The Bottom Line Defying Low Expectations
William A. Dembski and Alex Thomas released a new book, Defying Low Expectations: What Jaime Escalante Taught Us About Learning.
The authors describe the book as follows:
Jaime Escalante didn’t just teach calculus in East LA; he blew up the lie that poor, minority students can’t handle serious academics—and then watched the system quietly bury the evidence. Defying Low Expectations tells the story beyond Stand and Deliver, the 1988 film about Escalante starring Edward James Olmos that became a classroom staple. Here we learn about the immigrant teacher from Bolivia, the maverick principal Henry Gradillas who cleared a path for him, and the forces that dismantled their success once it became too threatening to the status quo. Drawing on fresh interviews, lost online material, and hard data about today’s failing schools, Dembski and Thomas show how Escalante created an ecosystem where students did the hard thing—and won big. This isn’t nostalgia. It’s a blueprint for rescuing American education. Escalante’s example exposes low expectations as educational malpractice and shows how disciplined teaching, principled leadership, and moral courage can turn “throwaway” American schools into powerhouses of learning.
Upon review of the book, Discovery Institute Senior Fellow and American Center for Transforming Education Director Keri D. Ingraham, remarked:
Defying Low Expectations turns one teacher’s triumph into a roadmap for revitalizing education in America. Dembski and Thomas masterfully make a compelling case for the transforming power of high expectations.
Keri D. Ingraham

The book is available for purchase at Amazon.
Dembski is a Founding and Senior Fellow with Discovery Institute’s Center for Science and Culture and a Distinguished Fellow with the Institute’s Walter Bradley Center for Natural and Artificial Intelligence.


