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29 pages 58 minutes read

Esmé Raji Codell

Educating Esmé: Diary of a Teacher’s First Year

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1999

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Books

Esme spends a lot of out-of-pocket money buying books for her students. At first, she does this because she is unhappy with the droll reading material that is readily available for her to teach. She is looking for more imaginative and inspiring texts to bring in to share with her students. She soon learns that for many of her students, having a book of their own is a real novelty. Many of them do not own any books at home. This, unfortunately, partly inspires the stealing done by students. Though Esme feels betrayed when books go missing, she realizes how vital it is that the students continue to be exposed to good literature. She lets them take ownership of their reading, presenting staged reenactments and discussing the literature in student-led groups. She allows them to escape their limited surroundings via a time machine that will take them to the world inside any book. At the end of the year, students write her notes, expressing surprise and pride at how much they managed to read in a single year.

Guns

Esme is distressed by how omnipresent guns are in her students’ lives. Students bring guns to school, concealed in book bags. Esme asks Mr. Turner to install metal detector but he refuses, seeing this as pointless. As the year goes on, Esme begins to have nightmares about her students shooting her or one another. She worries about them being shot at home or committing a crime, even more so after Ozzie’s mom reveals that Ozzie fantasizes about killing his abusive stepfather with the gun kept in the house.

Clothes

Esme uses clothes and costumes to keep learning and the classroom safe and inclusive. She surprises her class by picking them from lunch on roller skates one day. She creates a special thinking cap that students can don when they need a few more minutes to solve a problem or finish a task. She wears a sari to make a student feel more comfortable with her cultural identity. When her students are frustrated with her or the workload, she dresses up as a witch to make them laugh some of their worries away.

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By Esmé Raji Codell