Teacher Teacher Stories of a Village School

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Teacher Teacher - a Village School Story

Have you read Teacher Teacher? Everyone loves a good school book! From Tom Brown's Schooldays on, we have enjoyed reminiscing about school. If you enjoy books about school you will love Teacher Teacher. Teacher Teacher is written from a village school master perspective and is fun!

Jack Sheffield's Teacher Teacher is a book that hooks you gently then slowly reels you in! This page tells you all about Teacher Teacher, by Jack Sheffield. I recently borrowed a copy and I thoroughly enjoyed it ao I would like to get the word out about Teacher Teacher because I think you might enjoy it too!


If you like Yorkshire, its dialect, its people, its character, then I think you should read this.

If you enjoyed Gervaise Phinns books, then you should read this.

If you attended a village primary school, as I did, then you will enjoy it.

If you would like to know what makes a good teacher or a good school, or simply if you have what it takes to become a teacher, give this book a spin!

If you have taught in Primary or Elementary school - especially in a small community - this book will ring true and evoke your own happy memories and funny stories in its pages.

So, in appreciation of many hours in the grip of its gentle humour, I recommend Teacher, Teacher! to you all!

Please note, this photo of a village school in the North of England is not the school in the book...

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Graduation - Definitely something to sing about. Check out Graduation Sheet Music at Musicnotes.com!

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Schooldays....

Why Jack Sheffield Appeals

What is it about school stories that draws us all in so irresistibly? It used to be that school children read books about schools where children got up to mischief - sometimes those schools were tough, and sometimes they were "la creme de la creme" - but wasn't it the mischief that drew us? The heroes and heroines who were braver, faster, brighter or naughtier than we ever dared to be? The bullies who were so stupid they always got their come-uppance! The teachers who were stricter, or had strange character faults that made us laugh? Whether it was Grange Hill or St Trinians we loved it.

And with what do we replace it? For those of us who are a little older and remember fondly the kind of uneconomic little schools that LEAs and School Districts close it is that element of nostalgia in the Gervaise Phinn and Jack Sheffield tales. For the youngest among us, the school of choice for delightful stories is now Hogwarts - for doesn't Harry Potter have it all? Magic and monsters and all the delights of those old prep school adventures! What a brilliant recipe for young readers of all ages!


Apple iTunes

The Alternative School Logbook

A Year in the Life of Ragley-on-the-Forest Primary School

Teacher, Teacher! The Alternative School Logbook, 1977-1978 is a funny, and yet gripping personal account of Jack Sheffield's day to day experiences as Head Teacher of Ragley-on-the-Forest C of E Primary School near York.

The book is written beautifully, is eminently readable and flows really well from start to finish. It is the kind of book that hooks the reader, then reels you in relentlessly to its end. What more can I say? Anyone who was familiar with village schools or Primary schools in the late 1970s would relate to this book.

Teacher and Cat

For Teachers with Purrrrsonality

Is it the book for you?

Would you enjoy Jack Sheffield or Gervaise Phinn?

If you like books about village life and reminiscences of the past when schools had character and teachers could afford a sense of humour then you will enjoy this book. If you enjoyed Gervaise Phinn you will love it!


It will appeal to anyone who knows and loves Yorkshire life at its most ordinary best and reading it will make you want to see more.

A Fantastic Read!

Teacher Teacher by Jack Sheffield

Teacher, Teacher

Amazon Price: $4.50 (as of 05/28/2012)Buy Now

Check this book out and read the reviews. It is well worth a look!

North Yorkshire Scenes on Zazzle

Scenes from the Whitby coast

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The Village Schoolroom

The Charm of the Village Primary School

I think one reason why I particularly enjoyed this book is that it brought back fond memories of small village schools. I attended many Primary Schools because my father had many postings abroad. One school in Singapore was huge!

The last posting back to England was to a very small village school much like the one in the photo. Classes were mixed, Y1 and 2 in class 1, Y3 and 4 in class 2, and Y5 and 6 in the "Scholarship Class" with the elderly Headmistress.

Activities were old-fashioned but as children we felt very safe and secure. Every day had a routine and the older children were buddies to the younger ones. What it lacked in imagination, it made up for in tradition.

An Extract from the Book....

Stan Coe encounters Elvis in the Gents washroom....

S
tan Coe mouthed a silent scream as he stared terrified in to the eyeless sockets of the skeleton's grinning skull.

"Who's that?" said Miss Twigg in amazement.
"It's Elvis," said Sue.
"No, I meant him," said Erica, pointing to a gibbering and very white faced Stan Coe.
Jo Maddisson grinned from ear to ear as I shambled forward to lift the skeleton from the terrified farmer. She turned to the wide eyed Erica Twigg.
"Erica, allow me to introduce you to our Vice-Chairman of Governors, Mr Stanley Coe," said Jo in her best toastmaster voice. Then she added in a stage whisper, "He's got nerves of steel!"

Books by Jack Sheffield

Series of books by Jack Sheffield

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More about Village Headmaster, Jack Sheffield

Jack Sheffield has his own website of course, and in finding that I came across one or two links that could help you get into the character of Teacher Teacher and read the book for yourself.


Map of Ragley on the Forest

Here you can see a map of the village which will help you identify places in the stories.


Ragley Characters

Jack Sheffield writes realistically and endearingly about local characters in his book. Here are some of the characters he brings to life in Teacher Teacher.

Ragley Village Street

The photo here could be taken in virtually any part of the rural North. It sets the scene....


Jack Sheffield's Home page

Jack Sheffield author of Dear Teacher, Village Teacher, Teacher, Teacher, Mister Teacher, Dear Teacher, Ragley Village, Ragley on the Forest, Yorkshire Author.... and so goes the description.... Perhaps visiting his own website will stir an interest in the author and the man himself.

Yorkshire Memorabilia

James Herriott's Yorkshire

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Jack Sheffield

A brief word about the author

Jack Sheffield was Senior Lecturer in primary education at Bretton Hall, near Wakefield. He was born in Leeds in 1945 and had a working class background.


He worked on building sites as a "pitch boy" (carrying boiling tar up ladders in buckets to mend roofs) before completing teacher training at St John's College in York. He worked in Keighley as a teacher and played rugby for Wharfedale RUFC before becoming a Head Teacher in a rural Yorkshire School....

Character, Dialect and Humour

Jack Sheffield, Heathcliffe and Ruby...

T
eacher, Teacher! is wonderful in its portrayal of Yorkshire character and grit and of course dialect, some of it of the colourful variety. Through its pages we meet many intriguing characters and learn to love them all:

Heathcliffe and Terry, the little boys who teach the school to swear, Ruby the larger than life caretaker cleaning happily as she sings Edelweiss, her diminutive husband Ronnie and Genghis Khan the pigeon, Miss Barrington-Huntley and her ill-fated hat, the beautiful advisory teacher Beth Henderson, the pompous and obstructive Vice-Chairman of Governors, Stan Coe, Vera the secretary and organiser, Elvis the skeleton, Sue Phillips, the cheerful nurse, Erica Twigg the student teacher, Ping the Vietnamese refugee who becomes best reader and poet in the school, Deke Ramsbottom, the singing cowboy.... Characters are sketched to be appealing even at their worst, and certainly loveable at best!

"A Plus" Teacher

Top of the Form!

More About Jack Sheffield

What is being said about Yorkshire author Jack Sheffield? Keep up to date with new books and new comments here!
New Canaan Baseball and Softball Results
Exeter area news briefs
New Canaan Baseball/Softball Report

Books by Gervaise Phinn

If you have not read Gervaise Phinn books, but enjoyed Teacher, Teacher! you might like to read these....
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Teacher, Teacher!

A good read?

If you have read the book, then please let us know what you thought. If you enjoyed the lens and feel you might like to read the book, let us know. Also if you have any other good books of a similar nature please tell us about them!

  • LizMac60 Jun 28, 2011 @ 7:35 am | delete
    this looks like a great book to read. Thanks for sharing it with us.

Then there is Mister Teacher....

Have you read this one?

It's 1978, and Jack Sheffield chronicles his second year as headmaster of Ragley-on-the-Forest Primary School in North Yorkshire. Three letters arrive on his desk - one makes him smile, one makes him sad and one is from nine-year-old Sebastian in the local hospital who is suffering from leukaemia. He writes a heartbreaking letter addressed to 'Mister Teacher'which eventually changes his life for ever. New characters include Dorothy the coffee shop assistant who wants to be Wonderwoman and the lovely Beth's sister Laura. The alternative logbook chronicles a year in Yorkshire life and the every day running of the school.

10 of the Best School Stories

Stories from real life

Ten of the Best

Amazon Price: $27.71 (as of 05/28/2012)Buy Now

Yorkshire....

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More Lenses with a Yorkshire connection

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Visit historic York

and the beautiful scenery of the Yorkshire Dales....

Why not see first hand the historic city and the wild and beautiful scenery that gave birth to the character of Yorkshire folk and inspires their fierce love and loyalty?

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Did You Enjoy Teacher Teacher?

Please sign our guestbook before you leave the school! ;)
Thank you!

  • RetroMom Jun 25, 2011 @ 9:33 am | delete
    I have not read it but what a great lens about important people... Teachers!
  • Serenia Feb 23, 2011 @ 8:46 pm | delete
    I havent read any of these books but I must try and find them at the library. Winderful Lens. Thank you for introducing me to a new author. Blessed by an Angel.

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I am a musician, educator and writer. I like to smile, so I keep my lenses light hearted when I can. When I am not at work as a full-time employed... more »

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Teacher Teacher by Jack Sheffield 

The book that started it all

Teacher, Teacher

Amazon Price: $4.50 (as of 05/28/2012)Buy Now

If you read through the lens you will know how much I enjoyed this book. I think you would too!

Goodbye, Mr Chips 

Classic movie about a special teacher

Goodbye, Mr. Chips

Amazon Price: $28.79 (as of 05/28/2012)Buy Now

I have seen this old movie so many times and it never fails to bring a tear to my eyes. We all know of teachers who have a special place in our hearts and Robert Donat takes us back to that special place.

"One more terrific film from a terrific year for movies--1939, the year of Gone with the Wind, The Wizard of Oz, and Stagecoach, among others--Sam Wood's Goodbye Mr. Chips is a deeply stirring work starring Robert Donat as the old schoolmaster who looks back upon his life. Told mostly in flashbacks, the film wraps itself around a history of an older England as seen through the generations of boys who pass through Mr. Chips's classroom. Greer Garson is her usual classy, sexy-intelligent self as Donat's wife, their earlier courtship one of the film's highlights. Get out the Kleenex for this one." --Tom Keogh

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark 

A great film about another influential teacher

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

Amazon Price: $7.15 (as of 05/27/2012)Buy Now

A great film!

"Maggie Smith is so witty and commanding in this film, you might forget that the script paints Jean Brodie as an ultimately self-deluding spinster. Dame Maggie won the first of her two Oscars for playing a teacher in 1930s Edinburgh more in thrall to her romantic notions of art and beauty than the real world, a cultivator of worshipping "Brodie Girls." (She exalts the Mona Lisa and Mussolini with equal fervor.) Smith's expert playing makes many of the brogue-heavy Brodie-isms worth memorizing ("She seeks to intimidate me by the use of quarter-hours.") and raises the picture above its generally theatrical style. Real-life husband Robert Stephens plays Jean's married lover, Celia Johnson excels as the hostile headmistress, and Pamela Franklin is the deadpan whistle-blower within Miss Brodie's coven. The dippy music of Rod McKuen helps mark the movie as more of a reflection of the '60s than the '30s." --Robert Horton