top of the salary scale. . . . "
Newsday and New York Newsday 1989-11-30
II-"My Year as a Teacher" - Emily Sachar - Newsday and New York Newsday
"Mary as a proud girl, the sort who found it easier to be nasty than nice. In those early weeks of school, she had come late to class, scowled at me in the hall, and told the other students to call me 'Mrs. Sucker.' . . ."
Newsday and New York Newsday 1989-11-28
IV-VIDEO: "ACORN NYC Child Prostitution Investigation" - Project Veritas - James O'Keefe
Youtube description: Undercover investigation at ACORN in New York.
IV-"I Lived in a Slum" - Woody Klein - New York World Telegram and Sun
It's almost a blessing that Old Sam can't see the squalor of the one-room dungeon where he lives with his faithful wife in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn.Old Sam is blind.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1959-06-26
"Dr. Theobald Supports Most of Allen Points" - Robert Prall - New York World Telegram & Sun
Dr. John J. Theobald, superintendent of city schools, yesterday agreed with the bulk of the conclusions of reporter George N. Allen, who for two months served as a teacher in Brooklyn's John Marshall Junior High School.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-12-02
Editorial: "Improving New York's Schools" - Unsigned - New York World Telegram & Sun
The objective of Mr. Allen's temporary role as a teacher, and of this newspaper's printing of his factual reports on classroom conditions as he found them, has been to perform a public service. Before reforms can be achieved, we believe it is essential that the public have the facts to guide it intelligently.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-12-01
XIV-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-29
XV-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
I came away from my two months as a substitute teacher in Brooklyn's John marshall Junior High School with some strong conclusions. They are based on what I saw and heard and experienced as a duly licensed teacher of two classes of adjustment students and two classes of average students. My experiences paralleled those of many other new teachers who entered the school system this term.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-12-01
XIII-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
Fortunately for me, I didn't have to live on my teacher's salary during the two months I taught at John Marshall Junior High in Brooklyn.My take home par was approximately $60 a week. As was reported at the start of this series, I spent not one penny of my salary. It's safely banked in a savings account and will be turned over to a teacher's fund or spent in some manner in the interests of the city school children.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-28
XII-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
Josephine is a tall, well-built girl. She spent most of her time in class primping or looking at a magazine. Periodically she bust into a rage over some imagined insult. Her IQ, as listed on her record card, is 58.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-26
X-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen- New York World Telegram and Sun
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-24
XI-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
Several teachers cited an incident they had seen the day before in the school's general office. They had seen a woman daily substitute, her eyes filled with tears, asking an assistant principal why the children in her classes that day had tried so hard to resist learning anything.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-25
IX-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
At the beginning of the school term I had to copy and recopy the registers of my various classes so many times that I once got writer's cramp. It seemed to me that in this age of modern office machinery, the school system's methods of handling its clerical work is far out of date - and wasteful.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-22
VIII-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
I got the surprise of my teaching life one morning in early October.I walked into the classroom of another teacher at JHS 210 to see how he was teaching hygiene to a group of "adjustment" pupils - neither of the groups I taught. By this time, I was aware of the learning limitation of my own "adjustment" (slow-learning) students. And I was curious to see how other teachers were handling the other ones.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-21
VII-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
From [Mary's] report card I knew that she and three sisters were living with an aunt who had four or five children of her own. A previous teacher had noted "child overworked at home" on her cumulative record card.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-20
VI-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
A group was pushing and shoving around my desk, fighting for extra sheets of paper. A jacket flew across the room. A pencil bounced off a window. Bedlam.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-19
V-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
It was Thursday, Sept. 4, when I first reported as a teacher - of what I didn't yet know - at John Marshall Junior High School in Brooklyn. Experienced teachers were not required to report until Sept. 5 and classes did not start until Sept. 8. But I was there because of a well-publicized announcement by school authorities that orientation meeting for new teachers would be held in all schools Sept. 4th.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-18
IV-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
Getting a job as a teacher in our city's school system is a relatively simple procedure, so hard pressed are school officials for teachers.I simply walked in off the street and my credentials were readily accepted by officials of the administrative headquarters of the Board of Education at 110 Livingston St., Bklyn.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-17
II-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
To the casual visitor, there is little about John Marshall Junior High School in Brooklyn to attract attention.From the outside, the five-story, red-brick building, erected in Brooklyn in 1924, looks like many of the 900 other schools in the five boroughs in New York City. The walls are unscarred, there are no broken windows, the playground is well kept.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-14
I-"Undercover Teacher" - George N. Allen - New York World Telegram and Sun
From Editor's Note: "Staff writer George N. Allen has just emerged from two months as a teacher in one of the city's "difficult" schools - John Marshall Junior High in Brooklyn. The school's principal committed suicide early this year after acts of violence in the school building and on the school grounds. Mr. Allen was assigned to obtain a teacher's job at the school, JHS 120, to learn first-hand the experiences of a teacher there, the attitudes and aptitudes of the students, the day-by-day problems of classroom instruction. School authorities, fellow teachers and students knew nothing of his true identity. From what Mr. Allen experienced himself and from what he learned from other teachers and supervisors there, he has written a series of articles the first of which appears today.
New York World-Telegram and Sun 1958-11-13