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Brief Intervals of Horrible Sanity: One Season in a Progressive School [Hardcover]

Elizabeth Gold (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 11, 2003
The acerbically humorous account of one teacher's experience at an idealistic "New Visions" high school in Queens, New York.

In response to plummeting test scores and a soaring drop-out rate, in April 1992, the New York City Board of Education established several New Visions schools, including the School of the New Millennium in Queens, New York. Created with hope and high ideals, New Millennium was to be a place where teachers and students would treat each other like family members, where no child would be lost or left behind.

This is the story of how that idealism failed.

Elizabeth Gold came to work at New Millennium as a mid-year replacement for a teacher who had suffered a nervous breakdown. Over the course of four months, her classroom nearly defeated her too. "Our goal was not simply to graduate students but to transform them into loving, compassionate Leaders of Tomorrow," she writes. "Though I never figured out how to do it, I did suspect that cowering behind my desk was not the way."

In Brief Intervals of Horrible Sanity, Gold describes the challenges she and her colleagues faced: no books, a principal not grounded in reality, and a system in which every child-but not every teacher-has a voice. She chronicles her students and how she tried to reach them: disruptive Cindy Fernandez, with a voice that was "part bullhorn and part plaintive baby"; beautiful Sarah Patel, a victim of her classmates' jealousy; and Peter Garcia, a skateboard-loving, Hobbit-reading teenager with an adult-sized sense of honor and self-respect.

At a time when the struggles of the School of the New Millennium are reflected in textbooks and schools across the country, this modern-day Up the Down Staircase offers provocative, wildly entertaining insight into what students should learn and what schools should actually be for.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

When New York City poet Gold arrives at the School for the New Millennium in Jackson Heights, Queens, in February, she's the fourth English teacher her ninth-grade classes have had since the beginning of the school year. The school, meant to be an alternative to the city's overcrowded, underperforming schools, claims to develop "New York City's leaders of the future" and employs the philosophy that in a small school (with only 500 students), "students and teachers get to know each other, work together, and love each other like a family." But, as Gold details in this tiresome, sketchy memoir, the philosophy falters when put into practice, and her students are unruly, angry, bored and not particularly lovable. Some ninth-graders read at a third-grade level; others are smart and capable, yet refuse to pay attention in class or complete homework. A few exceptions emerge (such as one boy who discovers writing and the public library), and Gold receives heroic help from the school's dedicated, supportive humanities teaching staff. Yet the author never gains control of her classroom, one she says she "grew to hate," and though she convincingly describes the anguish of that defeat, her narrative lacks the depth and cohesiveness to make the book compelling or enjoyable. In the end, Gold's afterword sums up what readers have known all along: "I learned what I knew already: I wasn't born to be a high-school teacher," she writes. "I learned that being a teacher is tough.... I had no idea how tough it could be."
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

In 2000, the author took a job as a ninth-grade teacher at the School of the New Millennium, in Queens. Because students had scored so low on tests in the 1990s, the New York City Board of Education decided to give alternative methods a try; hence the establishment of something called a "New Vision" school--less hierarchical, more inclusive. But, as Gold points out, the plan was doomed to failure: whereas educators tend to swing between promoting self-esteem, on the one hand, and test scores, on the other, the School of the New Millennium tried to endorse both philosophies simultaneously. The result, if Gold's memoir is any indication, was something that looked a lot like any other school, with good students and bad students, cliques and social hazing. But the pressure to create a "new kind of education" made the atmosphere at the school oppressive. Gold's memoir, in which she introduces us to a number of her students, is stylishly written and sharply observed. It should be required reading for anyone interested in the state of public education. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Tarcher (September 11, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585422444
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585422449
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.8 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,352,267 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A tale so true for idealistic untrained teachers, November 11, 2003
By 
Christine Wyne "tall teacher" (Lake Oswego, OR United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Brief Intervals of Horrible Sanity: One Season in a Progressive School (Hardcover)
Elizabeth Gold's book made me laugh so hard with intense recognition of my own experience on every page. I couldn't put it down for two days (very rare for me).
I was a similar overeducated idealistic substitute teacher, who in the middle of the year, was placed in charge of an urban Oakland CA eighth grade ESL classroom (the previous teacher had had a nervous breakdown in the middle of class and left abruptly, leaving her students wondering where she had gone). Ms. Gold's description of the difficulty of managing such a classroom with no classroom management skills, no consequences for the student misbehavior, no support from senior administration, insufficient books/materials for her students, no curriculum, etc, etc were painfully similar and accurate to my experience. The teacher I had replaced was a "Teach for America" teacher, the best and brightest of college grads who have been placed in urban schools with 6 weeks of teacher training.
Teaching in an urban school is one of the hardest jobs there is, and it takes professional, emotional, and material support to make it happen successfully. I've gone on to get my teaching credential and to realize how many more years it is going to take to become a master teacher. Elizabeth Gold is a brilliant writer and observer of urban education and its shortcomings and contradictions, and her insights of her four months teaching more than make up for her four months of inadequate "teaching" (which includes managing her classroom which she obviously couldn't manage at all).
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars finally! a terrific memoir!, October 8, 2003
By 
Dina (Forest Hills, NY USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Brief Intervals of Horrible Sanity: One Season in a Progressive School (Hardcover)
I love a great memoir and I have been combing the shelves for one for months: devils wearing Prada, people climbing Everest, etc etc and I can say for sure they've got NOTHING on Elizabeth Gold. My hat is off to her, not only because she did what many of us underemployed New Yorkers have thought we SHOULD do, that is, teaching in the NYC public school system: she took the experience and wrote a HEARTBREAKING and HILARIOUS memoir about it. One of my favorite passages is when she's lost total control of the class (VERY early on) and she thinks she's seen it all, until 2 students are about to begin necking ARDENTLY, right before her very eyes, (page 43):

"Please, please, I pray, don't let them kiss, I don't want to tell them to unglue those lips, and Tongues, Buster, Are Not For Sharing, but the other part of me is thinking, why not kiss? Who am I to interfere with young love, if that's what it is? Why don't I push a couple of desks together in the back and throw a sheet over them, light some mood candles (though they really don't need mood candles), toss over a pack of cigarettes for after, why don't I make myself useful?"

I was doubled over laughing and when I wiped my eyes I thought "wait a minute: these are my fellow New Yorkers in these schools. These are supposed to be the Leaders of Tomorrow! Boy, are we in trouble".

Gold leaves us forewarned: what's going on in the inner city schools is terrifying. It seems like the problem is far too complex for quick-fix solutions. These kids are angry (as Elizabeth hilariously testifies), and they have good reason to be. They have nothing to say but "I Hate Elizabeth" when she tries to teach them Romeo and Juliet, but ask them about Amadou Diallo and they have plenty of opinions. The book is funny, but it leaves you thinking about racism and inequities in education.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Miscategorized Memoir, October 21, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Brief Intervals of Horrible Sanity: One Season in a Progressive School (Hardcover)
This memoir of one writer's experience teaching in Queens, NY is not, as the book is marketed, about education. Instead, it is about a new teacher's experience within the New York City education system, and about her students and fellow teachers. As that, it works. With wit and candor, the memoir details the writer's encounters with a system on the verge of spiraling out of control.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In April 1992, the NYC Board of Education asked New York citizens to submit ideas for creating several "New Visions Schools." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
horrible sanity, tamale lady, candy necklace, hot girl
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
School of the New Millennium, Cindy Fernandez, New York, Sarah Patel, Adam Patel, Erica Reynolds, Sammy Morales, The Call of the Wild, Amadou Diallo, Park Sang, Ricardo Silva, Eric Antonelli, Amy Lee, Parents Committee, The Glass Menagerie, Leon Greene, Middle Passage, Stephen Thomas, Teacher Development Day, The Best Public Middle Schools, Vincent Daly
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