
Image from http://www.kidsdeserveit.com.
We all have those memorable educators in our experience we will never forget. It may have been their work ethic, ingenuity, enthusiasm, love for the profession or countless other characteristics describing a great teacher. I may not know Todd Nesloney or Adam Welcome personally, but after reading Kids Deserve It, I feel like I do, and I have added them to my list of “memorable educators.” Their inviting, personal style of writing is something one must investigate in order to understand “the buzz” about their book (just check out the Twitter hashtag #KidsDeserveIt – it is practically a movement).
Image from http://www.kidsdeserveit.com.
This book is for the teacher who wants to engage and excite their students in order to maximize their learning potential. The authors’ stories of classroom and school success are not unattainable mountains of teaching perfection. Their success stories start with just one teacher move that sparked another move that sparked another. Pretty soon there was a fire of learning that at times took on a personality of itself. In teaching, we need those moments, not just for our students, but for us. Without energy and passion, our school day is bleak and boring. No one deserves that and especially not our students!
I previously stated that the ideas of Kids Deserve It have created “practically a movement.” Correction: it is a movement. This book has created a movement of teachers who not only remember why they joined the profession in the first place but also know that they can choose to go to school every morning with some of the same joy and enthusiasm they had their first year of teaching. Isn’t that something that all of us need right now?
Jessica Carlson is an instructional coach at Garrett Middle School in northern Indiana. She is also an adjunct professor at Purdue University Fort Wayne. Follow Jessica on Twitter @carlsjm.
