However, it is not all play, and I am an avid reader. The following is an excerpt from a recent letter...
...I have had a couple of occasions recently to be with groups of people who do not know each other, and the discussion has quickly moved to current reading lists. It strikes me what knowing what someone is reading can be a quick window into what he or she is interested in. It wouldn’t surprise me if more than one of you had asked “Who the heck is this guy Kerney and what makes him tick?” Accordingly, I thought that I would share two book lists with you. The first is a list of books that are recent favorites:
- Colors of the Mountain – This is Da Chen’s wonderful story of a boy’s coming of age during the Cultural Revolution. We read this last year with our whole ninth grade and it was a great experience. For a school with a significant Chinese population, this is an especially interesting read.
- A Long Way Gone – This is the stunning autobiographical account of a former child solder from Sierra Leone who ultimately escapes the horrifying circumstances he is in and winds up a very successful college student here in the U.S. It’s not only a wonderfully written story, but it offers lots of interesting things to think about why and how we do what we do as teachers in the 21st century.
- Five Minds For the Future – Howard Gardner, one of the leading thinkers in modern educational practice has returned with a really informative book that builds on his reflections on multiple intelligences with a great look at the type of intelligences that the most successful 21st century adults will possess.
- Mountains Beyond Mountains – Tracy Kidder tells the story of Dr. Paul Farmer’s work that has changed the way that we think about addressing infectious disease in impoverished countries. If anyone doubts that each of us can have a major positive impact on the world, read on.
- The World Is Flat – This is a book that I originally read when it first came out about five years ago and I have regularly returned to as it was transformational in my thinking. Friedman challenges us and gives us a framework for thinking about what skills today’s teens will need to be successful in their thirties and forties. While I don’t necessarily agree with all that he says, this book has a lot to do with how we think as educators in general and about the opportunities that lie ahead for Winchendon in general.
…and on my short list for this summer:
-Jeffrey Sachs – The End of Poverty
-David McCullough – Brave Companions
-Fareed Zakaria – The Post-American World
-Carl Hiaasen – The Downhill Lie (You have to have some fun, especially at a school with it’s own golf course)
-Carol Dweck – Mindset:The New Psychology of Success
…and I am just finishing Three Cups of Tea, the amazing story of Greg Mortenson and his work building schools for girls in impoverished Islamic communities in Pakistan. It not only is a great story but makes some compelling arguments about literacy and the potential for world peace.
I have now finished Three Cups of Tea, and it is well worth the read. I have moved on to a compelling recommendation from Pam Blair The Teaching Gap and am at various stages in a couple of the others and looking forward to a week off in August. Have I mentioned my new Kindle? It is better than I had ever hoped. Check out the Kindle at Amazon. I am probably getting to read two to three times more than I had been BK (before Kindle!).
Until next time...
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