Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America

Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America
by Paul Tough

Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America
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Book Summary Information

Author: Paul Tough
Edition: Paperback
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2009-09-10
ISBN: 0547247966
Number of pages: 336
Publisher: Mariner Books
Product features:
  • ISBN13: 9780547247960
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!

Book Reviews of Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America

Book Review: Children of the Enlightenment
Summary: 5 Stars

This interesting book continually makes reference to liberals and conservatives in its account of Geoffrey Canada's efforts to improve education in the United States:

"In education circles, there were bitter disagreements over charter schools, and the debate was politically charged. Teachers at charter schools were usually nonunionized, and many conservative policy groups touted the schools as a free-enterprise solution to the nation's choked educational bureaucracies. Liberals were more likely to oppose charters; many suspected that the Right's sudden interest in inner-city education was nothing more than a cloak for a campaign to weaken unions and undermine the public school system." (p. 7)

Daniel Patrick Moynihan wrote a confidential internal memorandum for the Department of Labor in 1965 titled The Negro Family: The Case for National Action, and James Coleman in 1966 wrote a report for the U. S. Office of Education titled Equality of Educational Opportunity. The Moynihan report, as it came to be known, addressed "the deterioration of the Negro family." The Coleman report was also critical of the families of African-Americans. Paul Tough quotes sociologist William Julius Wilson as follows:

"'the controversy surrounding the Moynihan report has the effect of curtailing serious research on minority problems in the inner city for over a decade, as liberal scholars shied away from researching behavior construed as unflattering or stigmatizing to particular racial minorities.'" (p. 28)

Into this "vacuum," as Tough called it, came books by the conservative Charles Murray (Losing Ground, 1984) and the liberal William Julius Wilson (The Truly Disadvantaged, 1987). The authors disagreed and Tough says of the virtual debate:

"Murray's book provided intellectual support for the Regan-era cutbacks in government aid for the poor, and it helped inspire the reforms of the welfare system that were eventually passed in the mid-1990s. Wilson's formulations underlay much of the Democratic social policy agenda of the late 1980s and early 1990s." (p. 33)

Tough then discusses books titled Class and Schools, written by "Richard Rothstein, a research associate at the liberal Economic Policy Institute," and No Excuses: Closing the Racial Gap in Learning, written by "Abigail and Stephan Thernstrom, well-known conservative writers about race":

"The two sides sniped at each other in web postings and in the pages of the New York Review of Books, with Rothstein accusing the Thernstroms of proposing a 'simplistic remedy' and calling their arguments 'wildly implausible,' and Stephan Thernstrom replying that Rothstein was the 'chief excuser' of the failure of the education system and accusing him of demonstrating, through his work, 'the bankruptcy of current progressive thinking about America's public schools.'

"And where did Canada stand? He agreed with Rothstein that the public school system needed more money, not less. But on the other basic principles of the education debate, Canada found himself with the Thernstroms, on the right. 'I'm for vouchers, I'm for charter schools--I'm for anything that blows up the status quo,' he told me. Canada felt that liberals' hearts were in the right place on poverty and education, but something--maybe it was their dependence on teachers' unions, maybe it was the overly idealistic view of how public education worked--had led them astray on this issue. 'It is my fundamental belief that the folk who care about public education the most, who really want to see it work, are destroying it,' he said. Anyone who looked at the urban public school system not as an abstract idea but up close, every day, the way Canada had for the past twenty years, would want to blow it up too." (p. 131)

I taught at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn in the early 1990s, where there were metal detectors and security guards, just as there are now at Louis D. Brandeis High School on West 84th Street in New York. Brandeis is mentioned in the book as a school no one want to go to. Not many of the children of parents able to afford apartments below 110th Street go to Brandeis. On January 24, 1995, I testified at hearings conducted by the State Education Department about safety and discipline in public schools. I argued that Erasmus did not enforce its discipline code as a matter of policy. The transcript of my testimony is at [...]

Why does Canada feel that "liberals' hearts are in the right place on poverty and education"? What do Canada and Tough think it means to be a liberal? In my opinion, the difference between liberals and conservatives is that conservatives are more mature than liberals. Liberals are emotionally needy because they must constantly reassure themselves that they are compassionate and enlightened.

Enlightened? The Age of Enlightenment or the Age of Reason of the 18th century was a period when many intellectuals criticized those who believed in God, the Bible, and the Koran. These philosophers considered themselves intellectually superior to people who believe our purpose in life is to serve God in this world in order to be happy with Him in the next. Liberals are children of the Enlightenment and are in a futile search for a meaningful life. Also, they interact continually with erudite and intelligent people who believe in the Bible. I suggest that these interactions undermine their self-confidence and make them fear, more than anything else, criticism from fellow liberals.

Summary of Whatever It Takes: Geoffrey Canada's Quest to Change Harlem and America

What would it take?

That was the question that Geoffrey Canada found himself asking. What would it take to change the lives of poor children—not one by one, through heroic interventions and occasional miracles, but in big numbers, and in a way that could be replicated nationwide? The question led him to create the Harlem Children?s Zone, a ninety-seven-block laboratory in central Harlem where he is testing new and sometimes controversial ideas about poverty in America. His conclusion: if you want poor kids to be able to compete with their middle-class peers, you need to change everything in their lives—their schools, their neighborhoods, even the child-rearing practices of their parents.

Whatever It Takes is a tour de force of reporting, an inspired portrait not only of Geoffrey Canada but of the parents and children in Harlem who are struggling to better their lives, often against great odds. Carefully researched and deeply affecting, this is a dispatch from inside the most daring and potentially transformative social experiment of our time.

Book Description
What would it take?

That was the question that Geoffrey Canada found himself asking. What would it take to change the lives of poor children--not one by one, through heroic interventions and occasional miracles, but in big numbers, and in a way that could be replicated nationwide? The question led him to create the Harlem Children's Zone, a ninety-seven-block laboratory in central Harlem where he is testing new and sometimes controversial ideas about poverty in America. His conclusion: if you want poor kids to be able to compete with their middle-class peers, you need to change everything in their lives--their schools, their neighborhoods, even the child-rearing practices of their parents.

Whatever It Takes is a tour de force of reporting, an inspired portrait not only of Geoffrey Canada but also of the parents and children in Harlem who are struggling to better their lives, often against great odds. Carefully researched and deeply affecting, this is a dispatch from inside the most daring and potentially transformative social experiment of our time.

About the Author
Paul Tough is an editor at the New York Times Magazine and one of America's foremost writers on poverty, education, and the achievement gap. His reporting on Geoffrey Canada and the Harlem Children's Zone originally appeared as a Times Magazine cover story. He lives with his wife in New York City.

Questions for Paul Tough

Amazon.com: What makes Geoffrey Canada's approach to educating poor city kids different than the many reforms that have come before?

Tough: Geoff is taking a much more comprehensive approach than earlier reformers. His premise is that kids in neighborhoods like Harlem face so many disadvantages--poorly run schools, poorly educated parents, dangerous streets--that it doesn't make sense to tackle just one or two of those problems and ignore the rest. And so he has created, in the Harlem Children?s Zone, an integrated set of programs that support the neighborhood's children from cradle to college, in school and out of school.

Amazon.com: This is a short book about a long story. How did you find a way to tell the story of such a complicated, long-term transformation?

Tough: When I set out to write this book, my main goal was to tell an engaging story, to find characters and moments and conflicts that would reflect the changes that were going on in Harlem. I wanted to present Geoff Canada more as a protagonist in a drama than as a static subject of a biography. And in that respect, I got lucky in my choice of subject, because during the years I spent reporting on his work, Geoff was in the middle of some major transformations, both personal and organizational. I was also lucky to find a variety of other characters in Harlem, from teachers and administrators to students and parents, who really opened up to me, speaking candidly and eloquently about their own hopes and fears for their children and their futures. With their help, I think I was able to make the book not just an account of some important new ideas in poverty and education, but a human story as well.

Amazon.com: You've spent much of the past five years reporting in Harlem. Beyond the school successes, do you see differences between the parts of the city within the Children's Zone and nearby neighborhoods where the program hasn't expanded yet?

Tough: Harlem as a whole has improved a great deal over the last decade--a process that Geoffrey Canada can take some credit for, though there were plenty of other people and forces that played a role. On a block-by-block level, though, it's not always possible to see the difference between a street that is in the zone and one that's outside of it. The most important changes in the zone are going on out of view, inside schools and apartments and housing projects, where children are, for the first time, learning the skills they need to succeed.

Amazon.com: Barack Obama has said that he would replicate the Harlem Children's Zone in 20 other cities. Have any other organizations begun to follow Canada's model in other places, or are they waiting to see how it goes (or waiting for Obama to be elected)?

Tough: There is a tremendous amount of interest right now in Geoffrey Canada's work among people working in education and philanthropy and social-service non-profits. And there are fledgling zone projects in a handful of cities, all drawing upon the Harlem Children?s Zone to some degree. But there's nothing yet happening on the scale that Obama has proposed. I do think people are waiting to see what Obama does. Will he take the steps necessary to put his replication plan into effect?

Amazon.com: How much of its effectiveness depends on Canada himself? Can you model him, as well as his program?

Tough: He's a unique guy. His personal story--born in poverty in the South Bronx, growing up around drugs and violence, then making it out of the ghetto and winding up at Harvard--was what gave him the passion and the commitment to create the Harlem Children's Zone in the face of numerous obstacles and widespread skepticism. So it's probably true that no one else could have built the first zone. But I think this next stage, the process of expanding the zone model around the country, will require leaders of a different type--people who are passionate about the mission of improving the lives of poor children, of course, but more importantly people who are very focused on results and how to achieve them. Those people may be rare, but they're out there.

Amazon.com: Finally, how are Victor and Cheryl [a young couple who went through the Zone's Baby College in the book] doing?

Tough: They're doing pretty well! They're still struggling with all the issues that most young adults in Harlem struggle with, like finding affordable housing and a decent job. But they're committed to their son, Victor Jr., and to the new parenting techniques they learned in Baby College. They're determined to do whatever it takes to give Victor Jr. a shot at a very different kind of future than they were able to imagine for themselves, growing up.

Questions for Geoffrey Canada

Amazon.com: How do you change the culture of a neighborhood while keeping its local values?

Canada: We are not changing Harlem's culture--we are working to provide an alternative to the toxic popular culture and street culture that glorify violence and anti-social behavior. When you are a scared kid, all this tough-guy stuff is very seductive. We are working with people from the community to provide safe, enriching, and engaging environments for children so they can develop just like their middle-class peers. By encompassing an entire neighborhood, we hope to reach a tipping point where the dominant culture is one that explicitly and implicitly moves children toward success.

Amazon.com: You say in the book, "It is my fundamental belief that the folk who care about public education the most, who really want to see it work, are destroying it." Can you explain what you mean by that? Have you been able to change any of those minds through your work?

Canada: First, let me say that I believe school staff--particularly teachers--perform one of the most important jobs in our country, and many of them are the most dedicated, hard-working professionals I know. I believe it is absolutely scandalous that they are not paid more and given more respect as professionals. That said, I believe our country's education bureaucracy has become calcified and resistant to change--and we are in dire need of change. When education self-interest groups defend practices that get in the way of improving schools for the sake of children, then I am absolutely opposed to them.

I believe that the successes we are having in Harlem are beginning to turn some heads in this country, and making people realize that things are not hopeless--that we adults can improve student achievement at a much-larger scale than we have been doing. It's obvious that the system that got us here is not the one that is going to get us out. So everyone is going to have to re-evaluate their roles, their assumptions and their positions. I think that has begun, but we are not there yet as a country.

Amazon.com: The story in the book ends in the summer of 2007. What has happened in your work, especially at Promise Academy, in the past year?

Canada: This past academic year was very encouraging and it really seemed like the school began to coalesce. The most obvious sign of that were the scores on the citywide math exam at our middle school, which had been the school with the most challenges. This past spring, 97 percent of the eighth graders were at or above grade level. For an area like Harlem, that is incredible, particularly since these were kids that were randomly picked by lottery from the neighborhood, were massively behind, and were with us for just three years. So we are very optimistic about the future of our kids.

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