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I'm the Teacher, You're the Student: A Semester in the University Classroom Paperback – July 27, 2004
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What is it really like to be a college professor in an American classroom today? An award-winning teacher with over twenty years of experience answers this question by offering an enlightening and entertaining behind-the-scenes view of a typical semester in his American history course. The unique result—part diary, part sustained reflection—recreates both the unstudied realities and intensely satisfying challenges that teachers encounter in university lecture halls.
From the initial selection of reading materials through the assignment of final grades to each student, Patrick Allitt reports with keen insight and humor on the rewards and frustrations of teaching students who often are unable to draw a distinction between the words "novel" and "book." Readers get to know members of the class, many of whom thrive while others struggle with assignments, plead for better grades, and weep over failures. Although Allitt finds much to admire in today's students, he laments their frequent lack of preparedness—students who arrive in his classroom without basic writing skills, unpracticed with reading assignments.
With sharp wit, a critical eye, and steady sympathy for both educators and students, I'm the Teacher, You're the Student examines issues both large and small, from the ethics of student-teacher relationships to how best to evaluate class participation and grade writing assignments. It offers invaluable guidance to those concerned with the state of higher education today, to young faculty facing the classroom for the first time, and to parents whose children are heading off to college.
- Print length256 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherUniversity of Pennsylvania Press
- Publication dateJuly 27, 2004
- Dimensions6 x 0.75 x 8.75 inches
- ISBN-100812218876
- ISBN-13978-0812218879
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"With a friendly intimacy, he invites the reader into his classroom, offering a rare glimpse into one of the most closely guarded spaces of the academy. . . . A wonderful model for anyone seeking guidance on the craft of teaching in higher education; highly recommended." ― Library Journal
"A wonderful book. I heartily recommend it and tip my hat to the author." ― Metromagazine
"A model for bridging the gap between being a teacher and a learner. It makes a significant contribution to the literature on teaching as a self-reflective model." ― Teachers College Record
"Charming, and compelling." ― Wall Street Journal
Book Description
From the Publisher
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Preface
It's a great life being a college professor, and the best part of the job is the teaching. I've been teaching history to undergraduates for more than twenty years and have always loved it. We professors, however, are expected not only to teach but also to write books. The books we write to get tenure and advance our careers are about our disciplines, not about our lives as teachers. It's strange, isn't it, that of the tens of thousands of books produced by academics in recent years, hardly any have been about our actual work? As far as I know, there aren't any about the daily life of a history professor. I mentioned this odd fact to Peter Agree, my friend and editor. "I've often thought about writing an account of one semester's teaching, to record what actually happens in class." He encouraged me to try. I did, and here is the result, based on a history class I taught at Emory University, entitled, "The Making of Modern America: 1877-2000."
Professors disagree about the proper relationship between teachers and students, about how to lecture, how to lead a seminar, how to teach writing and use writing assignments, how to give and grade exams, how to counsel students, and how to evaluate class participation. I have opinions on all these subjects, and here I'll explain and try to justify them by putting them in the context of an actual college course. In addition to describing what happened with a typical class in a typical semester, I'll throw in some how-to advice and a few "What would you do?" ethical dilemmas based on situations that arose as the weeks went by. A few of these points were debated during the culture wars of the 1980s and 1990s but much of the day-to-day activity in class bears little or no relation to that debate's great controversies.
"I'm the teacher, you're the student." There are all kinds of implications. First, as the teacher, I know more about the subject than the students do, which is why they have come to class in the first place. They want to learn things they do not yet know. As their teacher, I have power over them because part of my job is to evaluate their work and give them grades. Second, some students are more talented than others and some are more hard-working than others, which means that their achievements—and their grades—will differ. Third, despite the steady temptation to make friends with the students, I have to resist it lest it compromise my judgment and impartiality. Professors and students must not be friends (friends don't give each other grades that have a vital effect on their futures). It's certainly OK to be friendly toward students, and to try to make studying a pleasure, but there must be no special friendship beyond a generalized affability. When you first become a college teacher, you're anxious to be liked and admired by the students, and you tend to approach them with an exaggerated sense of how much you can do for them. As a beginning teacher I had the fantastic delusion that I could literally change all the members of a class for the better, meanwhile creating a miniature ideal community in the classroom. Experience wears away the first few layers of illusion, but the tendency to want students to like you persists.
I don't mean that the students should dislike you, of course. If they like you, so much the better; it contributes to their wanting to come to class and learn. One thing I always hope to show students is that what at first glance seems dry, technical, and dull is really absorbing, exciting, and entertaining. There are moments when students, like anybody else, can be disappointing. Not most of the time, though; what makes the job such a pleasure is them. Treated well, they respond. Many of our students at Emory, with the right incentives, are captivated by learning things they did not know before, especially when they are presented in an interesting or engaging way. My whole teaching life has convinced me that nothing works better as a classroom technique or gets a better response than simple enthusiasm.
A book like this can, I hope, give teachers some useful advice, but the way to improve as a teacher is by actually teaching; hypothetical situations or abstract discussions are too different from the real thing. The best you can hope for, short of actually getting down to the job, is to learn a handful of principles, on the one hand, and a handful of useful techniques, on the other. Also, it helps to think of what your own favorite teachers did and to watch the best of your contemporaries at work.
Product details
- Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press (July 27, 2004)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0812218876
- ISBN-13 : 978-0812218879
- Item Weight : 13.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.75 x 8.75 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,862,025 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,247 in Educator Biographies
- #1,573 in College & University Student Life (Books)
- #18,054 in Higher & Continuing Education
- Customer Reviews:
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Although I've spent 7 years in undergraduate and post-graduate education, I must admit that I've had no idea of the professor's viewpoint, apart from that of a friend or two in law schools, given long after I graduated. In fact, as I read Allitt's book, I experienced a fair amount of guilt over my undergraduate attitudes, work habits and efforts, all of which were largely of the mediocre level of which he complains. Something, however, probably the efforts of the 4 or 5 excellent professors I had, motivated me to attempt continued learning and that pursuit is exceptionally rewarding in middle age. And that heightens the sense of what I missed by not being a better student years ago.
More significantly, "I'm the Teacher" led me to realize facts about the educational process nearly 35 years after I ended my undergraduate career. In particular, I feel embarassed about my lousy attitude and the frustration which that may have caused my most able professors and I can understand how a journeyman level of writing skills can compensate for all but the most deficient motivation. If Allitt's concerns were reduced to a single level of complaint, student writing would take the cake distantly followed perhaps by geographical ignorance. All in all, I wish that I either knew then what I now know (much better so, in fact, after reading this text) or at least had the maturity to intuit it. I'm not certain that this would be extremely helpful for a late adolescent about to enter college, but if I had a mature close relative in that position I would give it a try. As a matter of thoughtful reading for pleasure for adults though, I have no question about giving the highest recommendation.
I have seen citations to the book in which it has been used to demonstrate the lack of preparation and indolence of American students (even at Emory). While he raises problems of contemporary higher education (grade inflation, for example), this is not a theoretical or historical book on higher ed; it is much more of a journal, detailing one professor's experience in one semester of work.
How representative is the experience related in the book? I would say that his expectations as a teacher are higher than most, much higher than many. His dedication to the task is also far higher than average. Even though he enjoys the help of a teaching assistant in a relatively small class (40 or so students) he goes out of his way to bring the material to life, with various media presentations and a series of labor-intensive activities. He volunteers to read first drafts of papers, which is something that most would not do. First, you cannot do it for some without doing it for all (and announcing that you are willing to do it for all, which he does). Once you announce that you will read first drafts you are setting yourself up to be the editor/proofreader for your students, an extremely important role which they will have to learn to do for themselves; teachers do not follow them around through life, reading first drafts.
His exams and paper requirements strike me as demanding, but then he curves the grades at the end of the process and his allocation of points for various activities within the course is applied in what appears to be a loosey-goosey fashion, something that would set him up for endless challenges by bunkhouse lawyers with calculators and personal claims.
The students seem to be like most upper-average students. Some readers may be chagrined to learn what they do not know; very few professors will be surprised. To give the Emory students their due, most professors would consider the course expectations to be extremely high. A course such as this would largely be unthinkable at 90% of American institutions.
So read and enjoy, take a few grains of salt, wish that you had teachers as conscientious as Professor Allitt and then read some of the more historical/analytical books on contemporary higher education to discover why we are where we are today.

