Since I began teaching I've wanted to expand the curriculum, but my first year was mostly about surviving rather than looking critically at what I teach and why I was teaching it. American literature conjures up a strong multicultural image for me. I've followed Sherman Alexie's characters on the struggle to find them themselves; I've explored the New Mexican desert of Rudolfo Anaya's novels; I've traveled down Harlem streets with Hughes and experienced Hurston's southern lifestyle. I imagined, when I received my first teaching assignment of American literature, that these authors would be the ones to grace my classroom. However, the way that my English 10 colleagues read the new state standards and the common assessments required by my district made it almost impossible to fit these authors into a "dead white guy" curriculum. I began to struggle through a year of teaching the curriculum as it was, feeling that I was doing a disservice to my students and my educational upbringing. I was required to stay on track with what other teachers in my grade level were doing, when they were testing, and how much time they were spending on units.
( Richard W. Beach )
[ Teaching to Exceed the English ]
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