"Waiting for 'Superman'": A simplistic view of education reform?

by: Stacy Teicher Khadaroo  |  The Christian Science Monitor | Report

In the eyes of some education observers, "Waiting for 'Superman'" oversimplifies the problems facing US students and implies an education reform silver bullet for struggling public schools.

"Waiting for 'Superman,'" opening Friday in New York and Los Angeles, has generated buzz for months in education circles. Everyone from Oprah Winfrey to Bill Gates is celebrating the documentary, which tells the emotional stories of five students who have entered lotteries to get into successful public charter schools.

Yet in the eyes of some education observers, the movie oversimplifies the problems facing US students and implies a silver-bullet fix for struggling public schools.

"It gives the reform community something to rally around ... but I do worry that ... it makes [the issues] more about sentiment than about understanding," says Frederick Hess, director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. "I don't just want people to like charters or support merit pay. I want them to understand what problems we're trying to solve and how we can do charter schooling or merit pay in smart ways."

The documentary's title comes from a story told by Geoffrey Canada, who founded the Harlem Children's Zone to offer cradle-to-college services and charter schools to some of New York's most disadvantaged kids. When his mother told him as a kid that his beloved Superman hero wasn't real, he was devastated to think that no one was strong enough to save him and his friends from their Bronx ghetto.

The suggestion is that the five children the film follows – four of them poor and African-American or Hispanic – need to be saved from their dismal schools.

Director Davis Guggenheim, best known for the environmental documentary "An Inconvenient Truth" featuring Al Gore, criticizes himself at the start of the film for driving by the local public schools to drop off his children at private school.

He and producer Lesley Chilcott hope to impel people in comfortable circumstances to stop writing off the struggles of children in chronically failing schools and become advocates for change.

"Once you witness these lotteries and start thinking of them as your kids," Ms. Chilcott says, "you're like, I cannot rest until I do something about this."

The movie's website features discussion forums and action steps. People who pledge to see the film receive a code worth $15 to give to any school project on DonorsChoose.org.

Some bigger bucks went out to schools on Monday when Ms. Winfrey featured the film on her show and announced $1 million grants for each of six charter schools or networks. Her focus on the film continues Friday in a show from Chicago, which also will feature the announcement of a $100 million gift from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to improve achievement in Newark, N.J., schools.

But many observers criticize the film's focus on charter schools – public schools that are granted autonomy from many district policies.

"It oversells charter schools," says Jeffrey Henig, a professor at Columbia University's Teachers College in New York. The film notes that only 1 in 5 charter schools are highly successful. But "it implies there's some philosophy that unifies charters and we just need to replicate that," Professor Henig says.

Another common criticism is that it paints a black-and-white picture of reformers such as Washington, D.C., schools chancellor Michelle Rhee (hero) and American Federation of Teachers (AFT) president Randi Weingarten (villain).

"The AFT ... has been pretty pragmatic in adopting a lot of positions the reformers want," Mr. Henig says. "Weingarten stuck her neck out on those a bit, and the movie just disregarded that entirely."

The nonprofit educational publisher Rethinking Schools launched an online forum to give voice to people pushing back against the message of the film. "By siding with a corporate reform agenda of teacher bashing, union busting, test-based ‘accountability' and highly selective, privatized charters, the film pours gasoline on the public education bonfire started by No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top," writes editorial board member Stan Karp.

"We're not saying, 'Start charters, get rid of unions,'" Chilcott says in response to the criticisms. "What [charters] do most differently is the quality of their teachers, and that can be done on mass level" through better training and evaluation, she says. 

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What charters do MOST

What charters do MOST efficiently is SEGREGATE out the children of high-performing families --educationally-- from the low-performing LeftBehinds. Remember:it is not so much what happens at school but WHAT THE CHILDREN GO HOME TO. Very few children going home to the 1600 Pennsylvania, WDC address will be failing b/c of their home environment & parenting support.



The article doesn't go into

The article doesn't go into very deeply how the film over simplifies the problems. Even the question mark in the headline undermines any countervailing opinion to the film. Whatever.



What about student &

What about student & parental responsibility?
Why can charter schools refuse the special ed students the public schools MUST MAINSTREAM?
Why is it always the fault of the teacher, never the student or parent?
Require charter schools to teach special ed students in the same proportion as the public schools who can not turn anyone away.
Most teachers can identify the students who will be failures before they reach middle school.
Poverty, poor home life, little home support, or mental, emotional or behavioral problems of the STUDENT are the reasons they fail.
Teachers do their best in the face of these challenges to help ALL students LEARN.



Instead of figuring out ways

Instead of figuring out ways to make "public schools" even more authoritarian, corporate-driven, and elitist/racist, real educational reform would be simple and universal. The same solutions for health care would work for k-12 education - "single-payer" or a full-fledged voucher system.
The parameters could be set to achieve whatever social goals are desired. Do we want to spend more money on disadvantaged students? Give them a double voucher. Do we want unionized schools? The vouchers are only good at union schools.
Of course, all existing civil rights laws, ADA, etc. would be fully enforced.
Don't like "corporate chain schools?" They can't use vouchers, then. Use Shankar's AFT model - all school receiving state money must be organized democratically by the teachers, parents, and student. They're all co-ops. Site-based management.
No state monopoly, no union monopolies, no standardized curriculum, etc. They're all "free schools." That's the real idea of a "voucher system." It isn't corporate welfare like most of these "reforms" promoted by Bush/Obama.



There are a great many

There are a great many problems in our schools. Bullying may be chief among them. I have seen it done by adults, students, and parents.

First take care of the school environment. Expect proper behavior and accept nothing less from all who enter.

Second is to respect the needs of each kid. ALL children have special needs. Every last one of them.

Third must be reading. Reading is the linchpin. Students can find subject matter that excites them and that is THE key to a life of learning. Reading develops language and writing skills. Reading helps develop cognitive ability.

These three elements cost very cost very little yet are fundamental to success in education. How damned hard is that to understand?