Monday, October 28, 2024

My New Book on Education

There is a reason I have not been blogging much lately.  In fact, my previous post came out exactly seven months ago, so it is time for me to share with readers what is going on.


Writing a Book


I remember telling the Speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives at the 2014 Teacher of the Year banquet that I was not interested in an award that would sit on a shelf.  If being named INTOY would open doors for me to do more for students and the education profession, then so much the better, and I am pleased to say that it has.

2024 marks the tenth anniversary of my receiving that honor, and a lot has happened over those ten years.  During that time I have been blessed to work with colleagues from across the United States and beyond, to speak at numerous events, and to continue writing.  There were academic articles, the second edition of Latin For Dummies with my friend Clifford Hull, and this blog.  Along the way we experienced a global pandemic, I retired from public education, and I began teaching at a Catholic high school.  Now it seems time to acknowledge some of that in a formal way, and so I have been engaged in the process of writing a book, which took me away from regular blogging.  Hopefully the tradeoff will be worth it.






Looking Back to See the Future


I enjoy a good look through a picture album as much as the next person, but if this book were merely a retrospective or for that matter focused on me, it would have little appeal and would be akin to the dust-gathering trophies about which I am not particularly interested.  Instead, this book is a collection of essays drawn from thoughts and writings and conversations across the past decade.  Although it does make frequent reference to the past, such references are to the wisdom of the ages expressed in the poetry and philosophy and art that have inspired the human race for thousands of years, and this is done with the goal helping us see a better educational experience for our children.

We need to recapture the thrill and excitement that come from a grand vision of education.  Education is a supremely human endeavor.  It is conducted by human beings with human beings, and we were created for more than is often experienced in our schools today.  Yet there have been glimpses of that grand vision through the ages.  We have known what it meant to seek and to discover the true, the good, and the beautiful, and many of us do so even today, for the natural curiosity of a student, whether at age six or age sixty, if guided well, leads to life, and that is the true measure of education.



Sine Quibus Non


sine qua non is something that is essential.  A literal translation from the Latin is, "without which not."  To make the expression more personal, I have restated it as sine quibus non, or "without whom not," and this book, coming out in December, is indeed a sine quibus non.  In it are some of my favorite people, such Homer and Plato, Cicero and Vergil, St. Thomas Aquinas and St. Augustine.  There are my own, wonderful teachers from Kindergarten through graduate school, all of whom find mention in the book, and there are many colleagues beside whom I have been so blessed to teach and with whom I have enjoyed countless scintillating conversations over the years, discussions so exciting that I was sure the very particles in the air around us had become electrified.

It is de rigueur to thank those without whom one could not have done a thing, but the worry is always that someone will be left out.  Please know that if you have ever been my teacher, my student, or my colleague, I am grateful for the time we have spent together on the shared journey of discovery that is education.  Here, now, I must name a very few.

I offer my deepest thanks to Ed Coleman, David McGinness, Kathy Nimmer, and Kate Smith for offering kind words to be used on the book jacket, and their full statements of support are within the book.  When I asked the girl who would become my wife for what would be our first date, I was well and truly surprised when she said she would go out with me.  The next word coming over the phone from my end after she said "yes" was "really?"  I had the same reaction when each of these extraordinary educators agreed to lend their name and approbation to this project.

Special thanks go to my dear friend Gary Abud, Jr.  We met when he was the 2014 Michigan Teacher of the Year and we have covered some solid ground together.  Not only am I grateful for his remarks on the book, but also for the sheer delight of working with him and his company CoGrounded to see it market.

I would not be a teacher were it not for so many of my family members who traveled the hallways of Indiana schools before me, and I talk about that in the book.  My dad died in 2009, but I was able to share with my mom that I was working on this book before she passed away late last year.  I can see traces of how they lived out their callings as teachers, and my dad as principal, every single day in my classes.

I am grateful to my children Austin and Olivia for allowing me to serve a calling even higher than that of teacher.  In particular, I must offer heartiest thanks to Austin for his work with CoGrounded and me on the cover of the book and the design of stevenrperkins.com.  There is no greater thrill than working on projects with one's own adult children.

Finally, I will conclude by expressing my deepest appreciation for my wife Melissa in the words that I used in my speech the night of the 2014 Indiana Teacher of the Year banquet.  "She's so conjunctive to my life and soul, that, as the star moves not but in his sphere, I could not but by her."  The Governor of Indiana and the Speaker of the House were most eager to ask me for the wording of what I said that night, for they thought it a fitting line to say to their own wives.  I confessed then as I do now that the words were not mine but Shakespeare's from Hamlet, Act 4, Scene 7.  

2 comments:

  1. I would like to hear your opinion of NEA and AFT and their policies and ideology currently being implemented in many public schools across America. Also, do you believe the Dept of Education should be downsized or eliminated entirely? Lastly, what is your opinion of the Ethnic Studies program soon to be mandated in all twelve grades of public schools in Minnesota?

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    1. Thank you for your comment. I have never been a member of the NEA or the AFT and cannot therefore speak from direct knowledge of their policies. For that same reason I cannnot speak about matters in Minnesota. As for the federal Department of Education, I do think that American citizens should all have certain academic skills regardless of the state in which they live, but the majority of decisions regarding the content and manner of education should be made at local levels.

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While I welcome thoughts relevant to discussions of education, comments that are vulgar, insulting, or in any way inappropriate will be deleted.