海角大神

What Teachers Make

A defense of teaching from an impertinent, hilarious, and challenging teacher.

What Teachers Make: In Praise of the Greatest Job in the World By Taylor Mali G. P. Putnam鈥檚 Sons 208 pp.

America鈥檚 best advocate for teachers is the intense and often funny slam-poet Taylor Mali: 鈥淲hat am I, really, but a propagandist who mollifies teachers into accepting the status quo? I sometimes feel that way when I am worn from the fight. But I always come back to the fact that being a teacher is one of the greatest jobs in the world, and sometimes the people who have chosen to walk that noble path simply need to be reminded that there is a vast army of educated and grateful citizens who have their backs. Someone needs to remind teachers that they are dearly loved. I鈥檓 that guy." He sings our praises in the face of reckless politicized disparagement.

What Teachers Make: In Praise of the Greatest Job in the World is thus a rare type of celebrity memoir, as its celebrity is based on a poem, Mali鈥檚 poem, the most famous American poem about teaching, 鈥淲hat Teachers Make.鈥 I won鈥檛 quote from it because you can watch it on YouTube in three minutes or read it in one 鈥 either way it鈥檒l amuse you and make you happy. However you encounter it, it鈥檚 dynamite, as satisfying as witnessing a put-upon good kid deciding he has had enough of a bully鈥檚 put-downs and finally retaliating.

In casual mini-essays, Mali, a New York City native, tells the poem鈥檚 front, back, and side stories: where it came from and where it鈥檚 brought him. He remembers when he was one of us, a full-time teacher, more than 10 years ago. And while he celebrates the legs that got under that poem, he鈥檚 no one-trick pony. He鈥檚 a poet in Walt Whitman鈥檚 line, and like Whitman his poems are poems because of their ecstatic colloquial voice.

鈥淚 teach for the fire, the moment of ignition, the spark,
the light bulb of cognition going on in the dark over an adolescent鈥檚 head.
O beautiful incandescence, dazzling the dead air all around the room; he tries
and he tries and he tries and BOOM, he gets it and you can see it in his eyes!
I teach for that moment....鈥

Mali鈥檚 voice is so loud and clear that we listeners can鈥檛 avoid it or pretend it鈥檚 not addressing us. It鈥檚 the engaging voice of that persistent teacher who knows all our tricks of avoidance. He knows evasion, meanness, and double-talking when he hears it, and in national media and political debates about education, we all hear it all the time.

鈥淭he only thing that surprises me is the characterization of teachers as lazy and greedy,鈥 writes Mali. 鈥淥nly someone who had very little understanding of what teaching requires would say such a thing. Certainly, teachers themselves can do a better job letting the world know how hard their profession is, but frankly, they have real work to do and a lot of it so they don鈥檛 have a whole lot of free time on their hands. Whenever I hear someone on television talk about how easy teachers have it, I want to put them in their own classroom for a year to see how they survive. Of course, that wouldn鈥檛 be fair to the students. An idiot might learn his lesson, and it might make for captivating reality TV, but it would come at the cost of a classroom full of students who deserve better.鈥

His admirable 鈥New Teacher Project鈥 came about after young people started telling him how his poem c茅l猫bre inspired them to become teachers. 鈥淲hen I was done, when I had finally convinced 1,000 people to become teachers, I would cut off my hair ... and donate it to a program called Patene Great Lengths, which makes wigs for kids battling cancer.鈥 He鈥檚 a loud, likable do-gooder, so his renown is gratifying, because we teachers need his voice out there. At the same time, it鈥檚 a shame he鈥檚 not in the classroom every day to inspire students.

The book鈥檚 wee size, not to mention the 鈥淭eachers Make a Difference 鈥 To: ___ From___鈥 signature page, suggests the publisher has designed "What Teachers Make" as a gift, and it really will be a sensible gift for anybody who is, was or could become a teacher. (Grading time: Some of the pieces in the second half lack his customary gusto and are not A+ material.) But a very nice book, indeed! Yet ... I prefer his volumes of poems, especially "What Learning Leaves" (2002), whose cover resembles a composition book; it鈥檚 full of, but not exclusively made up of, classroom-poems and is almost as good as being in the presence of an impertinent, hilarious and challenging teacher.

Bob Blaisdell teaches English in Brooklyn at Kingsborough Community College.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to What Teachers Make
Read this article in
/Books/Book-Reviews/2012/0329/What-Teachers-Make
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe