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The Freedom Writers Diary (Movie Tie-in Edition): How a Teacher and 150 Teens Used Writing to Change Themselves and the World Around Them Kindle Edition
Now a public television documentary, Freedom Writers: Stories from the Heart
In 1994, an idealistic first-year teacher in Long Beach, California, named Erin Gruwell confronted a room of “unteachable, at-risk” students. She had intercepted a note with an ugly racial caricature and angrily declared that this was precisely the sort of thing that led to the Holocaust. She was met by uncomprehending looks—none of her students had heard of one of the defining moments of the twentieth century. So she rebooted her entire curriculum, using treasured books such as Anne Frank’s diary as her guide to combat intolerance and misunderstanding. Her students began recording their thoughts and feelings in their own diaries, eventually dubbing themselves the “Freedom Writers.”
Consisting of powerful entries from the students’ diaries and narrative text by Erin Gruwell, The Freedom Writers Diary is an unforgettable story of how hard work, courage, and determination changed the lives of a teacher and her students. In the two decades since its original publication, the book has sold more than one million copies and inspired a major motion picture Freedom Writers. And now, with this twentieth-anniversary edition, readers are brought up to date on the lives of the Freedom Writers, as they blend indispensable takes on social issues with uplifting stories of attending college—and watch their own children follow in their footsteps. The Freedom Writers Diary remains a vital read for anyone who believes in second chances.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCrown
- Publication dateApril 24, 2007
- File size27444 KB
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From Library Journal
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Fall 1994
Entry 1 -- Ms. Gruwell
Dear Diary, Tomorrow morning, my journey as an English teacher officially begins. Since first impressions are so important, I wonder what my students will think about me. Will they think I'm out of touch or too preppy? Or worse yet, that I'm too young to be taken seriously? Maybe I'll have them write a journal entry describing what their expectations are of me and the class.
Even though I spent last year as a student teacher at Wilson High School, I'm still learning my way around the city. Long Beach is so different than the gated community I grew up in. Thanks to MTV dubbing Long Beach as the "gangsta-rap capital" with its depiction of guns and graffiti, my friends have a warped perception of the city, or L B C as the rappers refer to it. They think I should wear a bulletproof vest rather than pearls. Where I live in Newport Beach is a utopia compared to some of neighborhoods seen in a Snoop Doggy Dogg video. Still, TV tends to blow things out of proportion.
The school is actually located in a safe neighborhood, just a few miles from the ocean. Its location and reputation make it desirable. So much so that a lot of the students that live in what they call the "'hood" take two or three buses just to get to school every day. Students come in from every corner of the city: Rich kids from the shore sit next to poor kids from the projects . . . there's every race, religion, and culture within the confines of the quad. But since the Rodney King riots, racial tension has spilled over into the school.
Due to busing and an outbreak in gang activity, Wilson's traditional white, upper-class demographics have changed radically. African Americans, Latinos, and Asians now make up the majority of the student body.
As a student teacher last year, I was pretty naive. I wanted to see past color and culture, but I was immediately confronted by it when the first bell rang and a student named Sharaud sauntered in bouncing a basketball. He was a junior, a disciplinary transfer from Wilson's crosstown rival, and his reputation preceded him. Word was that he had threatened his previous English teacher with a gun (which I later found out was only a plastic water gun, but it had all the makings of a dramatic showdown). In those first few minutes, he made it brutally clear that he hated Wilson, he hated English, and he hated me. His sole purpose was to make his "preppy" student teacher cry. Little did he know that within a month, he'd be the one crying.
Sharaud became the butt of a bad joke. A classmate got tired of Sharaud's antics and drew a racial caricature of him with huge, exaggerated lips. As the drawing made its way around the class, the other students laughed hysterically. When Sharaud saw it, he looked as if he was going to cry. For the first time, his tough facade began to crack.
When I got a hold of the picture, I went ballistic. "This is the type of propaganda that the Nazis used during the Holocaust," I yelled. When a student timidly asked me, "What's the Holocaust?" I was shocked.
I asked, "How many of you have heard of the Holocaust?" Not a single person raised his hand. Then I asked, "How many of you have been shot at?" Nearly every hand went up.
I immediately decided to throw out my meticulously planned lessons and make tolerance the core of my curriculum.
From that moment on, I would try to bring history to life by using new books, inviting guest speakers, and going on field trips. Since I was just a student teacher, I had no budget for my schemes. So, I moonlighted as a concierge at the Marriott Hotel and sold lingerie at Nordstrom. My dad even asked me, "Why can't you just be a normal teacher?"
Actually, normalcy didn't seem so bad after my first snafu. I took my students to see Schindler's List in Newport Beach, at a predominately white, upper-class theater. I was shocked to see women grab their pearls and clutch their purses in fear. A local paper ran a front-page article about the incident, describing how poorly my students were treated, after which I received death threats. One of my disgruntled neighbors had the audacity to say, "If you love black people so much, why don't you just marry a monkey?"
All this drama and I didn't even have my teaching credentials yet. Luckily, some of my professors from University of California-Irvine read the article and invited my class to a seminar by the author of Schindler's List, Thomas Keneally. Keneally was so impressed by my students that a few days later we got an invitation to meet Steven Spielberg at Universal Studios. I couldn't believe it! The famous director wanted to meet the class that I had dubbed "as colorful as a box of Crayola crayons" and their "rookie teacher who was causing waves." He marveled at how far these "unteachable" students had come as a junior class and what a close group they had become. He even asked Sharaud what "we" were planning to do next year as an encore. After all, if a film does well, you make a sequel--if a class surpasses everyone's expectations, you . . .
. . . dismantle it! Yep, that's exactly what happened. Upon my return from Universal, the head of the English department told me, "You're making us look bad." Talk about bursting my bubble! How was I making them look bad? After all, these were the same kids that "wouldn't last a month" or "were too stupid" to read advanced placement books.
She went on to say, "Things are based on seniority around here." So, in other words, I was lucky to have a job, and keeping Sharaud and his posse another year would be pushing the envelope. Instead, I'd be teaching freshmen--"at risk" freshmen. Hmm . . . not exactly the assignment I was hoping for.
So, starting tomorrow, it's back to the drawing board. But I'm convinced that if Sharaud could change, then anyone can. So basically, I should prepare myself for a roomful of Sharauds. If it took a month to win Sharaud over . . . I wonder how long it's gonna take a bunch of feisty fourteen-year-olds to come around?
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B000Q9J092
- Publisher : Crown (April 24, 2007)
- Publication date : April 24, 2007
- Language : English
- File size : 27444 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 458 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 038549422X
- Best Sellers Rank: #381,805 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #40 in Minority Studies
- #49 in Biographies of Educators (Kindle Store)
- #91 in Education Philosophy & Social Aspects
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

ERIN GRUWELL, the Freedom Writers, and her nonprofit organization, The Freedom Writers Foundation, have received many awards, including the prestigious Spirit of Anne Frank Award, and have appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show, Primetime, Good Morning America, and The View, to name a few. Erin Gruwell is also a charismatic motivational speaker who spreads her dynamic message to students, teachers, and business people around the world. She lives in southern California.

A book. A movie. A movement.
For 20 years, the Freedom Writers Foundation has mitigated student dropout rates by reproducing the Freedom Writers’ experience in schools around the world. The Foundation’s mission is to provide educators with tools to empower all students to succeed. Our core programs include Training, Outreach, Scholarship, and Curriculum.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book great for teens and tweens, with enlightening stories and graphic content. They also describe the emotional tone as emotional, true, and enjoyable. Readers describe the book as very well written, insightful, and honest. They say all the stories are pretty good.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the stories touching, enlightening, and inspiring. They also say the book provides great ideas and inspiration for teaching. Readers also say it's a wonderful tool for teen groups and helps build self-esteem and character.
"I had seen the movie years ago. The book adds even more detail and the follow-up at the end helps to give you an idea of the long reaching impact of..." Read more
"...The transformation of the students is encouraging, and they have Erin Gruwell to thank for the change in attitude that convinces these once hopeless..." Read more
"...This book is definitely recommended for anyone in education, or who simply wants a little inspiration to achieve success in their own lives." Read more
"...The stories are so touching and enlightening. Some of the stories have made me laugh and some made me cry...." Read more
Customers find the book very well written, interesting, and helpful. They also say it's realistic, honest, and authentic. Readers also say the book is easy to understand and not oversimplified.
"...I also love the writing style in this book, rather than being told by a single person the story is told by the diary entries of the students...." Read more
"...more readable for publication in a book, it also taught the students how to proofread and make corrections so that their written material would be..." Read more
"Great source for teaching writing" Read more
"...The vocabulary could not have been authentic. No teenagers, regardless of their backgrounds would all be so well spoken...." Read more
Customers find the book's difficulty level to be pretty good.
"...Phenomenal story." Read more
"There's nothing I dislike about this book. The stories are so touching and enlightening...." Read more
"I like that it tells more than one story from different prospectives. Used for pleasure reading" Read more
"...It definitely caught everyone's attention since the stories told were real and touched your heart with rage, sadness, and deep joy...." Read more
Customers find the book emotional and true experiences written by remarkable kids. They also say the stories bring tears to their eyes, are heartbreaking, funny, and revealing. Readers also mention that the book is a feel good movie and book.
"...Making it easy to feel their struggles, pain and their joys. I purchased a copy for myself and read along with my daughter...." Read more
"...of these students are insightful, surprisingly honest and often heart-breaking.I highly recommend this book." Read more
"...It is such a feel good movie and book. Makes you realize how lucky you are to have grown up in a loving family/community." Read more
"...Great read, sad but evocative." Read more
Customers find the graphic content in the book very eye opening and realistic. They also mention that it portrays life in the intercity in a very graphic and interesting way.
"...The book very graphically and realistically portrays life in the intercity...." Read more
"...Students would benefit from more teachers like her. Very eye opening and interesting to hear how life is for these students. Worth the read." Read more
"I myself as a teacher, this book is filled with a lot of honest reflections by boys and girls, and what Ms G has done is truly inspiring." Read more
"Although the book didn't cover by plastic bag, it still looks great and didn't has any fold.I really like it :)" Read more
Customers find the book great for teens and tweens, with remarkable students and teachers. They also say the passion these kids show is amazing, and the book is a real and honest portrayal of what teens and teachers experience.
"...forgiveness...hope & inspiration is a testimony in itself...these kids are amazing & huge thanks to Ms G. For being more than just a teacher...to..." Read more
"...I love reading it. The teacher is one amazing person." Read more
"...It deals with all kind of problems and is beneficial to people of various ages and from all walks of life." Read more
"...Appropriate for young people and adults - and especially educators." Read more
Customers find the book very moving.
"Very moving" Read more
"Very powerful and moving book. Shows how student can come together with some motivating and guidance...." Read more
"...It's sad and graphic...not meant for children, but very moving and eye opening." Read more
"Inspirational, moving, educational...." Read more
Customers find the content boring, disappointing, and repetitive. They also say the kids' diaries seem to be a complete waste of money.
"...Some people might like it, but I thought it was a complete waste of my money...." Read more
"...Reading diary entry after diary entry gets repetitive and unlike the movie which takes us through one school year, the book consists of years worth..." Read more
"Got bored reading this book. Not mentally challenging." Read more
"I felt a little disappointed in the kids' diaries as it seemed,while trying to describe their own particular situation, the..." Read more
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Erin Gruwell saw that these kids were capable of great things, they just needed someone to believe in them. She designed her lessons to teach them about history they could relate to and gave them assignments in order to give them confidence. Throughout the book we can see how she changed these students' lives and teach them how to believe in themselves and their abilities. She made them write in a journal to capture their lives and this book is a collection of some of those entries.
I also love the writing style in this book, rather than being told by a single person the story is told by the diary entries of the students. We are able to see how the attitude and confidence of each student changes as we get further into the book. We get their in the moment, thoughts making the whole thing a little bit more personal. The diary entries allowed for us to have a deeper connection with the students and for us to really understand what struggles each of them had to go through.
This book does a great job of showing the influence teachers can have on kids, teaching has become very political and everything is based off of the curriculum. Lots of factors are going against teachers not allowing them to form the kind of teacher student relationship that we see in this book, this book just shows to me that teachers need more wiggle room to be able to show that they are people and not just their grades.
Some students give up because they believe they aren't good enough because people say they are or their grades make them feel like they are incapable and then they stop trying. But in the end the only person that can tell you you can or can’t is yourself. This is a constant theme in this book, Mrs. Gruwell met these kids when they had no hope or belief in themselves and in the end of her showing them they can they end up surpassing everyone else’s expectations.
1) Obviously the people trying to ban this book never actually read this book. If they had, they'd know that this book is basically the poster child of WHY BOOKS SHOULDN'T BE BANNED. It's almost laughably ironic that THIS book-a book about the 1st hand account of students learning from books- is on the list of books people want to ban students from reading. 🤦♀️
2) Anyone who suggests this book has no 'literary value' really should leave their gated community once in awhile. Or... if they don't want to subject themselves to what goes on outside their HOA, might i suggest a (THIS) book. Just because a topic is hard or uncomfortable to talk about doesn't mean it shouldn't be discussed. In fact, those are the most important conversations to have.
3) This should be REQUIRED reading material for ALL students at some point during their education.
4) If you're an adult and haven't read this book, 10/10. Highly recommend.
This book is a collection of 142 diary entries taken from the students and the candidness of these young people will shock some readers. Students share their most private thoughts, and they include daily encounters with physical violence; frequent engagements with guns and gunfire; everyday encounters with dysfunctional family members; and constant reminders of their own problems and those of the world immediately around them. Some of the entries sound like they were taken straight from the dialogue of a violent movie. Others sound like they came from the transcript of a busy social worker. They students generally write with a certain feeling of dread and despair. They cannot believe that anything positive will ever come from their lives and they don't believe that anything will ever get them away from their neighborhoods and away from the suffocating lifestyle that they have known since birth.
But as you read the diary entries, you will slowly notice a change in attitude. It starts out slowly and starts to grow. The pessimistic thoughts and general feelings of gloom and doom are slowly replaced by a positive outlook on life. The entries in this book are in chronological order so that the reader can clearly witness the changes as they take place. There are no names (except for a few exceptions), but in some instances you can tell by the stories which entries were written by the same people based on their content. The transformation of the students is encouraging, and they have Erin Gruwell to thank for the change in attitude that convinces these once hopeless underachievers to realize that they really are capable of great things.
One surprising quality of the entries in this book is the writing itself. It isn't perfect, but it is far better than many readers will imagine. I noticed this right away and I wondered how the students were able to learn to write so effectively in so little time. Then, I discovered why: Erin Gruwell wasn't content to let her students write sloppy, grammatically incorrect diary entries. She insisted that they take time to edit what they wrote each day. Only after close scrutiny with an editor's pen did their ordinary prose become good enough for inclusion in this book. This was a smart- not to mention educational- move by Ms. Gruwell. Not only did it make the entries more readable for publication in a book, it also taught the students how to proofread and make corrections so that their written material would be more presentable.
Overall, The Freedom Writers Diary is a very interesting, very realistic book written by a determined teacher and the 150 students whose lives she helped change for the better. The brutal honesty will shock, enrage, and sadden many readers. But the personal growth of these youngsters as they move from grade to grade and slowly mature into happier, more confident youth is both uplifting and inspiring. It shows the power that one person can have on the lives of others and it's a book worth reading for both educators and others who like books with fresh ideas and positive messages.
Top reviews from other countries
Very interesting reading, though sometimes it becomes very lengthy.















