<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>So much of what we call creativity is actually the continuing creation of Venn Diagrams...the comparison of two concepts, things or activities that are apparently dissimilar. Flyfishing and teaching at first glance would appear to have little in common, but with a little mental effort, the boundaries become blurred and the similarities reveal themselves.<br>Each new stream I flyfish presents its own challenges and beauty, while every class is unique in its student composition, each class a mini-culture that presents numerous tests of my teaching skills and which simultaneously offers wondrous possibilities for me to see the world anew through my students' eyes.<br>A stream or river might be hundreds of miles long, but the pool I choose to flyfish is its own microcosm, its channels and eddies mysteries for me to uncover. A classroom, though part of a much larger institution, possesses its own micro-environment, a sacred space where, hopefully, truths are unveiled to students for the first time.<br>There is the saying, You can never step into the same stream twice. No two days in teaching are ever the same. The nature of discovery is surprise. Often a trout's sudden splashy rise to a fly will shock a flyfisherperson in the same way that a student's insight or inappropriate action will make a teacher's heartbeat skip. In some classes, each moment for the instructor is a tiptoeing through a minefield. <br>Ten Streams Ten Students presents ten situations which many teachers will recognize and which many non-educators might find surprising. School for many students is a gauntlet of intellectual and emotional challenges. <br>The author has spent a great deal of time on a forested stream so focused on fooling his quarry that the rest of the world dissolves into unawareness, and yet, even in those moments of zen, he is haunted by his students, their successes and his failures. Ten Streams, Ten Students is a description of those hauntings.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>So much of what we call creativity is actually the continuing creation of Venn Diagrams...the comparison of two concepts, things or activities that are apparently dissimilar. Flyfishing and teaching at first glance would appear to have little in common, but with a little mental effort, the boundaries become blurred and the similarities reveal themselves.<br>Each new stream I flyfish presents its own challenges and beauty, while every class is unique in its student composition, each class a mini-culture that presents numerous tests of my teaching skills and which simultaneously offers wondrous possibilities for me to see the world anew through my students' eyes. Flyfishing and teaching are supported by a network of colleagues who mitigate my failures and share in the joys of my successes.<br>A stream or river might be hundreds of miles long, but the pool I choose to flyfish is its own microcosm, its channels and eddies mysteries for me to uncover. A classroom, though part of a much larger institution, possesses its own micro-environment, a sacred space where, hopefully, truths are unveiled to students for the first time.<br>There is the saying, You can never step into the same stream twice. No two days in teaching are ever the same. The nature of discovery is surprise. Often a trout's sudden splashy rise to a fly will shock a flyfisherperson in the same way that a student's insight or inappropriate action will make a teacher's heartbeat skip. In some classes, each moment for the instructor is a tiptoeing through a minefield. <br>Ten Streams Ten Students presents ten situations which many teachers will recognize and which many non-educators might find surprising. As much as we would like to imagine it to be so, American high schools are not predicated on the classroom presented in Little House on the Prairie. School for many students is a gauntlet of intellectual and emotional challenges. <br>The author has spent a great deal of time on a forested stream so focused on fooling his quarry that the rest of the world dissolves into unawareness, and yet, even in those moments of zen, he is haunted by his students, their successes and his failures. Ten Streams, Ten Students is a description of those hauntings.<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Ralph Maltese, a former adjunct professor for integrating technology in the classroom, received a B.S. in education from Villanova University, followed by a master's degree in English from Indiana University. For thirty-eight years, Ralph taught English, as well as numerous electives--from Cinema to Computer Assisted Composition, at Abington High School. Ralph was selected as Pennsylvania's 2002 Teacher of the Year, representing the Commonwealth in national meetings, and in 2003 he was awarded a Fulbright Memorial Scholarship to visit schools in Japan. His school district chose Ralph as the Classrooms for the Future Instructional Coach for the high school, and, later, he served as one of nine Coach Mentors in the state, working with districts and coaches to help teachers rethink the challenges of teaching and learning.<br>Ten Streams Ten Students is based on his experiences both as an educator and as an avid fly fisherman. <br>Ralph is the author A Class Act, a sharing of his classroom experience to help novice teachers survive their first year; 25 Projects for 21st Century Learning, a collection of templates for project based learning;, Mahogany Jim and the Nightcrawlers and Other Tales, a memoir of growing up in the nineteen fifties and sixties; and Murder By Whale, a satire of Scandinavian Noir. Ralph shares his perspectives on a variety of topics in his blog, blog.ralphmaltese.com
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