SELECT LANGUAGE BELOW

Jaime Escalante: Teacher who expected the best of the worst

As we all know, DEI stands for diversity, equity, and inclusion. But recently, those who have noticed its corrosive effect on the people it purports to help have come up with a second, more brutally honest meaning.

This may equally apply to “experts” enriched by DEI applications.take joe bowleris a mathematics education professor at Stanford University who has devised a novel method to help students (often poor, black or Latino) who are falling behind their peers in eighth grade algebra. .

Just remove it from the curriculum completely.

This solution allows teachers to not only punish students who are good at math, but also to give up on students who struggle while taking credit for the phantom success of their accusations. Let’s talk about DEI.

As someone tasked with educating California’s “worst” students, Jaime Escalante He was a man who understood the tyranny of low expectations. “If we expect our children to be losers, they will be losers. If we expect them to be winners, they will be winners. It rises and falls according to the level of expectations of people, especially parents and teachers.”

After a successful career as a math and physics teacher in his native Bolivia, political unrest forced Escalante to move with his wife and two sons to Los Angeles, where he worked odd jobs and re-purchased a college degree. I learned English by myself.

In 1974, he arrived at Garfield High School, serving one of the city’s poorest neighborhoods. Escalante soon found herself at odds with the administration and her fellow teachers. They considered it a waste of time to do anything other than take care of the charges.

Escalante disagreed, and a few years later was teaching advanced placement calculus. By 1987, thanks to Escalante’s dedication, theatrical teaching style, and contagious passion for learning, Garfield had the fifth highest number of students taking her AP Calculus exam in the nation, and Now I can pass.

Escalante retired and returned to Bolivia in 1998. His success as a teacher brought him national acclaim, and Edward James Olmos played Escalante in his 1988 film. But at the end of his life (he died of cancer in 2010), he made it clear that his students were most important to him. “I’ve had a lot of opportunities in this country, but the best ones I’ve found in East L.A.”

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
Telegram
WhatsApp

Related News