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Students: Danza Made The Grade As English Teacher

Tony Danza

KATHY MATHESON   09/28/10 04:26 PM ET   AP

PHILADELPHIA — When former sitcom star Tony Danza began teaching English at a Philadelphia high school, no one really knew what to expect. Not even Tony Danza.

Certainly school officials were holding their breath after the district greenlighted "Teach," an A&E reality show premiering Friday that chronicles Danza's year at the head of a class.

Danza, with no teaching experience, was enthusiastic but overwhelmed when filming began last fall at Northeast High School. His students seemed excited but puzzled; some had no idea who he was. ("Wasn't he in, like, 'Cheers'?" one teen asks in the first episode. Um, no.)

While critics contended that education was being sacrificed to benefit the actor best known for "Taxi" and "Who's the Boss?", students and administrators say "Mr. D" ended up making the grade.

"You're hoping that all the new teachers grow the same way he did," Assistant Principal Sharon McCloskey said.

"Teach" comes at a time when education reform is a huge topic in public policy and popular culture, from President Barack Obama's Race to the Top grant program to major film documentaries like "Waiting for 'Superman'" and "Race to Nowhere."

Danza underwent weeks of prep and new-teacher orientation before starting at Northeast, a diverse 3,400-student public high school in a blue-collar neighborhood. His class of 26 sophomores ran the gamut from jocks and divas to brains and immigrants.

Initially, it's rough going for the boss of Room 230. Danza talks too much and gets corrected by a student in front of the class. He deals with cheating and violence, meets with parents of obstinate students, and tries to balance discipline with empathy – all while teaching "Of Mice and Men" and other books to teens with varying academic abilities.

It's overwhelming. Danza cries several times in the first few episodes.

"I can't help it," Danza told The Associated Press. "You see yourself in them. You want them to learn from your mistakes and you can't get it through to them."

Danza also threw himself into civic life and extracurricular activities. He helped coach Northeast's football team, organized a student variety show, sang the national anthem at a Phillies game, and participated in a citywide clean-up and a poetry slam.

"He embraced the city," said Mayor Michael Nutter, who had urged the district to approve the reality show. "It wasn't just a gig that he was doing with A&E network. He became a part of whatever else was going on."

At the end of the year, students issued their own report cards on Danza. They largely praised him, citing everything from his lessons on "To Kill a Mockingbird" to his caring attitude and positive outlook on life.

"He brought a lot of joy to our class and the whole school," said Ileana Morris, 17.

Stephanie Pyle, 16, described the class as a family and Danza as the dad. Eric Lopez, 16, called Danza a "really good guy" who went above and beyond to help students with their academics and personal lives.

After watching the first episode, Northeast High officials are cautiously optimistic that "Teach" will honestly portray the joys, frustrations and challenges of urban education. In many ways, the series tells the story of any first-year instructor.

"You know they say a picture can be worth a thousand words?" said Principal Linda Carroll. "A TV show can be worth a lot more."

Danza, who is planning a book about the experience, said he never could have made it through the year without instructional coach David Cohn. Because Danza is not certified to teach – he holds only a bachelor's degree in history – Cohn sat in on every class. He also met regularly with Danza to offer feedback and advice.

If educators nationwide take nothing else from the show, Danza said, they should realize the importance of mentors for rookie teachers.

"I can't imagine they would have thrown me in without that guy there," he said.

Cohn had kind words for Danza, too. Noting TV crews were absent from class for several weeks, Cohn said Danza had the same intensity regardless of whether the cameras were rolling.

And though critics may carp that Danza had to manage only a single 90-minute class, Cohn said teaching provided the actor with the most challenging roles he will ever play: father figure, counselor, coach and role model.

"It's exhausting from the moment you wake up until the moment you go to sleep," Cohn said. "I hope it starts a lot of dinner table conversations around teaching and what a noble profession it is. We need good, passionate educators."

___

Online:

http://www.aetv.com/teach-tony-danza/

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PHILADELPHIA — When former sitcom star Tony Danza began teaching English at a Philadelphia high school, no one really knew what to expect. Not even Tony Danza. Certainly school officials were h...
PHILADELPHIA — When former sitcom star Tony Danza began teaching English at a Philadelphia high school, no one really knew what to expect. Not even Tony Danza. Certainly school officials were h...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
terri autorino
05:36 PM on 10/16/2010
I rest my case.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Amarnath Amarasingam
Book: The Stewart/Colbert Effect: Essays on the Re
06:29 PM on 10/06/2010
This show has some potential to showcase the struggle of teaching to a public that has very little idea of what goes on inside the classroom. Hopefully, it doesn't turn into just another ridiculous show. These kinds of programs change my mind about reality-tv. We'll see what happens.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Americulchie
Unapologetic Liberal
08:38 AM on 10/06/2010
I remember being awestruck reading Tom Sawyer;Mark Twains portrait of the teacher at Toms school hit a chord with me and I was only about ten at the time.It seems to me that if Samuel Johnson were alive today he might say Education is the middling refuge of the scoundrel.
09:18 PM on 10/05/2010
He only had 27 students in his class? And a mentor/coach there? If all teachers could be so lucky to have such great numbers and a support system.
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Christopher Bowen
Author of, Our Kids; Building Relationships in the
06:07 PM on 10/05/2010
I can't wait to see the show. It's an incredibly daunting task, but one I wouldn't trade. The other side to the job is when kids break through, whether it's by choice or by sheer teacher/parent will. But, anytime a kid breaks through academically, I remind myself that not only have I made that child a better reader or writer, but I have also just decreased their chances of drug addiction, crime, domestic abuse, violence, and homelessness. What other job offers you the opportunity to do something that important? With great power comes great responsibility.

Chris Bowen
Author of "Our Kids: Building Relationships in the Classroom"
10:33 AM on 10/05/2010
So from what I read Danza a history major teaches english after being away from school for many years..... I guess from this the teaching thing is overated and is an average job...
09:19 PM on 10/05/2010
No one said they learned anything that year.
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Darwinita
Goddess Divine and certainly an acquired taste...
04:05 PM on 10/06/2010
Nobody said they didn't either.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Darwinita
Goddess Divine and certainly an acquired taste...
04:05 PM on 10/06/2010
I dare you to try it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mr Anonymous
Mumpsimus, I am not entertained!
10:53 PM on 10/04/2010
Dang, obvisouly these kids aren't old enough to know that he's the boss.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
03:30 PM on 10/04/2010
I watched this show. A lot of the assumptions in the posts below are way off base, both pro and con. He does get an easy gig, just one class, but he's not completely uneducated. He got a BA in history so he could become a school teacher. Why they decided to have him teach English is anyone's guess. It's a bit dramatic but the best parts of the show are when he's talking to his mentor. The mentor sits in on all of his classes and critiques him at the end of everyday (another advantage for him). This is where I actually heard some of the best talk about education. I think Danza thought it would be a little more like Dead Poets' Society, but I think a lot of first-year teachers think the same way. The problem is that inspiration without nuts-n-bolts education is pointless. The kids on the show definitely understand and state this.

I went to school with a couple of guys who had Jaime Escalante as a teacher (Stand and Deliver fame). They basically said that the news stories and the movie missed the best part about him. He made them work their a**es off. He made them memorize, memorize, memorize. Inspiration is fine, pithy catch phrases are fine; but at the end of the day kids need to know a lot of boring information if they want to further their education.
09:21 PM on 10/05/2010
Memorization is definitely NOT the best way to educate students. They need to tap into those critical thinking skills, and learn to analyze. This is why we have so few going into math and science...memorization will not get them there.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onionboy
Blessed are the Cheese Makers
10:14 PM on 10/05/2010
Didn't say it's the best. I just said that inspiration is pointless without hard work and in our current educational structure that has to include a lot of memorizing, which I think most of us find the most boring.
01:19 PM on 10/03/2010
A true class act. This guy is the epitome of do good!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheWanderer
Above us only sky
04:11 PM on 10/01/2010
So an immigrant can't be a brain?
12:00 AM on 09/30/2010
Awww, I wanted to enroll in "The Tony Danza School of Acting and Tap Dancing." Hey Tony, driven any Go Karts lately ? But seriously, I'm all for quality "at home" schooling for children.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AmeriGus
Wore On Terror
11:50 PM on 09/29/2010
ONE CLASS? When I read this I knew the whole project is a Hollywood version of real school, a facade propped up by sticks. That means Danza had 6 preps a day? Had to learn 25 names total?

A&E's choice to follow a celeb instead of a real teacher symbolizes America's over-fascination with fame. We would not care about a real teacher's experience because we only sympathize with charismatic stars and these parents all happily signed releases knowing Danza wasn't a degreed professional.

We also hardly realize when "news" site like HuffPo allow pre-written "articles" to be planted into our reading choices. If this wasn't a paid-for promo fashioned by the show's producers, then it should be.

All this said, we do all need to value teachers and be more involved in education, so if we have to bribe Americans with gimmicky reality shows to get them to consider how their kids are learning, it's better than showing some washed up celeb getting into drunken bar fights.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SouthJerseySteve
I am NOT in a Skim Milk Marriage!
05:22 PM on 09/29/2010
Mr. D succeeded for one other reason that nobody in Philly would dare touch -- he didn't have to deal with the (GASP) TEACHER'S UNION! They are one big part of the fall of public education!
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AmigaMan
Your micro-bio will never meet our guidelines.
11:18 AM on 10/04/2010
Look Dimwit...

I'm only going to say this once again.

A teachers' union is there to protect... um... teachers. DUH! They are there to protect their members from being harassed, fired maliciously, etc. They are NOT there to protect children.

Tell me something, Dimwit... Why is it OK for police, firemen, construction workers, garbagemen, nurses, etc. to all have a union? But it is not OK for teachers to have a union? Something is seriously F***ED UP with that line of thinking.
09:22 PM on 10/05/2010
Whatever, SouthJersey. You have no idea what you're talking about.
Giftedroot
A forest from one root.
04:46 PM on 09/29/2010
Someone should make this a permanent reality show that shows a different actor, politician, or media personality each take a turn at being a substitute teacher at shcols chosen by the audience.

The kids would get the chance to be on camara, the public figures would get first hand experience about what teachers face and what is needed in shcools, a few parents could see how their kids act in class, and the public would get a break from "reality TV" that has so little to do with reality.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Amy Rollins
12:12 PM on 10/01/2010
Hooray! BEST idea I've heard all day (it's only noon where I'm at, so there could be more. But I've been in other sections of HP reading some comments....which is why I'm predicting by 10 PM yours will still be the winner).
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AmigaMan
Your micro-bio will never meet our guidelines.
11:20 AM on 10/04/2010
I've worked as a licensed substitute teacher for four years now. I've gained much classroom experience that is going to help me when I do my student teaching phase in one year. I will be graduating as a high school Social Science teacher (history, geography, economics, etc.).

These people would not last a day as a substitute teacher with the utter lack of respect that we get from administration, teachers, parents, and the students themselves.
Giftedroot
A forest from one root.
04:39 PM on 09/29/2010
It seems to me a natural connection to make that actors (good ones) could be good teachers.
Good actors spend their careers studying about people, how to try to connect to them, how to communicate and convey to them whatever it is their role or passion calls for them to translate through their character.
Also, if the actor actually cares about the job at hand, I think they have the natural tools to pull off the job.
Teachers on the other hand, don't act, but they do (the good ones) try to make a connection to their students.