Documentary: Waiting For Superman

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In the documentary directed by Davis Guggenheim, "Waiting for Superman" follows the United States educational system and how public schools have declined. The film follows five specific individuals who are experiencing the struggles and problems of education. These five kids and their families prove how hard the educational system is and how it affects them. One specific topic of the film that stood out to me was the idea of tenure. How a teacher, no matter how poorly their teaching methods are will still have a guarantee of a job. What tenure is the act or length of time that something is held or the achieved status of having one 's employment position become permanent. This issue has caused teachers to take advantage of the education system. …show more content…

For example, Students with high performing teachers progress three times as fast as those with low performing teachers. Yet they cost the same to the school. A bad teacher only covers 50% of the required curriculum. A good teacher can cover 150%. (34:48) The following triggered a memory to me. I had a teacher my freshmen year of high school who honestly I never learned a thing from. She let the class basically do what they want and just handed us worksheets. I could agree with the satistics of how we have good and bad teachers. How one person with a good teacher can receive a better knowledge than one who had a poor teacher. This concept could lead into how students who don 't receive the proper teaching could affect their home life. To exemplify, These 97 blocks are the highest rate of foster care and twice the unemployment rate of the rest of the city. Many experts believe that motivated educators cannot overcome the problems that these children brought from home. (48:18) Since the teachers cannot assist with the proper teaching, students have to settle into the likely hood of their neighborhood. Specifically, I had a friend who experienced a similar matter. The neighborhood the child grew up in decided how their schools were. How the education was at the school and how the children acted in the school, it reflected of how many kids would drop out of school in high school. The education reflects on how a student will reflect on the outside world of school. Students were not less motivated with school before in America. For instance, In the 1970s, America 's public schools were the best in the world. The image of public schools in our films and tv reflects an ideal that even if your unlucky enough to be born in the wrong neighborhood, education can be a ticket out. (58:35) Moreover, this statement made me questioned what happened in that gap from the 1970s for

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