The process of becoming an urban teacher is multi-layered and complex, filled with intense struggles and success in small doses. Despite expensive reform efforts, political cries for accountability and standardized testing, and periodic shifts in school control, urban students and teachers are still—in large numbers—experiencing failure and defeat. Many new teachers in urban schools are not from urban backgrounds. They must learn about school and community culture, as well as gain an understanding of their own notions of school in order to bridge the cultural and social distance that separates them from the urban school community. Concurrently, they enter teacher preparation to acquire expertise in technical aspects of teaching and are chal...