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	<title>Holt Uncensored - Pat Holt on Books, Book Publishing Industry, Reviews &#187; teachers</title>
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		<title>&#8220;Ms. Cahill for Congress&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://www.holtuncensored.com/hu/i-managed-not-to-hurl/</link>
		<comments>http://www.holtuncensored.com/hu/i-managed-not-to-hurl/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Mar 2009 18:47:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Pat Holt</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barack Obama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[education]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[elections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[newspapers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[political campaigns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[teachers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tierney Cahill]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.holtuncensored.com/hu/?p=303</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A LESSON THAT NEVER ENDS
Well, this is the most upbeat and inspiring story I&#8217;ve heard in a long time.
It came out in joyous original trade paperback last fall but somehow fell through the increasingly narrow slats of our distracted media (see *personal note below). Now there&#8217;s a chance of resurrecting it, but more about that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>A LESSON THAT NEVER ENDS</strong></p>
<p>Well, this is the most upbeat and inspiring story I&#8217;ve heard in a long time.</p>
<p>It came out in joyous original trade paperback last fall but somehow fell through the increasingly narrow slats of our distracted media (see *personal note below). Now there&#8217;s a chance of resurrecting it, but more about that later, too. <a href="http://www.holtuncensored.com/hu/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/this-book-jacket-for-web.jpg"><img class="alignright size-medium wp-image-304" title="this-book-jacket-for-web" src="http://www.holtuncensored.com/hu/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/this-book-jacket-for-web.jpg" alt="" width="187" height="288" /></a></p>
<p>The book is <strong>&#8220;Ms. Cahill for Congress&#8221;</strong> (written with Linden Gross; Ballantine; 246 pages; $14), and here&#8217;s  how it starts:</p>
<p>In 1999, a  gifted teacher named Tierney Cahill was introducing the concept of democracy to her sixth-grade class in Reno, Nevada, when she pointed out that in America, anybody can run for office.</p>
<p>Nobody believed her.  &#8220;You can&#8217;t run for office in this country unless you&#8217;re a millionaire or you know a lot of millionaires,&#8221; one girl said.</p>
<p>Cahill tried again. &#8220;All citizens in our country have the right to run for office,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Would having a million dollars make things easier? I&#8217;m sure it would. But not having the money isn&#8217;t going to prevent someone from being able to run.&#8221;</p>
<p>And the class shot back. &#8220;Well, then, why don&#8217;t you prove it?&#8221; they asked. &#8220;Why don&#8217;t <em>you</em> run for office?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>*A Personal Note</strong></p>
<p>It just kills me that during the presidential election,  Barack Obama stood for exactly what Cahill was telling her students &#8211; that anybody (even &#8220;a mutt like me,&#8221; as Obama half-jokingly to himself) can run for office and be taken seriously. Obama&#8217;s belief that the biggest lessons come to us from the ground up, not the top down, couldn&#8217;t find a better example than &#8220;Cahill for Congress.&#8221;</p>
<p>What stopped the media from seeing this book as a great story during and <em>for</em> the presidential campaign? Well, here is one idea: traditional media are failing because they&#8217;re  addicted to reporting ONE STORY ONLY &#8211; Olympics, Election, Super Bowl, 9/11, Oscars, Bank Disasters, War Hot Spots, or Environment [if fun, like electric cars for everyone]).</p>
<p>And newspapers have dropped to the lowest of the low, following rather than leading TV/radio  news. No wonder three more just failed. What newspapers have forgotten they do best is to give readers a feeling of community through stories all around us that we don&#8217;t know exist.  IF editors would get off their own addiction to the ONE LOCAL STORY (mayor, murders, teams, colleges, events, scandals) and assign some real reporting on long-unseen districts and neighborhoods, neglected arts and offbeat human interest features [plus wouldn't advertisers love to appear in a center spread with a hundred fascinating websites per day called NEWS FROM THE INTERNET], the print version no matter how brief might find a grateful audience returning.  It would be great to see newspapers launch a simple  campaign that shows people <em>enjoying</em> the morning paper with their coffee under a headline like AH, THE LUXURY OF DOTS ALREADY CONNECTED or some fun thing. Of course they have to connect those dots first.</p>
<p><span id="more-303"></span></p>
<p>To make a long and delicious story short, that did it. In this often funny, always instructive and occasionally scalding memoir,  Cahill describes how she not only ran for Congress using her sixth-grade class to manage her campaign, she turned the race into a terrific civics lesson for students and general readers included.</p>
<p>Starting with an empty Folger&#8217;s coffee can (for initial fund-raising), a single phone, grand ideas for buttons (&#8220;we&#8217;re going to have to design stuff?&#8221;) and committees on everything from speechwriting, finance, media, and management, the kids and their teacher initially do everything wrong.</p>
<p>They don&#8217;t order posters from union printshops; they don&#8217;t know how to talk to the media; they approach state bigwigs who become &#8220;annoyed by our little class project,&#8221; and Cahill herself gets nauseated at the thought of speaking outside the classroom. (Her greatest accomplishment:  &#8220;I managed not to hurl&#8221; during her first big speech.)</p>
<p>Just getting the idea  past school authorities and parents in her very Republican district is a huge and intimidating task. Cahill, a Democrat, is already at odds with such Republican milestones as Bush&#8217;s No Child Left Behind program of  &#8220;teaching to test&#8221; rather than &#8220;teaching to learn.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Our vice principal brought us these disgusting practice test booklets and expected us to get the kids to regurgitate the answers, and then test them again and again. Where&#8217;s the growth in that? You&#8217;re simply testing kids to the point where they&#8217;re never going to think for themselves.&#8221; Don&#8217;t get her started on the &#8220;horrid&#8221; trick questions in multiple choice exams that only highlight students&#8217; weaknesses.</p>
<p>Very soon the kids get so organized and streamlined that even reporters, fighting to get on her schedule, tell Cahill, &#8220;That child could work for me!&#8221; Getting her name on the ballot is an arduous but exhilarating effort, and readers get to cheer as well when some of the shy and learning-disabled students reluctantly enter the fray &#8212; and begin to thrive.</p>
<p>The fun of the book lies in Cahill&#8217;s love for teaching as an interactive experience. She tells us that only 20 percent of students learn &#8220;the traditional way&#8221; &#8211; study, get tested &#8211; so teaching is a matter of offering different means of access.  &#8220;I don&#8217;t consider myself a teacher as much as I do a facilitator,&#8221; she writes. &#8220;I guide them along the way by asking questions and demonstrating that it&#8217;s more important to be &#8216;passionately curious,&#8217; as Einstein said about himself, than to have all the answers.&#8221;</p>
<p>She certainly makes us passionately curious about teaching this &#8220;lesson that never ends,&#8221; as one observer puts it,  while still running as a serious candidate. The fact that she&#8217;s not running for dog catcher or councilwoman but for national office means that if if she wins, her family will have to move to Washington D.C., a frightening yet increasingly tantalizing thought.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, though, Cahill, a single mother of three children, is working three jobs (teacher, waitress, realtor)  and still can&#8217;t make ends meet. In fact, she acknowledges how low teachers&#8217; salaries can get by admitting that &#8220;my own children qualified for free and reduced lunches, which meant that we fell below the poverty line.&#8221; <a href="http://www.holtuncensored.com/hu/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/send-to-peter-web-version-of-tierney.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-305" title="send-to-peter-web-version-of-tierney" src="http://www.holtuncensored.com/hu/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/send-to-peter-web-version-of-tierney.jpg" alt="" width="192" height="288" /></a></p>
<p>Despite the fact she often can&#8217;t afford a quart of milk, Cahill becomes a knowledgeable and well-traveled candidate (and soon an excellent speaker), who also makes time for coaching volleyball and high school basketball, working as an eight-grade advisor, acting as the NEA (National Education Association) union rep and running the student store.</p>
<p>But the idea that anyone can throw in her hat and learn to be a good candidate is sorely tested with the book&#8217;s biggest eye-opener -  the dismissive and cruel snub by  the Democratic Party of one of their own.</p>
<p>&#8220;Is this a joke? Do you think this is funny?&#8221; says the executive director when Cahill and her class call the state Democratic office to introduce her candidacy. &#8220;I don&#8217;t appreciate this, and I don&#8217;t think the party is going to appreciate this. Have you talked to the movers and shakers in the North?&#8221;</p>
<p>Happily for readers, the madder Cahill gets, the funnier she becomes.</p>
<p>&#8220;Disgusted, I replied. &#8216;Who are they? Are they listed in the phone book under movers and shakers? You&#8217;re saying I have to ask permission to run for office? I don&#8217;t think so! Last time I checked, that&#8217;s my  right as a citizen&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>Hard to believe, but most of the Democrats she meets try to stop Cahill because she isn&#8217;t &#8220;anointed&#8221; and end up treating her like &#8220;a whack job.&#8221; We can&#8217;t blame her for feeling &#8220;insulted&#8221; and shocked, especially since she grew up loving the Democratic Party so much that she named one of her children Kennedy (after Bobby).</p>
<p>&#8220;I had been told my entire life that the Democrats were the white hats,&#8221; she writes, &#8220;the ones who saved the day, who fought against poverty and civil rights. Now all I could see was them fighting me.&#8221;</p>
<p>Increasingly, &#8220;Cahill for Congress&#8221; campaign materials are routinely lost by Party staffers (&#8220;Oh, we must have forgotten them at the office. Sorry,&#8221; says Shane Piccinini, head of Washoe County Democrats).  Cahill herself is given a dressing down by the East Coast Coordinator for the Gore campaign that is so condescending and snide, we know now why Bush stole the presidency.</p>
<p>&#8220;<em>How many other candidates have they done this to?</em> I wondered&#8230;Suddenly I realized why the Republicans have gained such a foothold. They do a great job with what amounts to farm teams. They bring a lot of their right-wing nut jobs up through the ranks in local government (and) wind up controlling everything&#8230;It made me sick.&#8221;</p>
<p>Since the back cover gives this away, I might as well say that halfway through, the impossible happens: Cahill whom the media is finally celebrating as &#8220;The Teacher [Who] Teaches Us a Lesson&#8221; wins the Democratic primary, and boy, do we cheer along with her students. . And yet except for one remarkable volunteer in Las Vegas, the Democrats still won&#8217;t help her campaign.</p>
<p>Aware of the irony &#8211; that she agreed to this campaign to prove to her students that anybody in America can run for office &#8211; Cahill tells a Democratic Party leader,  &#8220;Assuming  I was a lost cause because I didn&#8217;t have a million dollars to run a campaign is the exact reason so many Americas have become so cynical about our political system.&#8221;</p>
<p>Unexpected lessons emerge as the final election approaches and a whole new class of sixth graders take over (after semester break). I guessed what would happen but never expected the toll it would take on Cahill. It&#8217;s a credit to her candor as an author that she lets us see her isolation and despair, and her fight to regain resilience.</p>
<p>The book is so enlightening and easy to read for adults and young adults alike that I&#8217;m glad there&#8217;s still hope for national coverage. For one thing, <a href="http://www.kepplerspeakers.com/speakers.aspx?name=Tierney+Cahill" target="_blank">a lecture agency</a> has gotten hold of Tierney Cahill and is sending her around the nation to speak to business and political groups as well as to teachers and parents. She&#8217;s such a no-nonsense and unthreatening speaker that books sell out wherever she goes.</p>
<p>Schools are beginning to adopt the book as an easy-to-read primer for teachers and classes who want to pursue their own civic cause. You can find resources for teachers and schedule of Cahill&#8217;s appearances at <span><a href="http://www.mscahillforcongress.com/" target="_blank">http://www.mscahillforcongress.com/</a></span></p>
<p>And movie rights have been sold with Halle Barry to play Ms. Cahill, so you never know.</p>
<p>But I think the reason the book never really surfaced last October is that the media saw &#8220;Ms. Cahill for Congress&#8221; as a fluke.</p>
<p>Now in the Obama era, we can all see it as a promise.  I think I&#8217;m one of many who hopes Tierney Cahill will run again, so I called her in Reno and learned that she&#8217;s &#8220;still happy being a mom and a teacher.&#8221; And after the kids leave home? &#8220;Oh it&#8217;s definitely something I&#8217;ve thought about.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>*A Personal Note</strong></p>
<p>It just kills me that during the presidential election,  Barack Obama stood for exactly what Cahill was telling her students &#8211; that anybody (even &#8220;a mutt like me,&#8221; as Obama half-jokingly to himself) can run for office and be taken seriously. Obama&#8217;s belief that the biggest lessons come to us from the ground up, not the top down, couldn&#8217;t find a better example than &#8220;Cahill for Congress.&#8221;</p>
<p>What stopped the media from seeing this book as a great story during and <em>for</em> the presidential campaign? Well, here is one idea: traditional media are failing because they&#8217;re  addicted to reporting ONE STORY ONLY &#8211; Olympics, Election, Super Bowl, 9/11, Oscars, Bank Disasters, War Hot Spots, or Environment [if fun, like electric cars for everyone]).</p>
<p>And newspapers have dropped to the lowest of the low, following rather than leading TV/radio  news. No wonder three more just failed. What newspapers have forgotten they do best is to give readers a feeling of community through stories all around us that we don&#8217;t know exist.  IF editors would get off their own addiction to the ONE LOCAL STORY (mayor, murders, teams, colleges, events, scandals) and assign some real reporting on long-unseen districts and neighborhoods, neglected arts and offbeat human interest features [plus wouldn't advertisers love to appear in a center spread with a hundred fascinating websites per day called NEWS FROM THE INTERNET], the print version no matter how brief might find a grateful audience returning.  It would be great to see newspapers launch a simple  campaign that shows people <em>enjoying</em> the morning paper with their coffee under a headline like AH, THE LUXURY OF DOTS ALREADY CONNECTED or some fun thing. Of course they have to connect those dots first.</p>
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