Kid Quixotes A group of students, their teacher, and the one-room school where everything is possible

Stephen Haff, 1965-

Book - 2020

Still Waters in a Storm is an after-school program held in a small room in Bushwick, Brooklyn; it is a place for kids to practice reading and writing in English, Spanish, and Latin. For the students, many living in constant fear of deportation, Still Waters is a refuge. For Stephen Haff, a former public-school teacher, it is the sanctuary he built following a breakdown caused by bipolar depression. At Still Waters, all agreed that there would only be one rule: "Everyone listens to everyone."

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York, New York : HarperOne [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Stephen Haff, 1965- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
287 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062934062
  • The rescuing song
  • The friendship song, or the adventurous adventure song
  • Ruler of myself
  • The song of basic needs
  • El show.
Review by Booklist Review

This is an introduction to an amazing bunch of kids, written by their dedicated teacher, champion, director, choreographer, model, and life coach (although he would probably disavow most of those titles). Former New York Public School teacher Haff offers his own test-free, all-inclusive, completely voluntary after-school program, Still Waters in a Storm, in Brooklyn's Bushwick neighborhood. The group is currently in the middle of an anticipated five-year task of reading Don Quixote de la Mancha in the original Spanish. Through thoughtful and careful analysis, Haff and his charges (some as young as seven) are absorbing Miguel de Cervantes' story of hope, and writing and performing interpretive, bilingual skits and songs for outside audiences. Telling their story in real time, Haff documents his students' progress, creates insightful personal profiles, unflinchingly reflects back on his previous experiences, and weaves in the realities his students and their families face: deportation, discrimination, poverty, drugs, and violence. In turns inspirational, funny, poignant, and enlightening, this will give readers an enjoyable opportunity to watch these young minds at work.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this poignant and politically minded debut, educator and theater director Haff explains the pedagogy behind Still Waters in the Storm, the after-school program he founded in Bushwick, Brooklyn, in 2008, and dramatizes his students' efforts to translate Miguel Cervantes's Don Quixote from 400-year-old Spanish into modern English and stage a bilingual musical adaptation. After resigning his public school teaching job and entering treatment for bipolar depression, Haff started Still Waters as a way to keep in touch with former students. The curriculum evolved from basic homework help to literature discussion groups, Latin instruction, mentoring, and weekly author workshops. "Everything we do," Haff writes, "is based on the same ritual of reading a text, discussing it together, writing a response, and taking turns reading our responses to the group." He interweaves the story of his mental breakdown and recovery with criticisms of the New York City public school system, along with accounts of his students analyzing Cervantes's antiquated language and developing scripts and songs connecting the plot to their own experiences as the children of undocumented immigrants living under the threat of arrest and deportation. Haff eloquently traces the journey one student makes "from shy to brave," and makes a convincing case for the power of "mutual attention and cooperation" in the classroom. Educators, immigration activists, and school reformers will find inspiration in this frequently lyrical account. (Apr.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Still Waters in a Storm, a one-room schoolhouse in Bushwick, Brooklyn, serving Spanish-speaking immigrant children, was a safe space--both for the students who went there after school and for its founder, Haff, a teacher battling bipolar depression. Under Haff's guidance, the students, who ranged in age from five to 17, embarked on a five-year project to translate Miguel de Cervantes's Don Quixote into English and turn it into a musical. Since their language and written skills differed, they had to listen to one another carefully and work together, adopting a version of what psychologist Lev Vygotsky called "scaffolding," or collaborative learning. Despite the threat of ICE agents and deportation, the students persevered, performing their work throughout New York. Haff structures his stirring, poignant narrative much like Don Quixote, incorporating poems, songs, and dialogue; inserting stories within stories; and illustrating that even seemingly disparate tales are connected. VERDICT This is an inspiring account that reminds us that with trust and empathy, there's no limit to what students and teachers can accomplish together.--Jacqueline Snider, Toronto

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The story of an after-school program that helps immigrant children adjust to their new American life.What does reading and translating Don Quixote, published in the early 17th century, have to do with modern-day life for immigrant children in Bushwick, Brooklyn? Quite a lot, according to Haff, a theater director and former high school English teacher, who set up Still Waters in a Storm for children of undocumented immigrants. As he writes, the author chose Cervantes' work because "that book is everything humanit is funny and tragic and beautiful and disgusting and smart and stupidand because it was written in Spanish, the native language of my students and their families." By reading the quirky tale of a man who never gave up his dreams, Haff's students have found new meaning in their own lives despite the constant fear of deportation amid the current toxic landscape surrounding immigration, an atmosphere inflamed by the current presidential administration. Not only did the students read the book and translate it out loud; they also adapted it into a series of musicals that they wrote. They became Kid Quixotes, acting out their own versions of the story, which they performed in multiple venues. Haff also includes his own story of being an educator suffering from bipolar depression and how this project has positively impacted his life as well. This is a decidedly upbeat book full of compassion and an attentiveness to language, and Haff imparts pertinent lessons regarding truth, hope, thoughtfulness, awareness, friendships, and what it means to be genuine. The narrative also carries the weight of what each child must endure as an immigrant, including racism, distrust, and fear, and shows how they have worked to overcome these obstacles via songs, acting, drawings, and imaginative retellings of their lives.A kindhearted, engaging story of helping modern immigrant children via a 400-year-old classic text. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.