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Journal of Teacher Education
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Lessons from Teachers

Lisa Delpit

Florida International University

This article argues that with changes in attitudes and actions in classrooms, teachers can alter what happens in urban schools and transform the lives of students. Ten precepts are offered to assist them in that role: teach more, not less, content to poor, urban children; ensure all children gain access to conventions/strategies essential to success in American society; whatever methodology/instructional program used, demand critical thinking; provide the emotional ego strength to challenge racist societal views of the competence and worthiness of children and their families; recognize and build on children’s strengths; use familiar metaphors, analogies, and experiences from the children’s world to connect what children already know to school knowledge; create a sense of family and caring in the service of academic achievement; monitor/assess children’s needs and address them with a wealth of diverse strategies; honor and respect children’s home culture; and foster a sense of children’s connection to community.

Key Words: community based • diversity • emotions • equity • race/class/gender issues

Journal of Teacher Education, Vol. 57, No. 3, 220-231 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0022487105285966


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This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Urban EducationHome page
T. A. Flowers and L. A. Flowers
Factors Affecting Urban African American High School Students' Achievement in Reading
Urban Education, March 1, 2008; 43(2): 154 - 171.
[Abstract] [PDF]