The premiere of a movement
Jeremy Sawyer reviews a new film produced by the Grassroots Education Movement in New York City in response to the anti-teacher documentary Waiting for "Superman".
May 18, 2011
SICK AND tired of Waiting for "Superman"? Despair no more. The hero is us.
This is the inspiring message of The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman,  a film created by the everyday superheroes of the Grassroots Education  Movement (GEM), a New York City coalition that mobilizes against  policies that underfund, undermine and privatize our public school  system.
In  a play on the title of the documentary on the environmental crisis by  Al Gore and director  Davis Guggenheim, the film explores a series of "inconvenient truths"  that expose and debunk the myths of corporate education "reform." In the  starring role is a movement of teachers, parents and students calling  for genuinely progressive reforms that can truly make a difference in  the lives of children and communities.
In  September 2010, Guggenheim, having won the praise for his film made  with Gore, lent his voice to the Hallelujah chorus of corporate reform  with Waiting For "Superman", a misleading documentary that views  American public education through the lens of some of the nation's most  powerful figures and institutions.
That  film touted corporate reformers as education "experts"--and painted  teachers, tenure and the unions that protect them as the enemy. The film  completely ignored the effects of broader social problems, such as  poverty and racism, while pointing to charter schools and privatization  as magic solutions. Though Guggenheim's An Inconvenient Truth offered some criticism of the role of corporations in destroying the environment, Waiting For "Superman" enthusiastically promotes destructive corporate policies in the realm of education.
WHAT YOU CAN DO
Attend the premiere  screening of The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman,  as well as a panel discussion featuring author Diane Ravitch, on May 19  at 6 p.m. at Riverside Church (enter at 91 Claremont Ave.) in Harlem.  The event is free and open to the public, but space is limited. To  attend, RSVP to the film's website.
For information on screenings, visit theInconvenient Truth website or e-mailgemnyc@gmail.com.
While the corporate media showered Waiting For "Superman" with  publicity, many teachers, parents and activists were outraged by its  teacher bashing and phony solutions, including some (like yours truly) who donned red capes to protest the film's opening at New York movie theaters.
But  many others suffered  through the film  in silence and may have emerged demoralized about themselves, their  public schools and their communities. If Superman isn't coming, are  charter schools and a hostile corporate takeover of public education the  only hope? The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting For Superman responds: You are not alone. Together, we can fight for real reforms.
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THE  OPENING minutes of the film are breathtaking as we are thrust into the  middle of the battle for public education now raging in New York City.  We are taken inside massive community protests from high schools to the  city's Department of Education (DOE) headquarters in the January chill.
We  see and feel the frustration with the  DOE's undemocratic education policies, as well as landmark moments in  the past year of the grassroots struggle for real reform in New York. We  get the sense that taking on Mayor Michael Bloomberg's dictatorial  control over New York schools--as well as and corporate school deformers  around the country--will require a growing movement for true democracy  and justice in our schools, communities and society.
REVIEW: MOVIES
The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting for Superman,  written and directed by New York City public school teachers and  parents, narrated by Julie Cavanagh, Brian Jones and Darren Marelli,  produced by Mollie Bruhn, Julie Cavanagh, Lisa Donlan, Darren Marelli  and Norm Scott.
The handful of images of teachers in Guggenheim'sWaiting For "Superman" consist  largely of caricatures from The Simpsons and School of Rock. If Guggenheim had trouble  locating actual teachers to speak to, he will find them in The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting For Superman.  Far from standing in the way of reform, these teachers are fighting  together with parents and students on the front lines of the struggle  for quality public education.
The  film's friendly guides are Brian Jones and Julie Cavanagh, New York  teachers with 20 years of collective experience and the down-to-earth  charisma that comes from hours mentoring children, working with parents  and joking with colleagues.
In the world of Waiting For "Superman",  people like Cavanagh--an experienced teacher at a successful public  school in a Brooklyn housing project--are not supposed to exist. As a  dedicated activist who teamed with her school community to fight to  protect her  students' special needs services from an invading charter school, she  is a monkey wrench in the charter operators' plans to infiltrate public  schools.
These  are teachers we can relate to. Jones, who comes from a family of  teachers, tells humorous stories of his frustrating, yet exhilarating,  early years of teaching. How different he seems from the suits and  data-crunchers who run our schools--people seemingly bent on causing  chaos and dislocation in the daily experience of teachers, parents and  students.
Eschewing the corporate talking heads that permeate Waiting For Superman,  Jones explains, "We wanted to explore the truth about education reform,  so we did something shocking: we spoke with parents and educators."  Their voices reveal uncomfortable realities that the deformers try  mightily to sweep under the carpet.
While Waiting For "Superman" laments  the fact that The Man of Steel can't save public education, the cast of  "experts" promoted in Guggenheim's film is more akin to the Legion of  Doom, the comic book super-villains.
These  self-anointed saviors--who generally have little or zero experience in  education--scapegoat teachers and transform children into data points.  They promote the same unregulated business model that "took this country  to the brink of Armageddon in 2008," in the words of Karen Lewis,  president of the Chicago Teachers Union.
Refreshingly, The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting For Superman takes  a hard look at the zealots,  billionaires and educational "entrepreneurs" who want the keys to our  schools. From former Washington, D.C., Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee,  to Bill Gates, to Harlem Children's Zone CEO Geoffrey Canada, the film  exposes some serious political and personal nastiness.
While  their machinations may enrich themselves and the powerful interests for  which they speak, they leave our children and communities bankrupt. The  film has a brilliant idea: why not invest in proven educational  reforms, such as smaller class sizes and experienced teachers?
Chills  ran down my spine when the film juxtaposed images of flood-ravaged New  Orleans with infamous statement of Education Secretary Arne Duncan, who  said that Hurricane Katrina was "the best thing that happened to the  education system in New Orleans."  Although I already knew the answer, I still found myself asking, "Is  this seriously what they want for our education system?"
Interestingly,  the film explores the lesser-known origins of charter schools as  centers of innovation that were started by educators and communities in  search of alternative educational services and options for students who  needed them. Mona Davids, of the New York City Charter Parents  Association, relates how control of charters has been hijacked by  corporate interests, in stark opposition to the original idea.
A  great strength of the film is the rarely heard voices of current and  former charter school parents who expose how charters serve a completely  different population than public schools. Charter schools have fewer  English language learners, fewer children with  special needs and far fewer children who live in poverty. Many of these  parents decided to leave their charter schools once they found they had  no voice in school decision-making.
Despite  the selective nature of charter schools, the film points to a Stanford  University study showing that only 17 percent of charters perform better  than their neighboring public schools, 46 percent perform equally, and  37 percent of charters perform worse. This damning evidence of charter  schools' inferiority is conspicuously absent from Guggenheim's film.
As  a school psychologist in Brooklyn who works with children with a  variety of disabilities and special education needs, it was  gut-wrenching for me to hear the story of Lydia Bellehcene, a parent and  Community Education Council member whose child's charter  school lost its psychologist and social worker. Bellehcene's child did  not receive mandated special services for a year and a half.
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THE INCONVENIENT Truth Behind Waiting For Superman also stands unapologetically in defense of unions and the due process rights known as tenure.
And why shouldn't it? Countries with successful education systems are overwhelmingly unionized. While Waiting For "Superman" sounds  the alarm about the U.S. falling behind countries like Finland in  education (which equals "competitiveness" in the terms of Corporate  America), it never investigates what makes schools in other countries  successful.
Thank  GEM for making a real documentary. We learn that Finland's teachers are  98 percent unionized. Their unions fight to keep class sizes low and  make sure a rich curriculum--rather than high-stakes testing--drives  learning. Furthermore, only 4.3 percent of Finnish children live below  the poverty line, while an outrageous 23.4 percent of American children  suffer this fate, many without health care or adequate housing. Instead  of bashing teachers' unions, shouldn't real reforms give a good bashing  to the poverty and neglect of our inner-city neighborhoods?
GEM's film provides the historical context that Waiting For Superman lacks, placing the attacks on teachers in the context of the 30-year offensive against unionized workers.
John  Bettis, a parent and member of Concerned Advocates for Public Education  (CAPE), poignantly describes a world without teachers' unions: "We  would have a teaching staff, young, inexperienced, shuffling from job to  job, unable to advocate children for fear of losing their job. That's  the fantasy world for the privatizers." What should our unions be  fighting for? You simply have to watch the film to see an amazing speech  by a young teacher who wants to see his union transformed.
The filmmakers don't pretend to have all the answers, but they'd like to begin with the corporate reformers' demand for their own children  (who don't attend public schools): adequate resources. Leonie Haimson,  director of the organization Class Size Matters, scoffs at reformers'  claims that funding doesn't  matter. Yeah, is that why the elite reformers pay $30,000-plus per year  for their kids' elementary school tuition?
Significantly  smaller class sizes would please kindergarten teacher Mollie Bruhn, who  has seen her class go from 16 to 26 students in recent years, with the  time for individual attention and connection with each student dropping  drastically. More teaching and less testing would be another sane  demand.
The  film ingeniously brings home the connection between real reform and  pedagogy through vivid examples of culturally innovative curriculums  being carried out by--that's right--public school communities. Measure  that, test manufacturers!
The appeal of The Inconvenient Truth Behind Waiting For  Superman comes not from a Hollywood-sized budget, but from teacher  and parent-sized hearts. At 65 minutes, it's the perfect length to watch  with friends, family and colleagues, and is guaranteed to provoke  discussion afterward.
The  film is a call to arms for all those who want to win a world-class  education for every student. It asserts that we must stop bailing out  the rich and start bailing out people, schools and communities. We will  need teachers, parents, and students standing together to make this a  reality. Be careful, as the film may just inspire you to join this  struggle and not look back. To quote a song from the film: "Are you  waiting for the savior? Wake up--the hero is you."
 



