2/23/14
I had not watched the movie Waiting for Superman and it honestly gave me a different perspective of the public school system in the United States. This movie showed me a glimpse of the lives of several kids who like most of us have to adapt to a public school system that is not giving us the same, equal education they say it's given to every child in America. It may seem like they are by the progress and achievements of a circle of schools but also turn a blind to so many other schools who are still failing. We always seem to see above the surface of most things and don't really bother to find out if things really are the way they are projected to us. For example, my thoughts of how schools were funded were that if a school needed the extra funding they would get it, if something wasn't working for a school they would immediately make changes to improve it, and that students were the main priority. After watching this movie I learned interesting ways of how it really is. First of all, yes, funding is given for schools but it's not divided in a way that it will uplift the schools that needed a lot more. Changes eventually do come to schools but sometimes it's to late to remedy the poor education of past generations. My thought of students being the main priority to this system is most shocking to me because kids are just cought up in the middle of it all. How Michelle Rhee said, "...it all becomes about the adults." It's sad to know that this is happening in many districts and communities across the country where kids are eager to learn, eager to become educated individuals but are not give the proper tools. Other than sad it also angers me to have seen and heard people in this movie who supposedly want every child in America to have the same opportunities but are not addressing the problem in a truly equal and realistic manner.