50 Great Books For Teachers

Edudemic

If you’re a teacher, you probably don’t have oodles of free time on your hands (unless you’ve thrown lesson planning and grading your students’ work out the window!), but when you do, a good book recommendation is almost always welcome (trumped only by a good wine/beer/food recommendation!). I always enjoy a good ‘beach read’ when I need something brainless (read: flaky, easy reading), but sometimes I’m up for something with a little more substance. What better than something that can help you out in your classroom or professional life?

The handy infographic below is a great list of 50 awesome books for teachers to read. From teaching strategies to teacher humor, and cartoons and real life stories, there’s a bit of something in here for everyone. Take a look – you can see what’s on the list that you may have already read, and you’ll likely find something new that you’d like to take a look at.

Do you have any other teaching related favorite reads that aren’t included here? Leave us a message in the comments!

50 Great Books For Teachers

(see the infographic for the rest!)

  • The First-Year Teacher’s Survival Guide
  • Teaching With Fire
  • The First Days Of School
  • Growing Minds
  • The Teacher’s Book Of Wit
  • Fred Jones Tools For Teaching
  • The Courage To Teach
  • Educating Esme
  • School
  • The Substitute Teacher’s Organizer
  • You Know You’re A Teacher If….
  • Stories From A Teacher
  • What If There Were No Teachers?
  • 99 Ways To Get Kids To Love Reading
  • See Me After Class: Advice For Teachers By Teachers
  • Why Johnny Still Can’t Read
  • Inside Mrs. B’s Classroom: Courage, Hope, and Learning on Chicago’s South Side
  • The Cooperative Classroom: Empowering Learning

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Please take this in the sprint in which it is intended ---

When this list of 50 books on education is set in contrast to the article that highlights Will Robinson's ideas in Mind/Shift, we arrive at the heart of the matter: some want only to reproduce the self-same educational vision while others as deeply entrenched in the educational industrial complex at all levels want REAL educational reform, not more 19th Century factory model education - regardless of superimposed standards (i.e. Common Core) or the bells and whistles of more technology.

What's the take-away from this: the hits and views of Sir Ken Robinson's YouTubes, including Schools Kill Creativity, are off the charts, yet where are all the people who watched these videos (parents, teachers, students)? Where are their voices in this conversation?

Tomorrow morning, the beast we struggle with daily lumbers on powered by its own systemic inertia. How does school leadership address that in a meaningful way that doesn't depend on a Messiah to rise from out of the locker-lined halls?

Ask yourself - which century do you choose to replicate? The 19th or the 21st?

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