National Institute for Literacy
 

[ProfessionalDevelopment 712] Re: A book or movie to inspireteachers

Lynn Pinder LPinder at cyitc.org
Mon Dec 18 19:25:44 EST 2006


As a product of Baltimore City public schools and a resident of
Baltimore City, it saddens me to see the disarray of the Baltimore City
Public School System. Although the problem of poorly functioning public
schools is not just endemic to Baltimore and is prevalent in almost
every inner-city across the nation, the problem seems to be of crisis
proportion in Baltimore.



I am thankful for television shows like The WIRE that give realistic
accounts of the horrors of the public school system and other "systems"
that impede the educational process of hundreds of thousands of youth.
In a city where more than 50% of ninth graders drop out of Baltimore
City Public Schools and the drop-out rate for African American males is
reported at 76%, it is a no-brainer as to why there is a growing need
for effective professional development for educators (adult literacy in
particular) in Baltimore and across the nation. Statistics show that
the Baltimore City Public School Systems and other major public school
systems are producing more drop-outs than graduates.



One major problem in Baltimore is that stakeholders would rather give up
on the public school system than invest the time, money, and effort to
make it better. Most middle class and upper class Black and White
parents send their children to private, charter, or Catholic schools.
These parents, not even the elected officials including the Maryland
Governor elect with several school aged children, are willing to enroll
their children in the Baltimore City Public School System.



As an educator who does not have children, I am often challenged by my
peers on what I would do if I were in their situation. Most of my
peers who live in Baltimore and other inner-cities around the country
have enrolled their children in private or charter schools. I wonder
what impact we - as concerned citizens - would have on the public school
systems across this nation if we demanded our elected officials (the
Mayor, the City Council President, the CEO of the Public School Board,
the City Council Member, etc.) to send their children to public schools.
I wonder what would happen if the majority of middle and upper class
Black and White parents in Baltimore enrolled their children in
Baltimore City Public Schools. I wonder what would happen if we as
educators, parents, investors, citizens, elected officials, etc. stood
in solidarity and demanded better public schools not just in Baltimore
but across the nation.



I wonder how our government could spend billions of dollars to fight a
war in IRAQ when the minds of hundreds of thousands of American children
are casualties of ineffective, under-funded, and poorly managed public
school systems. I wonder how many more episodes of The Wire and how
many more movies like Dangerous Minds do we need before we "be the
change that we want to see..."





________________________________________________

Lynn Pinder

DC Children & Youth Investment Trust Corporation

1400 16th Street, NW Suite 500

Washington, DC 20036

www.cyitc.org





-----Original Message-----
From: professionaldevelopment-bounces at nifl.gov
[mailto:professionaldevelopment-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of
ejonline at comcast.net
Sent: Friday, December 15, 2006 12:29 AM
To: The Adult Literacy Professional Development Discussion List
Subject: [ProfessionalDevelopment 702] Re: A book or movie to
inspireteachers



I just want to second the shout-out to the Wire. I have watched the show
from the first season, and I think it is the greatest show in the
history of television. Hands-down.



What is so great about this season is that the portrayal of the school
system takes the time to really work through the implications of many
issues educators are grappling with. One on-going discussion involves
whether or not pull-out programs targeted to help "at risk" youth
constitutes tracking. Another on-going issue is making the material
relevant to the students'. There are no quick and easy answers - the
show is realistic in its complexity. Watching it makes me want to work
harder.



There's plenty of graphic violence (physical, emotional and social) and
language so, as they say, viewer discretion is advised.



Erik Jacobson





-------------- Original message ----------------------

From: "Laurie Sheridan" <laurie_sheridan at worlded.org>


> This is a TV show, not a book or film, but it's worth checking out.



>



> I have recently been watching the current season of "The Wire," a



> fictional but grittily real series about inner-city life in Baltimore,



> including in the schools, on the streets, in police headquarters, and

in


> city politics. The interplay among the characters and their constant



> butting of their heads against an intractable bureaucracy is deeply



> compelling though often quite bleak, and I can't think of a better



> portrayal of the lives and backgrounds of some of our learners. It



> principally follows a group of young African-American boys as they



> thread their way among unsupportive school system, police who

sometimes


> abuse and sometimes nurture them, harsh family situations, and the

pull


> of the street, gangs, and extreme violence. It's riveting, and the

kids


> who are in their early to late teens are brilliantly acted. "The



> Wire," a bad name for a good show, refers to a wiretap the police use



> to try to trap the most brutal gangleaders, who are constantly luring



> the young students into the world of the street, murder and deals gone



> bad.



>



> The scenes in the current season focus on the classroom and a new



> teacher (and former cop) who works with others in the school to find



> ways to reach, retain and educate the most at-risk among the youth.

You


> get a close look at the barriers to his doing this, to the kids'



> learning and continuing in school at all--and their constant pressure

to


> fall back into "the life" on the street in gangs and dealing.



>



> It's on HBO, so you have to have cable, on Thursday nights, at least

in


> Boston. You can also get it from Netflicks or from the video store.



> Previous years are nearly as rewarding, but this year focuses on the



> classroom so it's especially good. For any of you who saw "Boys of



> Baraka" this year--this is like a continuation, and in a very similar



> setting with similar characters, and it's even better.



>



> Laurie Sheridan



>



> >>> David Rosen <djrosen at comcast.net> 12/14/2006 3:01 PM >>>



> Andrea and others,



>



> By "challenging" young adults I meant, school dropouts, returning to



> an alternative education program who have relative little time (for



> example one year) and who may be reading or doing math at an upper



> elementary school level, who may be skeptical about what education



> can do for them but who are willing to give it a second try. Also,



> because they are still young, they may bring with them some



> adolescent street behavior not appropriate to the learning



> environment. So films or books about inspiring high school teaching



> might fit the bill, too.



>



> Any suggestions?



>



>



> David



>



> David J. Rosen



> djrosen at comcast.net



>



>



> On Dec 14, 2006, at 8:40 AM, Andrea Wilder wrote:



>



> > David, Please define "challenging young adults."



> > On Dec 13, 2006, at 9:00 PM, David Rosen wrote:



> >



> >> Hi Wendy and others,



> >>



> >> Just to clarify, the book is to inspire the _teachers_ of classes



> of



> >> challenging young adults.



> >>



> >> David J. Rosen



> >>



> >> On Dec 13, 2006, at 8:22 PM, Wendy Quinones wrote:



> >>



> >>> Two come to mind -- "Dangerous Minds," which is more for high



> >>> school age,



> >>> and "Educating Rita" which is maybe for older folks. Both are



> >>> really



> >>> inspiring.



> >>>



> >>> Wendy



> >>> ----- Original Message -----



> >>> From: "David Rosen" <djrosen1 at comcast.net>



> >>> To: "The Adult Literacy Professional Development Discussion List"



> >>> <professionaldevelopment at nifl.gov>



> >>> Cc: "The Women and Literacy Discussion List"



> >>> <womenliteracy at nifl.gov>



> >>> Sent: Wednesday, December 13, 2006 6:28 PM



> >>> Subject: [ProfessionalDevelopment 682] A book or movie to inspire



> >>> teachers



> >>>



> >>>



> >>>> Colleagues,



> >>>>



> >>>> I was asked today for a recommendation of a movie or book (such



> as



> >>>> "Stand and Deliver") which would inspire teachers to have high



> >>>> expectations for their young adult students, to give each day



> >>>> 100% to



> >>>> their teaching. What would you recommend?



> >>>>



> >>>>



> >>>> David J. Rosen



> >>>> djrosen at comcast.net



> >>>> ----------------------------------------------------



> >>>> National Institute for Literacy



> >>>> Adult Literacy Professional Development mailing list



> >>>> ProfessionalDevelopment at nifl.gov



> >>>> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to



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> >>>>



> >>>> Professional Development section of the Adult Literacy Education



>



> >>>> Wiki



> >>>> http://wiki.literacytent.org/index.php/



> >>>> Adult_Literacy_Professional_Development



> >>>>



> >>>



> >>>



> >>> ----------------------------------------------------



> >>> National Institute for Literacy



> >>> Adult Literacy Professional Development mailing list



> >>> ProfessionalDevelopment at nifl.gov



> >>> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to



> >>> http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/professionaldevelopment



> >>>



> >>> Professional Development section of the Adult Literacy Education



> >>> Wiki



> >>> http://wiki.literacytent.org/index.php/



> >>> Adult_Literacy_Professional_Development



> >>



> >> David J. Rosen



> >> djrosen at comcast.net



> >>



> >>



> >>



> >> ----------------------------------------------------



> >> National Institute for Literacy



> >> Adult Literacy Professional Development mailing list



> >> ProfessionalDevelopment at nifl.gov



> >> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to



> >> http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/professionaldevelopment



> >>



> >> Professional Development section of the Adult Literacy Education



> Wiki



> >> http://wiki.literacytent.org/index.php/



> >> Adult_Literacy_Professional_Development



> >>



> >



> > ----------------------------------------------------



> > National Institute for Literacy



> > Adult Literacy Professional Development mailing list



> > ProfessionalDevelopment at nifl.gov



> > To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to



> > http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/professionaldevelopment



> >



> > Professional Development section of the Adult Literacy Education



> Wiki



> > http://wiki.literacytent.org/index.php/



> > Adult_Literacy_Professional_Development



>



> David J. Rosen



> djrosen at comcast.net



>



>



>



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>



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opment


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