Synopses & Reviews
One heroic schoolteacher has saved hundreds of lives with unconditional love and zero tolerance for rule-breakers.
His students are the worst of the worstdrug addicts, gang members, and violent criminal offenders. They have flunked out or been thrown out of every other school theyve attended. They may be the children of addicts, of abusers, or even of good parents, but they have one thing in common: they have been rejected by everyone except Paul White. With ten simple rules, he has helped hundreds of kids turn their lives around.
“I cant remember when Ive been this happy. Since I came here Im getting right with my family and friends, Im off the drugs and staying out of trouble. Im doing really well in school and Ive got a job.”
Kathy, fifteen, West Valley student, former crystal meth user
“He never gives up on you.”
Roger, seventeen
Among students, theyre the worst of the worst: chronic truants, drunks, drug addicts, even violent criminals. Some havent been to school for months, even years. Some have spent a year or more locked up for gang-related offenses and felony assaults. All of them, it seems, are on the short list of lifes early losers.
Enter Paul White, the teacher whose combination of unconditional love and unbreakable rules has changed, and sometimes saved, the lives of the most troubled students in Detroit, the San Francisco Bay Area, and Los Angeles. When they walk through the door of his one-room high school, the West Valley Leadership Academy in Canoga Park, California, White treats them like his own children: loving them, protecting them, and requiring them to become men and women of moral courage, integrity, and high achievement.
Sometimes it only takes one person to turn the tide. During his twenty-five-year career as a teacher, Paul White has saved hundreds of students from falling through the cracks. Veritable miracles have taken place in his classroom:
?The reading skills of a fourteen-year-old recovering crystal meth addict climbed from a seventh- to a tenth-grade level in six months. She finished high school at age sixteen and went on to complete a nursing program.
A fifteen-year-old girl was flunking out of schooland so violent that the safety of the people around her couldnt be guaranteed. After joining Pauls class, she not only brought her grades up enough to graduate from high school at sixteen, but has gone on to finish several semesters at a local community college.
A seventeen-year-old boy who had been a neo-Nazi asked a Holocaust survivor to forgive him for his disrespectful behavior.
Whites Rules is a lesson to parents and educators who cant control their kids or their classrooms. For Americans who truly want to stop the violence, end the apathy, and improve academic performance, White poses a challenge: Try his rules. The ten-rule list that he developed covers everything from character values to schoolwork, from getting off drugs to learning personal finance skills. By enforcing these rules, parents and educators can attack both the causes and the effects of the crisis in our schools. This is the moving story of how the program evolved and what we can all do to save our youth, one kid at a time.
Synopsis
White’s Rules introduces us to a veteran teacher whose unconventional methods are making a big difference in the lives of at-risk youth. Out of White’s twenty-five years of experience came the West Valley Leadership Academy, a one-room public school where drug addicts, gang members, chronic offenders, and the hopelessly lost are given a real chance by a teacher who believes in them wholeheartedly, who doesn’t judge them on their past, and whom they can call 24/7. In return, they are required to follow a dress code, volunteer for drug testing, attend college or vocational classes, and hold after-school jobs. White’s school boasts an 80 percent graduation rate. What sets WVLA apart is White’s strategy: a combination of stiff discipline, unconditional love, and a rock-solid foundation of moral values. This is no saccharine tale of thugs suddenly turning Ivy League. The power of
White’s Rules lies in real challenges: helping a nineth-grader choose reading over crystal meth or convincing a gangbanger to meet the world with unclenched fists and an open heart.
Part narrative nonfiction, part sociological examination of our school system, and part prescriptive guide to raising and educating our kids, White's Rules is for anyone who has an uneasy feeling that—rising test scores notwithstanding—something is seriously and dangerously lacking in the souls of our children, and that void must be addressed by both schools and parents before it's too late.
About the Author
Paul White walked away from a college basketball scholarship to find a career that let him give back to the world. The first student he turned around is a college graduate and a successful business owner.
Ron Arias is a former senior writer for People magazine and the author of The Road to
Tamazunchale (nominated for the National Book Award), Five Against the Sea, and other
books.