Movie Review: Waiting for "Superman"

I think we all can recognize that U.S. public schools are in trouble. They have been for years and every year, they get progressively worse. American students have some of the lowest scores in math and science in the industrialized world.

The new movie, Waiting for "Superman", gives startling statistics about America’s school system. It talks about how our schools pass children through grades without having proficiencies in reading and math. The movie also shows statistics on why most of the children in our inner city schools drop out of high school and never make it to college.

Waiting for "Superman" focuses on five students from across the country.

  • Daisy who lives in L.A. and wants to be a veterinarian.
  • Francisco, a first grader from the Bronx, whose mother tries to get involved with the school, but the teacher never returns her calls. She desperately wants him to go to a charter school where he will receive more attention.
  • Anthony, from Washington DC, is in one of the worst schools in the country. He flunked first grade and needed to repeat it. He lives with his grandmother. His mother left him and his father died of an overdose.
  • Emily, an 8th grader, who lives in an affluent neighborhood in Silicon Valley, doesn’t want to go to the public high school because they track students and the ones in the middle often fall by the wayside.
  • And Bianca, from Harlem, whose mother worked hard to pay the $500 a month to send her to a private Catholic School. When her mother lost her job and fell one payment behind, the school refused to allow her daughter to attend graduation.  Her mother cries on the film saying, because she couldn’t afford one or two payments, why does the child have to suffer?

All of the children wanted better lives and wanted to go to a charter school where the teachers teach and the students learn.

The movie talks about how “bad” teachers in different areas go from school to school. They call this the dance of the lemons. In New York City, they have a “rubber room,” where “bad” teachers hang out during the day because they can’t be fired. And what does it cost us New Yorkers? $100 Million Dollars.

Michelle Rhee, the Chancellor of Schools in Washington DC, along with several other progressive educators from around the country try in different and dramatic ways to shake up their school districts and find a better way to teach. Unfortunately, they are met by roadblocks at every turn. 

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Article Author: Hilary Topper

Hilary JM Topper, MPA, is the President & CEO of HJMT Public Relations, Inc., a boutique Public Relations and Digital Media Agency located in Melville, Long Island, Manhattan and in Rochester, NY.

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Article comments

  • 1 - Advice

    Dec 12, 2010 at 8:31 pm

    please proofread so that possibly, in the future, someone will read this article and view it as a competent source.

  • 2 - Alan Kurtz

    Dec 12, 2010 at 8:56 pm

    I took Advice's advice and proofread this article by Hilary Topper. I found only three mistakes, which by Blogcritics' standards makes it practically perfect.

         ¶1: in [the] industrialized world

         ¶6: is [in] one of the worst school[s] in the country

    It's unfair to single out this review for proofreading when there are so many worse articles on this site.

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