What Do I Do Monday? (Innovators in Education) by John C. Holt


What Do I Do Monday? (Innovators in Education)
Title : What Do I Do Monday? (Innovators in Education)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0867093684
ISBN-10 : 9780867093681
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 292
Publication : First published January 1, 1970

Holt . . . makes literally a thousand suggestions for opening windows to blow air from the outside world into the classroom, making it new and making it human.
The Washington Post When teachers listened to Holt's talks, or wrote him letters as hundreds did, invariably they would say something "I understand what you're saying, but what can I do about this in my own classroom? What do I do on Monday?" This book is a rich harvest of possibilities. It is an encouraging book, a book that says "there are so many things we can do. Some will seem easy, some will seem harder; do what feels possible to you, and then try something else."


What Do I Do Monday? (Innovators in Education) Reviews


  • Kimberlee

    Overall Holt is absolutely for the education of children in fresh ways that inspire and reflect a child’s true ability to learn. I loved the different chapters about ways to incorporate math and experiments, very Charlotte Mason’ish.

    I wish he would have left political views out of this book. Even small one liners changed the book for me, I think he trusted his audience would be on the exact page as him in every sense-and for that I’m disappointed.

  • Amber

    I enjoyed this book overall and gained from it what I was looking for -- detailed application ideas for Holt's approach to education. I'm glad this wasn't the first book of Holt's I read, and I probably wouldn't recommend it to others to read first, either. Much of it can get tedious with the detailed descriptions he provides of specific ideas, but the detail is good because it gives an immersive understanding of what exactly Holt envisions, precisely what changes he might make and what approaches he might take in a classroom setting. Many thoughts could be applied at home as well. Throughout the book are also many insightful, thought-provoking statements, which I've come to expect from Holt. I don't agree with everything I read, but there's a lot that's good. I definitely gained a better understanding, and I appreciate Holt's thoughtful consideration of what children really need from parents and teachers.

  • Abby

    I agree with other reviewers--probably wouldn't start here if you're new to Holt. But he's always a thought-provoking read. Here he draws from George Dennison,
    The Lives of Children: The Story of the First Street School, Frances Hawkins, Paul Goodman, and others, arguing for learning as an autonomous enterprise driven by the child.

    His thoughts on high-stakes testing are incisive, so I will quote them here. Keep in mind, this was written fifty years ago:

    Many teachers in California, for example, have complained about all the tests that the state legislature is forcing them to give their pupils. I say, "I agree with you that this is bad. But where did the idea come from in the first place that learning could be measured with numbers? Did a legislator think it up? No, so-called educators developed these ideas, and sold them to the public and their legislators, and if we think this is all a lot of harmful nonsense, it's our duty to do all we can to unsell it."

    In the article, "Why We Need a New Schooling," which I wrote for Look magazine (January 13, 1970), I said that any tests that were not a personal matter between the learner and someone helping him learn, but were given instead to grade and label students for someone else's purposes (employers, colleges, evaluators of schools, administrators, anxious parents, etc.), were illegitimate and harmful. I then said that students should organize to refuse to take such tests, and that teachers should organize to refuse to give them. The students will probably lead the way in this. We may not have long to wait before they begin. When they do, we should give them all the support and cooperation we can. They are not trying to destroy our authority, but to restore it. Only when we stop being judges, graders, labelers, can we begin to be true teachers, educators, helpers of growth and learning.


    He advises teachers to do their best work within the confines of the system but ultimately concludes that the kind of teaching we need may not be possible there:

    Hearing my comparison with doctors, teachers may feel, "Doctors can afford to be braver than we are; they are richer." I don't say that this is not an important difference. But a more important difference is this. A doctor, like a lawyer, is a professional because he can say to his patient, or client, "If you don't like my medicine, or law, you don't have to take it. Go somewhere else." It is because his relation with his patient is based on mutual consent that the doctor can afford to be professional, that is, to say and do what he thinks right. Precisely the opposite is true of us. It is because our relationship with the public, the parents of the children we teach, is not voluntary, not based on mutual consent, that we are not allowed to be professional. Because the parents, whether they like it or not, have to send their children to our classes, because for most of them there is no other option, they are bound to try to make us say and do in those classes whatever they want, whether we like it or not. Only when all parents, not just rich ones, have a truly free choice in education, when they can take their children out of a school they don't like, and have a choice of many others to send them to, or the possibility of starting their own, or of educating their children outside of school altogether—only then will we teachers begin to stop being what most of us still are and if we are honest know we are, which is jailers and babysitters, cops without uniforms, and begin to be professionals, freely exercising an important, valued, and honored skill and art.

    As a public school teacher and union member, I have always been opposed to school choice as a matter of course. (That the twerp Milton Friedman wrote a paper advocating school choice certainly makes me wary.) But Holt's convincing arguments are borne out by my own experience. If you are disillusioned by public education, you should read his work.

    This book is available free online.

  • TimsGlitterBug

    Another great John Holt book, empowering one to see how we can help our children learn, without sending them to school.

  • Channing

    Some good thoughts that I recorded but nothing earth shattering. I got about halfway through it but I kept getting distracted with other books and the 4th time I had to renew it at the library, I just didn't. Maybe I would have gleaned more from it, and therefore enjoyed it enough to finish if I didn't already agree with so many of his ideas.

  • Laura Cheek

    This is a very important book with much to ponder and digest. All of John's books are lovely and full of true respect for children. I have read it several times and it always inspires me.
    This is one of his most accessible books - easy to take in and practical.
    I like all of his books, but this one and, "Instead of Education", are my two favorites.

  • Susie

    contains some good ideas for helping children learn Math and writing.

  • Mark

    Another decent, humane and edifying book from the late John Holt, whose voice is badly needed in today's educational debates.

  • Jill

    Some good useful tips. Dont get distracted by the dated technology. The advice is still good.