It is easy for people my age to look on the schools of the past with a sense of nostalgia, seeing a golden age that never really existed.
Told with an engaging voice and sense of humour, Fifty Years in the Classroom is sure to delight and entertain readers..
Barsby shares insights on many issues affecting teachers today: students cheating, curriculum development, streamed classes, mark inflation, and technology in the classroom, among others.
Mathematics teachers, in particular, will find much of interest.
Filled with interesting anecdotes and historical details, this personal memoir is for the education lover and history buff, student and aspiring teacher of any subject.
In Fifty Years in the Classroom and What I Learned There, John Barsby paints an honest picture of the schools he has known, and how they evolved over time, starting with his student days in the \'50s and early \'60s and moving on to his many Years as a teacher, first in a northern mining town, then in an inner-city school, and finally in a well known independent school.
I recognize that the schools of today have much more to offer.
I am not among them.
It is easy for people my age to look on the schools of the past with a sense of nostalgia, seeing a golden age that never really existed