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'A powerful and moving memoir about how the current system is letting down children and parents, and breaking dedicated teachers. Devastating, heart-breaking, enraging.
'Watching children learn is a beautiful and extraordinary experience. Their bodies transform, reflecting inner changes. Teeth fall out. Knees scab. Freckles multiply. Throughout the year they grow in endless ways and I can almost see their self-esteem rising, their confidence soaring, their small bodies now empowered. Given wings.
'They fall in love with learning.
It is a kind of magic, a kind of loving, a kind of art.
It is teaching.
Just teaching.
Just what I do.
What I did.
Past tense.
'In 2014, Gabrielle Stroud was a very dedicated teacher with over a decade of experience. Months later, she resigned in frustration and despair when she realised that the Naplan-test education model was stopping her from doing the very thing she was best at: teaching individual children according to their needs and talents. Her ground-breaking essay 'Teaching Australia' in the Feb 2016 Griffith Review outlined her experiences and provoked a huge response from former and current teachers around the world. That essay lifted the lid on a scandal that is yet to properly break - that our education system is unfair to our children and destroying their teachers.
'In a powerful memoir inspired by her original essay, Gabrielle tells the full story: how she came to teaching, what makes a great teacher, what our kids need from their teachers, and what it was that finally broke her. A brilliant and heart-breaking memoir that cuts to the heart of a vital matter of national importance. ' (Publication summary)
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Works about this Work
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“I Don’t Believe I Left Teaching. Teaching Left Me”
2018
single work
review
— Appears in: Inside Story , August 2018;
— Review of Teacher : One Woman’s Struggle to Keep the Heart in Teaching 2018 single work autobiography'As Gabbie Stroud’s memoir shows, reformers will get nowhere if they don’t take teachers with them'
-
“I Don’t Believe I Left Teaching. Teaching Left Me”
2018
single work
review
— Appears in: Inside Story , August 2018;
— Review of Teacher : One Woman’s Struggle to Keep the Heart in Teaching 2018 single work autobiography'As Gabbie Stroud’s memoir shows, reformers will get nowhere if they don’t take teachers with them'
Awards
- 2019 longlisted Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) — The Matt Richell Award for New Writer
- 2019 shortlisted Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) — Australian Biography of the Year
- 2019 longlisted Indie Awards — Nonfiction