Tony Danza Honors Teachers After Walking In Their Shoes

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июл 2013
  • Having taught for a year in an inner-city Philadelphia school, Tony Danza humorously relates his experience with the challenges public school teachers face everyday.

Комментарии • 17

  • @MsSarit2311
    @MsSarit2311 2 года назад +2

    As a teacher i relate to every word...So true!

  • @erikaheintz4241
    @erikaheintz4241 10 лет назад +4

    I commend Mr. Danza for his words. He really understands exactly what teaching is all about. I am a 15 year veteran and I still have days where I cry! Thank you for your RUclips video-I hope you keep them coming.

    • @Rogerwhittaker100
      @Rogerwhittaker100 Год назад

      I’m glad I can motivate you wherever you’re. I just saw this comment. I hope you get this

  • @shawnwiley7562
    @shawnwiley7562 2 года назад +1

    Tony is a riot! I have the Teach DVD series and his book. I give him so much credit for doing what he did.

  • @beverlycarter5382
    @beverlycarter5382 2 года назад +1

    I understand exactly what he is saying, I thought, okay, all I have to do is stand in front of the classroom and give my lesson, well to all the teachers out there, you deserve a big shout-out. It's not easy and for those who continue to go in everyday to prepare our children for their future, I give you an applause for doing so. I still work with special education students, it's a passion because the pay does not amount to what we all go through. God bless teachers!!!

  • @P1983sche
    @P1983sche 6 лет назад +4

    Going on year 10. I teach K-5 and see multiple classes each week because I see the entire population of the school in a week. Each class 50 minutes. I have had moments after a class where I sat at my desk and just teared up. My classes are just so large; it’s management over teaching. 50 kids in one class is not teaching. It’s survival.

  • @catwalkalex
    @catwalkalex 2 года назад

    I used to be a teacher and I also cried. But believe me, I was forced to leave teaching and go to a call-center due to the crisis in 2010 and I cried a lot harder and I still cry my eyes out often missing my teaching days. Love, Alex

  • @marjoriejohnson6535
    @marjoriejohnson6535 2 года назад

    I surely didn't have a participating teacher such as he had..I have no idea where mine was but he sure wasn't in the room. Would have been nice. I hope he was working on his doctorate thesis or something but I doubt it.

    • @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288
      @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288 Год назад

      I had a cooperating teacher for one semester as a student teacher. She wasn't a game changer, although I suppose it would have been even worse without her? But the job didn't really start until my first full year in my own classroom. That feeling of the training wheels coming off and taking ownership of the space, that was much better. That fake confidence is one of the keys to discipline anyway.

  • @internetpolice1166
    @internetpolice1166 7 лет назад

    Statistically, the inner city Charter Schools are BLOWING AWAY public schools. Many public school teachers (not all) have lost their lust for teaching because they feel their jobs are so secure with teachers unions. Teachers of Charter Schools on the other hand know that their jobs are based on how well they teach. I mean the comparisons of educational tests from Charter Schools to Public Schools are all you need to look at to realize how well they are doing, which is an incredible thing because inner city kids are actually getting incredible educations and are being groomed to go to college as opposed to just passing the 12th grade and working at McDonald's or milking the welfare system.

    • @bretchandler6053
      @bretchandler6053 5 лет назад

      This is completely wrong. Teacher's job security are more threatened now than ever before. In my state, IL, we are evaluated all year based on our teaching skills with the onerous "Danielson Framework." We never know whether or not we will have a job the following school year until mid March when we get our "summative scores" from our administrators. I'm not sure what you are talking about, but public school teachers are currently one of the most overly scrutinized and evaluated professions in the US. The evaluation process is almost obsessive and borderline insane. Unfortunately, we get the media perception that Unions are making posh teaching positions, but unfortunately it has never been further from the truth. Sorry Internet Police, but you are thoroughly wrong here. As far as your claims about test scores, I'm not sure what you're talking about there either. You take to comparable schools, a public and private, with similar students and backgrounds and Charter schools do NOT fair any better. Stop the mythologizing.

    • @joelwillis2043
      @joelwillis2043 Год назад

      It is almost like you missed the entire point. I too can pick the best and preform better than the average. Moron.

    • @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288
      @girlfromthebronxbywayofelb7288 Год назад

      I feel very confident that this guy is a charter school administrator who is trying to sell his school in the hopes that he can increase the enrollment at his struggling charter. Just saying....

  • @williamrandolph8133
    @williamrandolph8133 7 лет назад +1

    i can't watch this guy, he makes me dizzy