cover image Building a Better Teacher: How Teaching Works (and How to Teach It to Everyone)

Building a Better Teacher: How Teaching Works (and How to Teach It to Everyone)

Elizabeth Green. Norton, $27.95 (320p) ISBN 978-0-393-08159-6

Journalist and cofounder of the news organization GothamSchools, Green promises to reveal how better teaching works and how everyone (or at least every teacher) can be taught how to do it. Unfortunately, the book promises more than it delivers. Green’s primary argument concerns the need for better teacher training (less attention to “teachers’ effect,” more attention to successful classroom practice), and one of her most insightful observations concerns the shifts that occurred when “universities... began to add the lucrative teacher-training business to their repertoires.” The material she cites most heavily comes from two distinguished specialists in training teachers to teach mathematics (Magdalene Lampert and Deborah Loewenberg Ball) and “from the world of educational entrepreneurs” (Doug Lemov, managing director of the Uncommon School charter network). Much of her content is classroom reportage that shows how teachers resolve the arithmetic problems of individual students. While this material will be of practical use to budding or aspiring teachers, it makes for dry reading. Japanese schools, charter schools, and national programs such as No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top are assessed as well. The book is best-suited for education specialists and working teachers. Agent: Alia Hanna Habib, McCormick & Williams. (Aug.)