New York City public school teacher Sari Beth Rosenberg is a force. This 20-year veteran couples her passion for education with her prowess in advocacy. In addition to teaching U.S. History, Rosenberg serves as a senior advisor for Voters of Tomorrow, hosts the PBS NewsHour Classroom Educator Zoom series, hosts her schoolâs feminist club (The Feminist Eagles), and has joined forces with fellow educators Abbey Clements and Sarah Lerner to found Teachers Unify To End Gun Violence. As if all that werenât enough to keep her busy, Rosenberg is also a passionate advocate for her fellow teachers and her students as well. We caught up with Sari the other night to chat about what itâs like in her dynamic and engaging classroom.
Whatâs your favorite part of teaching?
My favorite part about teaching is providing my students with the skills and content to better understand current events. My favorite feedback from former students is when they tell me they always think of my history class when they pay attention to the news and the current political, economic, and social landscape in America and the world.
If you could change anything about teaching, what would it be?
That people would stop demonizing teachers and blaming them for all of societyâs ills. I would also make it so that people start viewing teachers as the professionals they are, who dedicated themselves to educating young people and equipping them with the tools to become empathetic humans and critical thinkers.
What do you wish people knew about you and/or your students?
I wish people would stop evaluating students and teachers based on standardized test scores. I wish we could create a more inclusive education system that makes every single child excited to learn and not feel alienated from the content. I also wish people knew that young people can handle complexity and we are not doing them any favors by banning books and whitewashing the curriculum.
Whatâs something unique about your classroom or your teaching?
Since 2015, Iâve been an advisor in our intersectional feminist club called the Feminist Eagles. It has helped me get to know my students in ways that do not happen during class. My experiences advising and attending our feminist club for the past 7 years (even online during the pandemic!) have informed my teaching and my view of the world and society. I spend most of the time at the club just listening to students, and it taught me to listen more and at least try to talk less as a teacher in the classroom as well.
Tell us one of your favorite stories from the classroom.
A bunch of my students started calling me by my first name, âSari,â instead of âMissâ or âMs. Rosenberg.â At my school every teacher is either referred to as âMissââ or Ms. + their last name, or âMisterâ or Mr. + their last name. I find it so amusing that they enjoy saying âHi, Sariâ to me in the hallways. Additionally, I have always felt that respect is not earned by names or titles but by relationships. So, it really doesnât bother me that they call me by my first name. I donât need to hide between titles to have an impact on my students.
What are your three âcanât live withoutâ teaching or classroom supplies?
1. The PBS documentary Reconstruction: America After the Civil War because to understand America today, viewing that documentary is crucial (https://www.pbs.org/weta/reconstruction/).
2. A sense of humor and a very thick skin.
3. Not to be sooo cliche but allow me: My morning coffee and my afternoon Celsius energy drink so I can have the energy to run and lift weights after a full day of teaching.
What should I have asked you that I didnât?
What keeps you doing this after 20 years? My answer? My students, of course! And all the people trying to destroy public education. It makes me want to keep teaching and fighting harder because I truly believe that public education is the essential foundation of a strong and equitable nation and the most effective way for us to continue to grow a strong, multiracial democracy.
Learn more about Sari Beth at
or Teachers Unify, and follow her on
or
Supporters of teachers and specifically of Sari can send fan mail, coffee, Celsius, joke books, and moleskin to the address below:
High School for Environmental Studies
c/o Sari Beth Rosenberg
444 West 56th Street
NYC 10019