If you haven't seen the movie...
SPOILER ALERT!
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Reflection On Waiting For Superman
The
foremost response I have to this film is that it is incredibly one-sided,
heavy-handed, and emotionally manipulative, and though it has some points to
make, it would have been a far better film and its audience would have been far
better served if the filmmaker had been more concerned with presenting an
honest, robust, and reflective picture of the situation and less concerned with
eliciting the particular narrow emotional response that it achieves. I’m going to reflect on one scene from
the film that I think most powerfully shows the filmmaker’s unexamined
assumptions and the filmmaker’s propensity for propaganda.
At
the end of the film we are subjected to the long scene (it seemed to last at
least a half an hour but it was probably more like five minutes) wherein the
kids are waiting to hear their names in the charter school lottery. As the number of placements available
drops to zero, and most of the kids we’ve been following are not called, our
hearts break along with theirs; a viewer cannot help but respond to tears
standing in the eyes of children and parents as their hopes are crushed. Throughout the film we were told that
the public schools these kids will be forced to attend are broken. The high schools they will attend are
failure factories. The cycle of
poverty and crime goes on and on and the only way out is education. But bad teachers, intractable teachers’
unions, and byzantine bureaucracy stand in the way of these kids receiving the
education they need to escape a dismal life of failure. Plucky reformers like Michelle Rhee try
to work within the system but they are slammed down hard by the awesome might
of the unions. Other plucky
reformers find a way out, a way to slip slightly to the side of the system and
create charter schools free from the crippling hands of the unions and the dead
weight of bad teachers. These
charter schools are the only hope for these kids, the film tells us, but space
is limited so they have one slim chance, one small hope to escape their
fate—the lottery. As that hope
slips away, the children and their families are devastated and we, the
audience, are devastated too. We
are devastated for these children because the film sets us up to believe that now
their lives are over and there is no hope for them. The children have received the sentence of death—death via
public school attendance. By
choosing this “dead children walking” frame for this scene and for the movie as
a whole, the filmmaker sets up very heavy-handed, emotionally manipulative,
false dichotomy and ignores a more nuanced reality.
First
of all, (ignoring the fact that these kids are all in a massively successful
documentary film and if they don’t all have college trust funds from this then
there is something very wrong with the filmmaker), what do all of these kids
have in common aside from a desire to attend a charter school? Each one of them is blessed with at
least one very strong advocate, parent or guardian, fighting for them, caring
for them, and supporting them. Having
advocates like that is a far more powerful aide to future success than the
particular school a child attends.
The film does those advocates a disservice by painting a “charter school
or doom” dichotomy for these kids.
Second,
this heavy-handed scene plays on a false “receive a great education or be
doomed to a life of poverty” dichotomy.
Now it is the case that
education is a road out of poverty for some
people, but there are no guarantees, our society has wider problems than
that. The road out of poverty via
education is a path for the few, not
the many. What I mean is:
what would happen if educators were successful beyond their wildest
dreams? What if no child was left
behind, every single member of a generation received a great education, graduated
from high school, and, let’s take it a step further, graduated from college? Would poverty simply disappear because
we were able to wave millions of college degrees at it? No, of course not. Our system is structured to have
winners and losers and we could easily end up with millions of highly educated
burger flippers and hotel cleaners.
Or, I suppose the hope is, or the assumption behind this film and
legislation like No Child Let Behind is, that education will create a nation of
American technocrats that will allow the United States to “beat” China, India,
Mexico, and everybody else in the world and insure prosperity for our citizens. Since it has slowly become too “icky”
(i.e. socially and politically unacceptable) for us to have an underclass in
the U.S. (although that particular battle is far from over—there are many, many
people who are just fine with having an underclass), people hope that poverty
will be eliminated through education and there will be enough room in the
middle and upper classes in America because an educated nation could be a
nation of four hundred million rich people if only we have the gumption to
exploit the rest of the world.
This
film rests on the assumption that everything is fine with our society at large
and it is only our broken public school system—broken by those pesky teachers’
unions—that is problematic. If
only those kids could have gotten into charter schools, their lives would be
saved. If only we could fix our school
system, then all the poor kids would get their shot at a picket fence and a two-car
garage. I agree that our school
system is broken. There are too
many bad schools, bad teachers, and bad educational experiences for
children. But maybe our schools
are broken because our society is broken, and the schools simply reflect that. I have long thought that the great hope
imbedded in education is a hope of societal transformation. The hope is that producing generation
after generation of highly educated citizens will give us a populace with the tools
needed to create and maintain a just society. But that too is too much of a false dichotomy. If it is to happen at all, a just
society won’t come through fixing the schools then letting the schools fix
society. It won’t be a simple
step-by-step, cause and effect, process.
To quote the band The Flaming Lips: “Tell everybody, Waitin’ for Superman; That they should try
to hold on best they can; He hasn’t dropped them, forgot them, or anything; It’s
just too heavy for Superman to lift” (from The
Soft Bulletin, 1999). Not only
is the problem of poverty too heavy for any reformer to lift, or any charter
school to lift; poverty is too heavy for our entire educational system to lift. Education can be a part of it and an
important part, but a just society will need many strong institutions to help
with the lifting.
2 August 2013 Edited to remove my name which popped in there due to the copying and pasting from my assignment. I'm trying to be a little more careful about interwebs anonymity these days.
2 August 2013 Edited to remove my name which popped in there due to the copying and pasting from my assignment. I'm trying to be a little more careful about interwebs anonymity these days.
8 comments:
Outstanding response.
Thank you for sharing this.
Thanks el. roklobster!
when you wrote," I have long thought that the great hope imbedded in education is a hope of societal transformation. The hope is that producing generation after generation of highly educated citizens will give us a populace with the tools needed to create and maintain a just society." it reminded me of a chapter i read in the book 'Everything You Know is Wrong' that spoke of how the modern school system was created to train children to become complacent adults that could withstand the boredom inherent in the new factories of the industrial age. any of us that have gone thru this system is no doubt aware of that underlying sensibility. so, even though ostensibly we were told that 'schooling' would lend itself to creating the kind of people you alluded to above, it actually was never intended to give individuals the reasoning skills to develop into the type of independent thinkers that the populace you described would need to become.
you raise such a good point when you ask,"Would poverty simply disappear because we were able to wave millions of college degrees at it?" because there are still so many lucrative ways to,"get their shot at a picket fence and a two-car garage" without a great education, but it involves working in the low-status fields of the service industry. we need more workers that can fix air conditioners and heating systems, but not enough people want to settle for that field.
but anyhoo, argh,harrumph, and piffle! i could go on about this even longer...but why?
Not much of a fan of H. Rollins anymore, but "Rise Above" seems to still be a reasonable target. If we can get just a little bit beyond where we were/are. that might just begin to tip the scales.
True, no one ever checks the scales correctly, but they need to exist and need to be utilized.
Rise above.
SEOHP: "i could go on about this even longer...but why?" Well, why not? I think HIA can be a safe space for us to harrumph a bit, and speak piffle to our heart's content as we grapple with Art, Ideas, Life! At least I intend to use it that way...
IMHO, the book you mentioned may be overstating things a bit...I think it's more likely that the public school system resembles a factory for the same reasons that factories resemble factories. In both sorts of settings there are pressures to try and accomplish certain jobs as efficiently and economically as possible. The assembly line is a wrong-headed model, but I don't think the sort of intentionality to create sheep described by the book really captures what is going on in this complex system that has a long and complex history.
What I mean is---sure, there have definitely been many specific people, ideas, and forces at work in the history of education that push obedience, rote learning, creating the "good worker" who can be plugged into the economic system, creating the cogs for the machine.
BUT! There have also been many specific people, ideas, and forces at work that have been pushing very different models of what education should be. You've got the sort of Jeffersonian model early on, you've got people like Horace Mann, John Dewey, Maria Montessori, the progressivists, the social reconstructionists, and so forth.
Throw into the mix the way schools are funded, the sheer administrative nightmare of keeping track of millions of kids, the never ending political wrangling over funding, curriculum, etc.
So my point is---it's a complex phenomenon, and I don't think we can pull out one thread and say "this is what schools were created to do" as the author seems to be saying.
Well, this comment was longer than I intended, there was more I wanted to say but I've got to get going today. I'll have much more to ponder and write on these issues in the months and years to come.
when i said,"but anyhoo, argh,harrumph, and piffle! i could go on about this even longer...but why?" what i meant to say is,"Well, this comment was longer than I intended, there was more I wanted to say but I've got to get going today. I'll have much more to ponder and write on these issues in the months and years to come."
a great use of the hia news forum imho
SEOHP--ah I get it. mully--I agree. I feel like I'm finally (in ripe middle-age) starting to break free (cue song by Queen). I want to discuss, and share, and do creative stuff and not worry so much whether or not anyone wants to look at it. I've been sort of stuck in "practicing" mode most of my life and the thing is, there's nothing wrong with practice (it makes perfect I hear) but if you aren't practicing FOR something, well you tend not to practice well or at all...because practicing is fucking BORING AS HELL if it's not FOR SOMETHING!
So, I want to just keep throwing things out there at the world even if those things aren't awesome and even if they kind of suck. My theory is, eventually whatever it is (writing, music, knowledge, understanding), it will improve with the doing of it. It's when a person (such as myself) gets stuck in practice mode trying to create something perfect before sharing--that's when nothing actually happens.
Or something like that.
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