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Classroom Heroes: Rafe Esquith's Mission To Share Shakespeare With His Students

Rafe Esquith 2

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 10/04/10 09:14 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:55 PM ET

Sir Ian McKellen and the members of England's Royal Shakespeare Company sat in rapt attention inside an inner-city Los Angeles classroom.

They watched as a group of fifth graders showcased their acting abilities and musical talent in a collection of scenes from Shakespeare's works.

Members of the troupe gave a standing ovation and congratulated teacher Rafe Esquith. The performance, they told him, was the "ultimate example of why Shakespeare should be performed."

Despite catapulting to international fame for his work teaching underprivileged children the art of Shakespeare, veteran teacher Rafe Esquith shies away from center stage. He strives to keep the focus on his students. His humility underscores his teaching philosophy, one he endeavors to share with parents and fellow teachers.

Over the last 25 years, Esquith has built a tremendous community around his classroom. Former students and other supporters help Esquith continue to supply exciting learning opportunities for the children who enter his classroom.

When Esquith stepped into Hobart Boulevard Elementary School as a young teacher in 1985, he was shocked by what he found.

At Hobart, 92 percent of the students live in poverty. Of the school's graduates, Esquith says only 30 percent are expected to earn a high school diploma.

"My greatest struggle was the realization that this is supposed to be a land of equal opportunity and it's not," Esquith says. He explains his work is "trying to get kids the opportunities promised to them in the Constitution."

In his first year at Hobart, Esquith quickly found the school day too short for all the things he wanted to accomplish. He decided to start after-school drama classes for his students.

By 1991, the after-school lessons in Esquith's Room 56 had evolved into a true Shakespeare company.

Today, the Hobart Shakespeareans are internationally renowned. Each school year, Esquith's fifth graders organize and rehearse a play to be performed in June.

Esquith has been honored with Disney's American Teacher Award and the National Medal of Arts. He has penned three books about his experiences, including the bestseller "Teach Like Your Hair's On Fire." He's been applauded by everyone from the Dalai Lama to the Queen of England.

Each year, thousands of people flock to his classroom, attempting to find the root of his success.

According to Esquith, the answer is simple: his endurance. "The press gets it wrong, they try to make me this iconic teacher," he explains. "It's not because I'm so brilliant, it's because I stuck with it."

He believes his accomplishments could be replicated by other teachers who are able to hang in there for as long as he has. Twenty-five years after the first meeting of his after-school program, you can still find him inspiring students daily in Room 56.

Since he's been at Hobart for so long, Esquith has built up a community of graduates and supporters. Past students continue to lend a hand, making Room 56 special for future generations.

"I have an army," Esquith jokes.

Matt Parlow, a former student who graduated from Yale Law School, helped Esquith establish the Hobart Shakespearean Foundation. The organization collects donations to advance the classroom's capability to provide amazing experiences for the students, like traveling the country to perform in Shakespeare festivals.

The Song brothers, Berkeley engineering grads both taught by Esquith, set up a website for the Hobart Shakespeareans, providing a way to spread the word about the foundation and solicit online donations.

In Yong Song says he was eager to find a way to use his skills to give back to Esquith's classroom. He and his brother faithfully update the website monthly with the latest news and photos from Esquith's class.

For Song, the lessons he learned from Esquith go beyond Shakespeare. "It's not about teaching kids to be thespians," Song says. He believes it's about teaching team work. "When people come together and work toward a common goal, they can achieve much bigger things."

The annual Shakespeare performances are a testament to this philosophy, as are the academic accomplishments of Esquith's students, who regularly place in the top 10 percent of the nation in test scores.

Esquith's mission is to encourage young teachers to stick with it so they can reach the success he has found.

"I meet lots of great young teachers and they give up too easily," he says. "You're going to have bad days. You're going to have days where you do everything right, and you still have a horrible day, and you go home and you cry. And to make it worse, you put on the latest Hollywood movie about teachers... and that's not you."

He may be applauded for staging complicated plays and raising test scores, but to Esquith, day-to-day persistence is the most crucial and least appreciated quality in a great teacher.

"This is a really hard job," Esquith shares. "This is a long journey. It's a marathon, it's not a sprint."

Supporters can donate online to support the Hobart Shakespeareans.

Selected scenes from the Hobart Shakespeareans' 2010 performance of "The Comedy Of Errors."

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Sir Ian McKellen and the members of England's Royal Shakespeare Company sat in rapt attention inside an inner-city Los Angeles classroom. They watched as a group of fifth graders showcased their acti...
Sir Ian McKellen and the members of England's Royal Shakespeare Company sat in rapt attention inside an inner-city Los Angeles classroom. They watched as a group of fifth graders showcased their acti...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
martigras
09:16 PM on 10/05/2010
Glad to see someone still finds Shakespeare relevant. The morons in charge of our local school district sure don't.
08:56 PM on 10/05/2010
We think our public officials should be in touch with our classroom heros much more often. Who better to inform what our public education policies need to be than those who live with them every, single day--classroom teachers and their students. It's time for education policy to come from and for the classroom--that what The VIVA Project (Vision Idea Voice Action) is all about www.vivausa.vivateachers.org. Classroom teachers from across the country are sharing their ideas with our nation's highest officials. All teachers are welcome to join the conversation now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rtolmach
07:23 PM on 10/05/2010
Know a great teacher? Show your appreciation at http://ThankTheTeachers.org
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hulagirrrl
02:38 PM on 10/05/2010
I love the attention that is given to our education system, it is five minutes before twelve and we all need to get it together. What makes me curious is that now the attention is there, we read about big donations to Charter schools, to this and that, but what about ALL of our schools. I know we here in Hawaii are always left out of the equation when it comes to donations. We have a large homeless population, most millionaires per capita yet our schools are suffering and our children are suffering. We do not have art, just a select few High Schools, not elementary where it matters. I know that for every bad school in my state there are just as many in any other state on the mainland, but what about all of those that are not in Washington DC, or NYC?
02:10 PM on 10/05/2010
Still, the play's the thing,
02:09 PM on 10/05/2010
A wonderful production, clearly. Brought tears to my eyes.
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SGlitz
Independent and Proud of it
researcher
researcher
01:17 PM on 10/05/2010
this is the american way.

dont create a system that benefits all children in america.

create heros of individualism.

you see americans love their individualism.

how is that working out for ya???????

education coming apart at the seams.
wars for corp profits.
50 million without health insurance
corp controlled gov
corp controlled media
corp controlled supreme court
corporations are now persons
money is free speech
open borders for cheap labor
mega profits off the sick and needy
theory taught as fact
soldiers used as pawns for corp wars for profits.
bankrupt nation.
communists own us with their money.

here is the best part a morman "guru" has millions of white evangels hanging on his every word.

yep education sure is working in america with this teacher centered individualist hero approach.

nations are societies. what we do to others we do to ourselves thing. ie karma
01:06 PM on 10/05/2010
This teacher is obviously very talented, and his students are blessed to have him. That being said, the subtle notion that these heroic figures are going to sweep down upon inner-city schools is naive. There is a new documentary that fuels this notion entitled "Waiting for Superman." I can tell you that the wait will be a very long one.

Our system of education will be world class when we don't have to rely on rarefied heroes. When it is designed such that eager, hard working, normal individuals can teach successfully, then we will be able to scale up something great. Until that time, we'll pluck these one in a thousand-type teachers and beg them to save us.
11:31 AM on 10/05/2010
Mr. Esquith has tapped into the one truth of learning that many don't understand, particularily parents. Learning for all of us begins before we are born. The human brain becomes developed enough to recieve input from the ears prior to birth. Part of what is learned is the sound of the mother's voice which leads to the bonding between mother and child.

The birth process opens up a whole new world of information and the child's ability to process that information explodes. What comes out of that experience is the birth of curiosity. At three months old, no child is ready for school but all children are more than ready to learn. It is up to their parents to feed that search, not simply to protect them but to help them understand how to protect themselves.

I don't like the word "teacher" because in the real world it is next to impossible to stuff knowledge into the brain of another. Mr. Esquith understands that and provides the tools for thirsty brains to gain the knowledge they want and need. The fact that his students do as well as they do rests on the fountain of their curiosity that he has tapped in to. This is educating at its finest.

Let me suggest that HP get together a forum of people with the task of laying out a plan to fix this system, and let me further suggest that this forum be open to children, parents and teachers across the country.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
VanessaFas
11:12 AM on 10/05/2010
Brilliant AND modest? What a wonderful teacher, every kid should be so lucky. I had a few teachers that had his passion, but didn't need to understand and overcome the obstacles he did. (I went to private school.)

This is the attitude that fuels children to succeed, to feel ambitious, creative, and alive. If he could teach this to other teachers, I am sure that everyone would benefit. His drive is incredible. Thank God for teachers like him.
04:33 AM on 10/05/2010
From the above:
"He decided to start after-school drama classes for his students."
From "There Are No Shortcuts" by Rafe Esquith:
"Our day began at 8:00 A.M., but some students decided they should come two hours early and begin at 6:00. Many did...They asked if they could start studying on Saturday mornings with me. They spoke of sacrifice."
He is at school at 6:00 A.M., and Mr. Esquith keeps working after his workday is done.
And Saturday mornings, yet.
Is he the kind of person that we are hoping to fill our classrooms? Perhaps we really
are looking for Superman.
"Each year, thousands of people flock to his class room to find the root of his success."
And Mr. Esquith explains: "It's not because I'm so brilliant, it's because I stuck with it."
Well I think that there is something else involved. Empowerment! Some students decided that they should begin at 6:00 A.M. They asked if they could start studying Saturday mornings. First, Mr. Esquith inspired his students, then he listened to them and gave them a chance
to make meaningful choices.
Perhaps, as we go forward in our search for the wisdom to prepare our children for the
decades of great transition that they will inhabit, our path may be enlightened by the work of Mr. Rafe Esquith. Perhaps we, too, will be inspired to bring to our children the benefit
of the greatest resource we have to offer. Our respect.
11:49 AM on 10/05/2010
Kudos, Mr. Rottman! As I said in my comment above, I don't like the term "teacher" because of what it emplies. Why don't we all agree to call them "Empowerors", if that is a word.

At Oxford and Cambridge in the UK if you ask a student what he or she is doing, you will get "I am Reading Astronomy" or whatever. That is a concept that we all would do well to copy from pre-school all the way to PhD's.