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Relentless Pursuit: A Year in the Trenches with Teach for America

Relentless Pursuit: A Year in the Trenches with Teach for America

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Author: Donna Foote
Publisher: Knopf
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $14.06
You Save: $10.89 (44%)



New (27) Used (8) from $13.28

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
Sales Rank: 15920

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 352
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4
Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 6.7 x 1.3

ISBN: 0307265714
Dewey Decimal Number: 371.100979494
EAN: 9780307265715
ASIN: 0307265714

Publication Date: April 15, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand new item. Over 3.5 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Order with confidence. Code: B20080818211952T

Also Available In:

  • Kindle Edition - Relentless Pursuit
  • Paperback - Relentless Pursuit: A Year in the Trenches with Teach for America (Vintage)

Similar Items:

  • Lessons to Learn: Voices from the Front Lines of Teach for America
  • One Day, All Children...: The Unlikely Triumph of Teach For America and What I Learned Along the Way
  • "Why Are All The Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?": A Psychologist Explains the Development of Racial Identity
  • There Are No Shortcuts
  • Unaccustomed Earth

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

A revealing look inside a national phenomenon, Teach For America, which, since its founding in 1990, has pursued one of the most daring—and controversial—strategies for closing the educational achievement gap between the richest and poorest students in the country.

The story is set in South Los Angeles at Locke High School, an institution founded in 1967 in the spirit of renewal that followed the devastating Watts riots but that, four decades on, has made frustratingly little progress in lifting the fortunes of the area’s mostly black and Latino children. Into this place, which resembles a prison as much as a school, are dropped a group of “recruits” from Teach For America, the fast-growing organization devoted to undoing generations of disadvantage through a fiercely regimented selection and deployment of America’s best and brightest. Nearly twenty thousand top college graduates apply for two thousand slots. Then, with only a summer of training, the lucky ones are sent to face the most desperate of classroom environments.

Giving us a year in the life of Locke through the absorbing experiences of four TFA corps members—Rachelle, Phillip, Hrag, and Taylor—Donna Foote recounts the progress of their idealistic but unorthodox mission and shares its results, by turns exhausting, exhilarating, maddening, and unforgettable. As the four struggle to negotiate the expectations of their Locke colleagues (most conventionally trained, many skeptical) and the relentlessly exacting demands of the overseers at TFA headquarters (to say nothing of the typical stresses of youth), we see these young people assume a level of responsibility that might crush a seasoned educator. Limited training must often be supplemented with improvisation in a school where Rachelle’s special ed biology students prove to need remedial reading more urgently than lab work, while Taylor’s ninth-grade English classes show themselves equal to discussing Shakespeare. Through it all, these teachers are sustained not only by the missionary fervor of their cause but also by the intermittent evidence that they can make a tangible difference.

Without romanticizing the successes or minimizing the failures, Relentless Pursuit relates, through the experiences of these four new teachers, the strengths, the foibles, and the peculiarities of an operation to accomplish what no government program has yet managed — to overcome one of the most basic and vexing of social inequities, a problem we can no longer afford to ignore.




Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Relentless Pursuit   August 19, 2008
I read an excerpt of this book on NPR's website, and it caught my attention. The book itself then caught the rest of me. Extremely well researched and written, I could hardly put it down. Capturing the human side of TFA and the vast challenges of our education system, this book - and its subject, the "Corps Members" of TFA - give me hope for the future.


5 out of 5 stars This truly is a relentless pursuit   August 15, 2008
I decided to read this book because I am currently in the process of applying to Teach for America and wanted to find out the truth about what it's like to teach in a challenging public school in America as a corps member. What I found out were those things and more. I didn't expect such a detailed account of what it takes to make TFA work as an organization nor did I expect to read stories from school administrators and especially not a corps member who quit. He believed that TFA "trumpeted the success of teachers making `significant gains,' and because the corps members are all psycho, and because they have always been told they can do anything they set their minds to, they chase this impossible goal, running themselves ragged to change the world."

I don't know what it's like to teach in a school like Locke, but I think Donna Foote tells it like it is. She reminded me how important the quality of a teacher is to a child's education and how dedicated corps members are to their cause no matter how overwhelming it might be. The four corps members depicted approached their teaching in different ways but each seemed to make a difference in their students' lives by the year's end. Reading this book made my heart sink and then rise again. Wendy Kopp's story alone is inspiring, but I felt like I actually knew the characters in this book while reading. I couldn't put it down.

This is a must read for anyone thinking about applying to Teach for America or anyone who has a negative view of teaching as a profession. For me, it reaffirmed my dedication to the cause of education reform and reassured me that TFA is a place I belong. For others it might do just the opposite.



4 out of 5 stars Excellent Observations   July 30, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Relentless Pursuit is a strong examination of one of the nation's most intriguing volunteer organizations. The struggles of the country's education system, particularly within impoverished urban communities, is nothing surprising to most people. But the extent to which Teach for America is involved in these struggles (and their methodology) is not common knowledge. By focusing her efforts on tracking a handful of teachers at a representative LA school and a few administrators they are involved with, Donna Foote goes a long way to illustrate the situation and some of the important questions brought up by the Teach for America phenomenon.


4 out of 5 stars Good case study that could benefit from more analysis   June 24, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a good and valuable book. It has some limitations that prevent it from being a great book.

The book's strengths are its detailed depiction of the challenges and triumphs of 4 Teach for America teachers in a troubled high school in LA, Locke High School. The book gives a real feeling of the challenges these teachers face because of neighborhood gang problems, the poor academic preparation of many students, and issues with classroom discipline, educational bureaucracy, and the overall atmosphere of the school.

The book also gives a thumbnail depiction of the history and current operations of TFA. This includes a detailed view of how TFA selects "corps members", TFA's philosophy of "teaching as leadership", TFA's developing approach to assessment and curriculum, and TFA's expansion plans. There is also a detailed depiction of the work of the TFA program director who is overseeing the four TFA "CMs" at Locke.

This book would be useful in anyone wanting to understand some of the challenges in the very toughest urban high schools. The book would also be of interest in anyone wanting to understand TFA as an educational reform organization.

The limitation of the book is that it doesn't really explore the broader implications of TFA within American education. For example, the book mentions perceptions by the Locke high school principal, and some of the CMs, that much of the teaching at Locke High School is not good. However, none of this "bad teaching" is shown or explored. The focus is narrowly on the challenges and triumphs of the TFA teachers.

As another example, the book does not explore whether it is possible for TFA to really be the way to radically transform American education, and how. TFA currently selects relatively few applications from a highly select group of idealistic college students. It then does a unique boot camp kind of training. To what extent is any of this replicable on a broad scale? This is unclear, and is not adequately explored in the book. Perhaps TFA's most important future role in American education will be as a way of getting some highly talented people into education, where they can play a key role as educational leaders.



4 out of 5 stars All Teachers Left Behind   June 14, 2008
 4 out of 7 found this review helpful

I happen to love the language employed by the media when talking about education. War metaphors are most popular and eye-catching. "At the front," and "in the trenches" capture one's attention. One thinks of sweet little Princeton grads in gas masks, armed with bayonets being charged by thousands of black kids screaming "whitey." No wonder so many Teach for America alumni write books; they are like war veterans. Some are too traumatized to ever speak of their ordeal again, while others are turned into overnight Hemingways. I was down there in Watts, too, having the time of my life, but I didn't see the same things these TFA kids saw. What I remember is the counselor who drove a white Rolls Royce to school, and walked around campus in her Sunday best. Or the coordinator of school funds who drove a gold Mercedes onto campus, parked daily in front of his office, and dared the school police to give him a ticket. I remember watching the kids take a single bite out of their hot dogs, hamburgers, pizzas or burritos and then throw the leftovers over their shoulders on to the cafeteria floor. Staff spent an hour scooping up the garbage using snow shovels every day after "nutrition" and lunch. And how could I forget Dr. Princess, the computer coordinator, who spent everyday locked in her office surfing the net. Kids would walk around campus throwing their unopened orange juice cartons against the classroom walls and screamed wildly when the juice splattered and rained over their classmates. I'd tell the kids to open to page 112 in their "The American Experience" textbook, only to watch in horror as they tore the pages out, made paper wads, and told me they didn't have page 112, so could we watch a movie? Houses sell for $400,000 down in Watts. There were kids with parents in dubious lines of work, but then again no more dubious than those of our substitute teachers. I never met a kid who didn't have $20 to blow on the latest movie at the Magic Johnson Theatre. They were poor, all right, but not in the sense that they lacked money. What is difficult in Watts as is true of many working class neighborhoods in Southern California is that there is no model for work that is glamorous enough to compete with Hollywood. Gambling is cool, buying lotto tickets makes sense, but not work. When the black counselor attempted to revive the long-abandoned horticulture department by asking kids to clean out the greenhouses, the head of the English department charged him with trying to revive slavery. There is no honor in labor; work is seen as a sign or weakness. Basketball playing is seen as worthy, rapping, drug-dealing: they're manly. But study is simply out of the question. You can paint signs on the school house saying, "All Children Can Learn" all you want, but somebody has to tell the kids to do their homework.


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