The
following appeared in the January 2009 edition of the Brookline High
School PTOÕs ÒNews & ViewsÓ:
Thanks to grants from the BHS PTO and the Brookline Education Foundation, on October 30, BrooklineÕs Professional Development Day, the BHS English teachers spent a day doing what they love—analyzing and discussing literature. Tufts professor Michael Downing led the department in an all-day seminar on Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee, a book Downing calls Òone of the best novels of the past twenty-five years.Ó The day was an enormous success in all respects. Not only were teachers rejuvenated by having the rare chance to discuss a provocative book with their colleagues, but they were inspired by DowningÕs gifts as a teacher and discussion leader.
Here are
some teacher reactions about the day
ÒDiscussing
a challenging piece of literature with colleagues reenergizes my thinking about
the literature I am teaching. Watching a college professor and master teacher
lead a discussion, I picked up some techniques that I will implement this week
in my own classroom.
ÒMichael
Downing is truly one of the great teachers of English. He is so knowledgeable
and skillful. He just made the day a fantastic intellectual and personal
experience.Ó\
ÒI would
like to do more to model DowningÕs style when leading kids through a verbal
analysis of a text.Ó
ÒWas
this the best professional development I have ever done? Yes!!!Ó
ÒOur
facilitator was intelligent, provocative, and expressed genuine interest in our
readings of the text—a perfect model for teaching literature.Ó
Many
teachers also emphasized the importance of the lovely off-site venue for this
seminar. Brookline parent (and now teacher!) Julie Joyal-Mowschenson hosted the
meeting in her living room. The teachers felt that the day was doubly effective
because they felt so pampered.
Michael
Downing will return to present a second seminar in March, this time on Chinua
AchebeÕs Things Fall Apart, a novel read by all sophomores at BHS. The English
teachers are looking forward to this second seminar and to examining the ways
these two books about transition in Africa speak to each other in rich and
surprising ways