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5 Documentaries for Educators to Watch This Summer

Documentaries can enhance your professional development and suggest innovative ways of improving instruction, classroom climate and school policy. These films also can validate the trials and tribulations encountered by educators. A range of documentaries address issues such as classroom diversity, charter school challenges, and the struggles of schools in low-income areas. 

Summer is the perfect time to watch an education-focused documentary. Here are five noteworthy ones (and for more recommendations, be sure to read Part 2 of this article):
 

  1. Race to Nowhere:  This documentary examines the pressures students face, asking whether today's young people are prepared to step fully and productively into the future. The documentary's interviews explore over-burdened schedules, student suicide, academic cheating and kids who have mentally "checked out."
  2. Waiting for Superman:  This documentary follows a number of students through a school system that faces many challenges. Filmmaker Davis Guggenheim looks at public education, considering dropout statistics, "academic sinkholes" and more. 
  3. Spellbound:  Follow eight teenagers on their quest to win the 1999 National Spelling Bee. 
  4. TEACH:  This film details the strengths and triumphs of America's educational system, through the eyes of teachers. 
  5. To Be and to Have:  This documentary follows a one-room school in rural France, where grades 4-11 are taught by one teacher. 


Article by Kassondra Granata, EducationWorld Contributor
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