Crazy Like a Fox: One Principal's Triumph in the Inner City |  | Authors: Dr. Ben Chavis, Carey Blakely Publisher: NAL Hardcover
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $13.35 as of 11/25/2009 00:47 CST details You Save: $11.60 (46%)
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Seller: book-it_now Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 37551
Media: Hardcover Pages: 304 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6.2 x 1.2
ISBN: 0451228189 Dewey Decimal Number: 373.1201092 EAN: 9780451228185 ASIN: 0451228189
Publication Date: September 1, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The inspiring true story of one man's determination to make a difference- and the school he changed forever.
"If you act like a winner, you'll be treated like a winner. If you act like a fool, you'll be treated like a fool."
This is the golden rule set forth by Dr. Ben Chavis, the highly unorthodox principal of Oakland, California's American Indian Public Charter School, which was hailed as an "education miracle" by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger after it was transformed from a failing "nuisance" into one of the best public middle schools in the nation.
This is the story of how one man, in daring to be different, effected such stunning change. With his rigorous, no-nonsense approach, Dr. Ben Chavis debunks the myth that poor, minority, inner-city schools have little chance at academic excellence. Focusing on back-to-basics ideals, he has created a structured educational model that, combined with the enthusiasm of his students and teachers, delivers astounding results.
Now, Dr. Chavis recounts how he did it-in his own words and through the stories of the extraordinary young people he's helped.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
Crazy Like a Fox November 8, 2009 Joan C. Volberg (Carmel CA 93921) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a fabulous book about a fabulous man who proves that under-privileged kids can learn and excel. He took over a poor "Indian" charter school in Oakland, and made it into the 4th best scoring middle school in the state. Everyone should read this book and be aware of Ben Chavis. This man has the vision to change our union dominated school system which leaves kids behind, into a vibrant educational system that prepares these same kids for college.
Excuses Be Damned! November 6, 2009 Marceau O'Neill 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
"Crazy Like A Fox" is a most commanding vehicle by which Dr. Chavis continues his bold, desperately-needed, challenge to America's impotent educational practices. With the concise writing style of Carey Blakely, it is a biting condemnation of those who enrich themselves by cheating our children of their right to be effectively educated; an achievement indispensable to their individual economic success.
This book demonstrates how a most principled educator prepares students for the realities of America's free enterprise system. That educator repeatedly illustrates how his schools' children are capable of reaching the highest standards of achievement, when that achievement is actually expected of them.
Dr. Chavis and Carey Blakely are strict advocates of those educating methods that actually work. Their apolitical publication adheres to the author's "back-to-basics" stance. It provides impressive empirical data, as well as detailed accountings of his successes. "Crazy Like A Fox" lays out the fundamentals of Dr. Chavis' American Indian Model of Education in clear, understandable terms, to encourage ease of replication. It's all about empowering individuals with a sure formula for success; i.e., achievement through hard work and self-discipline.
All families with school-age children, as well as those educators who are dismayed by America's unconscionable dumbing down of its youth, absolutely must read this zesty eye-opener! ###
Stop the insanity... October 23, 2009 M. Nora, sp. ed. teacher 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Are you tired of seeing children fail in school year after year? There is hope but it comes with a price, change...This book is a roadmap to student academic success that cannot be ignored. Dr. Chavis is a leader that has thrown down the gauntlet. Let's pick it up and run with it. These children deserve it. Crazy Like A Fox is the guide to achieve that goal.
Crazy Like a Fox October 22, 2009 Jean Jones (Iowa, USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Great example of successful inner city education that excels academically. Inspiring, revolutionary approach. Applicable to all public education. Kids can learn. We don't need more money for 5 star education we need motivated, smart leadership,teachers and parents that will get out of the way and let them do their job. Teach language arts and math each for 1.5 hours a day and students will excel in all areas. No fluff, no nonsense, common sense education.
Academic Justice Leads to Social Justice October 10, 2009 Buster (Seattle, WA USA) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I heartily recommend that you take time to get to know Dr. Ben Chavis, former principal of the inner-city, Oakland, CA, American Indian Charter Public School (AIPCS), by reading his book, Crazy like a Fox. This book is especially for all those who are concerned and saddened about the current abysmal performance of so many U.S. K-12 schools. This book will either confirm your belief that we can do better educating our children, or it will--if you keep an open mind--challenge your progressive beliefs about the ingredients required for a successful school. It will either confirm your belief that performance is about more than money, food, computers, empathy, self esteem, and politically correct nostrums; or it will hopefully shatter those progressive beliefs which have so clearly failed our failing children.
Ben Chavis has now taken his education model public, after turning around AIPCS, turning it around with family, good books, good teachers, a back-to-basics focus, structure, discipline, high expectations, a taste of free market capitalism, accountability and his unique disdain for educational orthodoxy: "Multicultural specialists, ultraliberal zealots, and college-tainted oppression liberators need not apply [for teaching jobs]." But success was not foreordained for his school. In fact, it was just one vote away--within days of Dr. Chavis taking over as principal--from being ordered closed by the school board. I invite you to follow his rescue and recovery, as he replaces a broken faculty, and fixes a dysfunctional curriculum, and imposes structure and discipline on a school without either. On his journey, Dr. Chavis will take away student computers and refuse to offer the federal school lunch program. He will take mirrors out of the student restrooms and require students and parents sign contracts. He will emphasize perfect attendance for all students, paying students at year end if they have zero unexcused absences, and his attendance rates will climb each year from around 65% to about 98%. He will require teachers focus on teaching language arts (reading, writing, grammar) and math each class day, allocating 90 minutes to each subject. He will adopt an educational model that focuses on the student, requiring approved texts, retaining only quality teachers, administering a program of accountability with an emphasis on rewards for achievement and punishment for misconduct.
And during that time, gradually building on success, his middle school's performance results will slowly climb from subterranean levels to the top of the performance charts, reaching the magic 800, the benchmark of excellence on the California Academic Performance Index, subsequently with breakneck speed the scores climb above 900, distinguishing the school as one of the top 10 in the state, garnering national recognition for his Oakland school. And along the way he sets Olympian goals for his students. Eventually, he expands his model, adding an AIPCS high school and a second middle school in Oakland: both schools continuing to excel.
It is a redemptive journey and there are now AIM-Ed (AIM to Educate) models of Dr. Chavis' program being replicated in CA and elsewhere in North America. Besides the story about turning around a troubled, dysfunctional school, this book is also an intriguing story about the life of Ben Chavis, a North Carolina Indian, a story about how he came to challenge just about every politically correct, educationally popular elixir in education today. Mr. Chavis learned from his own life lessons what works: focus on teachers in the classroom--eliminate the bureaucracy and ancillary staff positions; focus on teacher-student relationships--require that a teacher be assigned to the same middle school class for all three years and emphasize core subjects; and focus on discipline--breaking down students that are discipline problems and building them up again. And Dr. Chavis blends all of these ingredients into an educational philosophy that works--works with exceptional results, at both the middle school and high school level.
And when you read this book, you will cry the next time you read about the chaotic, inner-city schools with their 50% flunk-out rates, with students graduating who cannot read, and with the huge waste of so much talent. And when you think about what these youngsters from Indian, Asian, and Hispanic poor families in Oakland accomplished, you might just wonder if the education lobby--consisting of too many left wing fantasy ideologists--is so committed to its religious orthodoxy that it would prefer the current school model over academic justice for students? Would they really prefer a model that just keeps plodding along with more failure over a school system that is successful beyond their dreams? In fact, a model that is so successful that every child in the first high school graduating class takes AP calculus and AP literature, 100% of the 2008 - 2009 seniors are accepted to four-year colleges and universities, and every middle school gets test results placing the class in the top 10 in the Academic Performance Index in the State of CA. And if they would prefer dogma over academic justice, then finally we will know that for some: the schools exist for everyone but the students.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7
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