ABSTRACT

At the heart of this inquiry into the ethical implications of education reform on reading practices in middle and secondary classrooms, the central question is what is lost, hidden, or marginalized in the name of progress? Drawing on her own experiences as an English teacher during the No Child Left Behind era, the author examines school cultures focused on meeting standards and measurable outcomes. She shows how genocide literature illuminates the ethics of reading and helps teachers and students rethink how literature should be taught in this modern, globalized era and the purposes of education more broadly.

part I|20 pages

Mandates

chapter 1|8 pages

The Education of a Teacher

The First Year

part II|28 pages

Rhetoric, Witnessing, and the Witness

chapter 3|14 pages

The Rhetoric of the Word

A Case Study of Bosnia and Herzegovina

chapter 4|12 pages

Reading Testimony

Witnessing and the Witness

part III|36 pages

Rhetorical Appeals in Fiction

part IV|77 pages

Into the Classroom

chapter 9|15 pages

The Writing Workshop

chapter 10|23 pages

Whole-Class Reading, Research, and Activism

chapter 11|16 pages

The Reading Workshop

chapter 12|15 pages

Assessment

No More Numbers and Letters

chapter 13|6 pages

Conclusion

The Education of a Teacher Continues