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Collage of book covers recommended to new teachers
Covers courtesy of publishers
New Teachers

14 Essential Reads for New Teachers

We asked educators in our community to share the most important books they鈥檇 recommend to the next generation of teachers. Here are their top picks.

February 2, 2024

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When math lecturer Howie Hua is working with his students鈥攆uture elementary school teachers鈥攈e often talks about the power of giving yourself grace.

鈥淚s it kind of ridiculous to be asked to get it right on the first try?鈥 he asks. 鈥淲hatever it is, you鈥檙e going to need patience with your learning. You don鈥檛 give up. You don鈥檛 say, 鈥榃ell, I fell trying this new skill, so I guess I鈥檓 not meant to do gymnastics.鈥 It鈥檚 important to help students embrace that and embrace the learning journey.鈥

This is also true for educators鈥攅specially new teachers. The early years in every teacher鈥檚 career are peppered with firsts鈥攆rom navigating classroom management hurdles to establishing routines and procedures that work for a room filled with students of varying backgrounds and identities. New teachers often feel a strong desire to be flawless, to walk into the classroom and do all things perfectly. But it鈥檚 OK to make a misstep, to fall and pick yourself up again, because it鈥檚 all part of the process of working toward getting it right. Generations of educators have walked that same path鈥攁nd many have documented their experiences of exactly what worked and what didn鈥檛.

We asked our community to share the books they would recommend as most important to new teachers鈥攖he books that helped guide them, shape their pedagogy, challenge their perspectives, and motivate them. Over 100 titles were suggested鈥攊ncluding some that surprised and delighted us, like educator Lily Crull鈥檚 comment on Instagram that she reads 鈥渁t least 5鈥6 new鈥 young adult books that her students recommend each year. Classics like Harry and Rosemary Wong鈥檚 bestseller The First Days of School made an appearance, while some more recently published titles were heavily nominated as well: Bettina Love鈥檚 2023 offering Punished for Dreaming easily made it into our final list.

These 14 titles represent the topics that resonated most deeply with our audience. There鈥檚 no need to read all of them in the span of a year鈥攎uch less before you ever set foot in the classroom. Consult them throughout your teaching journey as you grow into your role.

by Zaretta Hammond
You won鈥檛 find a list of tips and tricks within this book. Hammond probes at the very nature of the term culturally responsive teaching: interrogating what it means philosophically, dissecting its nuances, and examining the impact of this work on students鈥 brains. Designed to prompt self-reflection and action, Culturally Responsive Teaching and the Brain empowers educators in diverse classrooms to begin intentionally bolstering engagement and fostering deeper learning in a way that honors students and their identities.

by Harry and Rosemary Wong
Almost 30 years after its publication, this teacher-focused how-to manual currently in its fifth edition remains a 鈥渕ust-read,鈥 according to our audience. Though much has changed in the school system since then, the book鈥檚 insights on evidence-based practices of high-functioning classrooms and the importance of establishing procedures and routines stand the test of time. that the authors鈥 approach to classroom management may 鈥渟tifle spontaneity in classrooms and lead teachers to become overly controlling,鈥 so consider taking the sections that don鈥檛 resonate with you with a grain of salt.

by Gholdy Muhammad
Steeped in the historical context of 19th-century Black literary societies, Muhammad鈥檚 Cultivating Genius presents a piercing exploration of current literacy practices and pedagogy. The book鈥檚 backbone is her equity framework, "Historically Responsive Literacy,鈥 which focuses on four 鈥渓earning pursuits鈥: criticality and students鈥 intellectual, skill, and identity development. These learning pursuits, when taught in tandem, she writes, create the foundation of an ecosystem where students from all backgrounds鈥攅specially those that have been historically marginalized鈥攃an thrive and achieve academic success. The book鈥檚 aim is to foster a smarter, more self-aware, and more discerning next generation of young readers and thinkers.

by Joe Feldman
Grading isn鈥檛 always a topic of discussion in teacher preparation programs, Feldman writes, leaving many new teachers with little insight on how to set up an equitable system for their students. Grading for Equity offers an implementation road map toward ensuring accuracy, preventing bias and subjectivity, and presenting a dynamic picture of academic performance鈥攁ll plotted by a 20-year veteran teacher, principal, and district administrator. The recently published second edition zooms in on the impacts grading can have on students鈥 mental health, as well as the role the Covid-19 pandemic played in changing perceptions around traditional grading.

by Peter Liljedahl
Can you tell if your students are actually thinking or just taking notes and mimicking what they see? With the help of over 400 K鈥12 teachers, Liljedahl鈥攁 professor of mathematics education鈥攕pent more than a decade pinpointing the qualities of a high-functioning math classroom. It all comes down to 14 key variables, including where students work, how groups are formed, the quality of assessments, and the types of tasks used and how they are given to students. As one reviewer put it, this book doesn鈥檛 simply identify common problems in math classrooms but provides intentional, actionable takeaways and next steps.

by Responsive Classroom
The First Six Weeks of School is a blueprint for those crucial initial days in the K鈥6 school year鈥攊t鈥檚 like having a seasoned mentor teacher in your back pocket. Alongside sample schedules, each chapter encompasses a week鈥檚 worth of time-specific suggestions like how to set up the flow of the day and how to create and maintain high expectations for behavior. From welcoming a new student to setting up a substitute teacher for success, this book shows teachers how to handle each new scenario with ease.

by Bettina Love
A searing and unflinching examination of over four decades鈥 worth of prejudice and racism in education reform, as well as its disastrous legacy for generations of Black and Brown children. Love interviewed 25 Black Americans whose lives were forever changed by policies that spanned from Ronald Reagan鈥檚 presidency to the Obama administration, and the book seamlessly traces the impact of those policies into the present day. Ultimately, Love asks鈥攁nd answers鈥攖he questions: What price did these people pay? And how can we prevent children from suffering the same fate in the future?

by Doug Lemov
The third edition of Lemov鈥檚 Teach Like a Champion is an 鈥渆xpanded and up-to-date revision鈥 of his original comprehensive overview of more than 60 teaching techniques that set students up for success. Lemov walks teachers through the right ways to phrase and ask questions, how to check for understanding, the best ways to motivate and encourage active participation, how to ensure that students retain material, and more. Readers particularly enjoy the over 100 accompanying videos found online, which showcase actual teachers implementing Lemov鈥檚 strategies in their classrooms.

by Natalie Wexler
Education journalist Wexler embarks on a thoughtful and thorough trek through history and research, arriving at an in-depth critique of skills-based literacy curricula. With an eye toward equity, she urges schools to reconsider the ways they teach elementary students of diverse backgrounds to read鈥攁nd she shares accounts from classrooms where educators are doing just that. Wexler characterizes this book as a criticism not of teachers but of a system that has become strikingly resistant to change.

by bell hooks
In this collection of essays on the intersections between education and politics, race, class, and gender, hooks takes ample inspiration from Brazilian educator and philosopher Paulo Freire, whose seminal text also made this list. Rethink the role of the student and teacher, hooks says, by engaging in the deeply vulnerable work of self-reflection and scrutiny. And hooks does this herself, recounting memories of her identity as both student and teacher. One reviewer on Goodreads explains that this isn鈥檛 the sort of book you read once and put back on your shelf鈥攊nstead it reveals itself to you in layers each time you revisit it.

by Kelly Gallagher
鈥淩eadicide,鈥 which Kelly Gallagher defines as 鈥渢he systematic killing of the love of reading,鈥 is the unintentional outcome of many common teaching strategies. If you want your students to read more and actually enjoy doing so, he suggests taking a good hard look at the practices you employ in your classroom. Are you asking students to read challenging texts without instructional support? Is there space in your classroom for recreational reading, or are only academic texts prioritized? Gallagher provides practical ways to make reading enjoyable for students.

by Paulo Freire
The educational landscape of today is very unlike the one Freire spoke about back in 1968 when this was originally published, but the need for a critical look at our pedagogical systems remains as salient now as it was then. Perspectives on knowledge, access, education reform, and class are heavily colored by Freire鈥檚 experiences with poverty in Brazil, as well as his work with marginalized communities鈥攎any of whose members could not read. Freire speaks neither of a 鈥渟age on the stage鈥 nor a 鈥済uide on the side鈥 model, instead articulating one where teachers view themselves as active participants in learning from their students and view their students as sharers of valuable insights to teach.

by Penny Kittle
Reluctant readers are an unfortunate reality of any English classroom, no matter the age or grade. So what to do when students simply won鈥檛 engage with assigned texts, or even pick up a book for fun? Kittle鈥攁 seasoned teacher and literacy coach鈥攕hares a mixture of inspirational and personal anecdotes balanced with clear and concise strategies to help start students on their personal reading journey. Whether you鈥檙e trying to build an engaging classroom library or revamping your instructional efforts to better support struggling readers, Book Love will breathe new life into your practice.

The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher鈥檚 Life by Parker Palmer
As you develop your unique teacher identity鈥攚ho you are and how that relates to being an educator鈥擯almer walks the same philosophical path. Reflecting on his own time teaching, Palmer doesn鈥檛 focus just on the motivational 鈥渉eart鈥 side of the work; he also explores ways to safeguard against burnout, demonstrates the importance of fostering connections with students, and explains why 鈥済ood teaching cannot be reduced to technique alone.鈥 The advice may be, as some reviewers on Goodreads claim, abstract rather than immediately actionable, but it could be a dose of encouragement just when you need it.

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