Themes for English B

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36 min read
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160 pages 2025

About This Book

Scrimgeour ponders the nature of meaningful learning, both in and beyond the classroom. He contrasts his Ivy League education to the experiences of his students at a small public college in a faded, gritty New England city. What little he knows of the burdens his students bring to class-family crises, dead-end jobs, overdue bills-leaves him humbled. Fighting disenchantment with the ideals of higher education, Scrimgeour writes, "How much I owe these students, how much I have learned. They know the score; they know they are losing by a lot before the game even begins, and they shrug, as if to say, 'What am I supposed to do, cry?'" Is there too great a student-teacher divide? Can Richard Wright, Langston Hughes, or any other writer Scrimgeour teaches have something to say to a single mother with a full course load, two jobs, a sick kid, and a broken car? Yes, it turns out, and it is magic when it happens. [from publisher description].

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