by Jim Grant, Char Forsten
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Product Description This is a humorour allegory about education, well-intentioned people with unrealistic ideas, and a dead horse. Confused? The book will help explain.
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Average Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
If You're Riding a Horse and It dies, Get off , 2007-12-31 This title is a good way to help a committee to move along. A fun read to help a group move beyond a old idea. A great way to poke fun of many stalled out meetings.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
New Strategies for New Students, 2007-08-24 This book, though some have found it unhelpful at best and offensive at worst, is a great analogy on the ways at which those outside of education think we should fix education.
We teachers know that raising standards, forming a committe or throwing money at a problem is not going to fix it.
Teaching is hard work and this book emphasizes the need to find new strategies for the new population of students that are in our schools. I encourage educators to use this book to brainstorm ways to help all students and not rely on how things have always been done!
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
A Metaphor for Greedy Business, 2007-07-16 This book metaphorically reflected how bad business rationalizes it poor decision-making process. It actually left a resounding ecko of how state departments of education have tried to "fix" our public school systems. Read it! It will at least give you a good giggle while answering how groups on the outside think the inside actually works.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Perfection, 2007-03-08 This book was read to me in class at Francis Marion University by the esteemed Dr. Lorin Anderson, author of the revised Bloom's Taxonomy. I loved it and bought 5 for my fellow teachers and administrators at my school. One has even been sent to the State Dept of Ed!
13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
true, cute, but v. short on solutions, 2005-04-26 Most anyone who works in the trenches of education-teachers especially-know that a good deal of our time is spent riding (or whipping) dead horses; doing things that just plain' ol' don't work year after year.
In this short book, a teacher is riding a horse outside of a lil' red schoolhouse when suddenly the horse flops over dead (X's for eyes and tongue sticking out an' everything). A series of people come along to make common, patent suggestions for how to fix the horse problem, including using a bigger whip, letting a more experienced rider give it a try, team-riding and two of my favorites, "how about an Individualized Equestrian Plan (IEP)?" and a clown on stilts who suggests that they "raise the standard on dead-horse riding."
After a dozen or so ideas that clearly wont work because they all focus on the dead horse, a little boy comes in and says simply that if you're riding a dead horse, you need to get off (the teacher is seen in a red convertible merrily zooming away on the last page).
"If You're Riding a Horse and It Dies..." looks like a children's book but clearly has an adult message. It's cute and will no doubt ring true to anyone who's been a classroom teacher for more than, say, 3 days. It's biggest failing, noted by many other reviewers, is that is does nothing but illustrate and put between 2 covers the most common suggestions to improve dead horse riding, none of which have worked in any meaningful, widespread way.
Teachers are like soldiers in the army: we are the ones who do much/all of the gruntwork and we are also most powerless in the entire hierarchy. We can do very little in and of ourselves BY ourselves to affect sweeping change. We know that we're often riding a dead horse, and if anyone would LISTEN to us and take our suggestions seriously, we very well COULD get off the horse and into the lil' red sportscar.
The book makes no suggestions for how to affect change from within, but in fairness, I don't think that's the book's purpose. The book is intended, I think, to be more of an amusement and call to arms than a step-by-step instruction manual for revamping education and eliminating dead horses. Those who are interested in such a thing might do well to check out "The Comfort Trap (or, What if You're Riding a Dead Horse)" by Judith Sills.
I can't justify giving it 5 stars or even really 4 because, IMHO, a book of this sort should offer at least a small, bulleted list of Where To Begin And How To Fix Education. Still, I think it would have some use for beginning Leadership and other Team meetings where those gathered could use it as an amusing way of beginning to discuss how the dead horses of the school can be taken away for a safe burial.

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