Gregory Hodge Explained

Gregory M. Hodge was the principal for over a decade at The Frederick Douglass Academy (FDA) in Harlem, where he was noted for his tough love, "No Excuses" approach.[1]

Early life

Hodge was raised in Harlem and the Bronx. Orphaned by the age of 16, he recounts to his students a life of homelessness that puts him on a par with their own experiences of poverty.[1] After a counselor "forced" him not to leave school, he earned two Master's degrees and a doctorate.[2]

Career

Hodge spent 31 years as a New York City school teacher, culminating in his 14-year tenure at FDA that began in 1995 when he replaced the founding principal, Lorraine Monroe.[1] He retired from FDA and teaching in general in July 2011.[1]

Hodge is noted for his tough love, "No Excuses" approach to education,[3] enforcing strict discipline within his school of mostly lower-income students.[1] He advocated personal attention to the students and personal responsibility: he greeted each student at the door every day[4] [5] and frequently spent nights on the couch in his office.[6] He said: "We do everything we can to help, but we place the burden on them to get the job done."[7] When he became principal at FDA in 1995, the student body was 80% female; he recruited boys to equalize the sexes but achievement did not decline.[8]

Death

Dr. Hodge died on February 16, 2019, at the age of 65.[9]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Evans. Heidi. School's out for Frederick Douglass principal Gregory Hodge: Tough-love head retiring after 31 years. New York Daily News. July 14, 2011.
  2. News: Fix . Sybil . A beacon of hope . The Post and Courier . November 26, 2000 . 20A.
  3. News: Holland . Robert . How to build a better teacher . . September 1, 2001 ., online at Highbeam
  4. News: Schools that beat the odds . 25A . . November 26, 2000 . Fix . Sybil.
  5. News: Williams . Monte . A Model for Learning In a Harlem School; Tough Standards and High Scores . . January 2, 2001 .
  6. News: Billups . Andrea . Academy in Harlem enforces strict rules . . March 27, 2000.
  7. Book: No Excuses: Closing the Racial Gap in Learning . Thernstrom . Abigail M. . Thernstrom . Stephan . New York . Simon & Schuster . 2003 . 9780743204460 . 74.
  8. Book: Berg, Barbara J. . Sexism in America: Alive, Well, and Ruining our Future . Chicago . Lawrence Hill . 2009 . 9781556527760 . registration . Gregory Hodge, Douglass. . 178.
  9. Web site: CSA News . 24 October 2023 . 9 . 24 October 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20231024144424/https://www.csa-nyc.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/JUNE-2019-CSA-News-FINAL.pdf . bot: unknown .