Tony Danza starred on ‘Taxi’ and ‘Who’s the Boss,’ had his own talk show, and  even appeared on Broadway. But in September 2009, the affable Brooklyn native  embarked on an entirely new  career, teaching English to 26 students in tenth grade at  Philadelphia’s Northeast High School, a crowded inner-city school.

First aired as a documentary series called "Teach" in 2010, Danza now tells  the story of his year as an educator in the new book  "I’d Like to  Apologize to Every Teacher I Ever Had." We talked to Danza, 61, about the  hardest job he ever had.

FOX411: Why did you decide to do this?

Tony Danza: It was something I’d been thinking about. I’ve always been  concerned about the state of American education. We drop out almost a million kids a year  and you can’t sustain a great country dropping out that many kids. I’m basically  fearful for our future, I have children and grandkids. And then I got the chance  to do it because I’m a celebrity and it was like the road not taken. I really  wanted to try, and then when I did it, I thought I’d made the biggest mistake of  my life.

FOX411: Why?

TD: It was so much harder than I thought, emotionally grinding. Yes,  it’s grueling, it’s 180 days, you gotta be there every moment and you’ve got to  show them you care. But the emotional tug of war that goes on is just  unbelievable, and then in the midst of that if you feel that the system doesn’t  support you, that you’re job is at risk, then it’s a very, very difficult  situation to be in. And by the way, you ultimately not only have a  responsibility to the kids you have daily, but for their future. They only get  one tenth grade, it’s got to count, and they don’t care. You have to convince  them, I’m getting a sweat just thinking about it.

FOX411: That’s a hard one, trying to convince kids that their education is  important.

TD: The kids are victims of our culture. When I was a kid everything  was about nurturing the kid. There was a family hour, there were regulations  that said we are nurturing our children, and that’s all gone now. Basically  every message they get now is almost antithetical to education. It’s scary, so  the kids have that problem. I have the solution (laughs). Listen to me, I have  the solution!

FOX411: So what is it?

TD: The solution is we can’t want it more for the kids than they want  it for themselves. We have to convince the kids that in spite of the formidable  obstacles that many of them face, and I mean it, one in three kids in New York  City lives in poverty, and if you think poverty’s not an obstacle to education,  you’re crazy. So let’s convince the kids that in spite of those formidable  obstacles, and even if it’s a bad school and you’ve got the worst teacher,  you’ve got to somehow want it, and it’s up to you.

FOX411: How do parental expectations factor in?

TD: I was poor, but I had parents who said, ‘This is important.’ They  expected things of you. You know what you get in a private school? People think you get better  facilities, smaller class size, better teachers, bulls**t. You get parents who  care. I stood in that school, I’m a gosh darn celebrity and one parent  came for parent teachers night. You know what one of the best indicators of  student achievement is? The academic success of the mother. If you have 75  percent single motherhood, you have a problem and that no teacher can solve.

If I’m a teacher and I have to teach the curriculum, which by the way is no  easy thing, I have to teach the curriculum towards the standardized tests  because they’re important for funding and for my job. I’ve got to do all that  and now I have to teach values and character and most importantly self control.  Try teaching a 15-year-old self control if he hasn’t had many lessons in  that.

So we need a campaign, a national campaign, much like the one we used to  convince people that smoking wasn’t good for them, like with mothers against  drunk driving, where we changed the attitude of the nation.

FOX411: What are your views on teachers unions?

TD: There’s wrong on all sides, but if you look at what’s been going  on, the unions have really been trying to work with the administration. I really  think they’re are always going to be abuses on both sides but I’m sorry I’m a  union guy. I think this country is better for unionism. If you track the  downward trend of wages, it’s the exact downward trends of unions.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2012/09/20/qa-tony-danza-recounts-his-year-as-teacher-says-kids-victims-our-culture/?intcmp=trending#ixzz271VVzawI