Rafe Esquith - 03/31/2015 - (Riall Lecture Series)
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2015-03-31
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Abstract
Begun in 1988, the E. Pauline Riall Lecture Series brings to the University and community outstanding national lecturers in the field of education. The series was established by the late Miss Riall, long-time principal and teacher of the former Salisbury University's Campus School. A generous bequest was provided by Miss Riall's will to fund this special program.
Once-in-a-lifetime educator, Rafe Esquith may be the most inspiring school teacher in America.
He's been called "a modern day Thoreau" by Newsday, "a genius and a saint" by The New York
Times, and "the most interesting and influential classroom teacher in the country" by The
Washington Post. For the past two decades, Esquith has taught fifth graders at a public school in
a Los Angeles neighborhood plagued by guns, gangs, and violence. His exceptional classroom at
Hobart Elementary - known simply as Room 56 - is unlike any other in the country.
Esquith's student are mostly immigrants or children of immigrants, living in poverty and learning
English as a second language. Yet under his tutelage, they voluntarily come to class at 6:30 in
the morning and often stay until five in the afternoon. They learn math, reading, and science. But
they also play Vivaldi, perform Shakespeare, often score in the top one percent on standardized
tests, and go on to attend the best universities. For his near-heroic work, Esquith is the only
teacher to be awarded the President's National Medal of the Arts. He has received the National
Teacher of the Year Award and won accolades from Oprah, the Queen, and the Dalani Lama.
He's also written four books, with his most recent being the critically acclaimed Real Talk for
Real Teachers, published in 2013. His other books include Teach Like Your Hair's on Fire,
There Are No Shortcuts, and Lighting Their Fires. Esquith has also been featured, along with his
students, in the PBS documentary The Hobart Shakespeareans.