It's about those kids. E]D[JWlwH{,j73?Mazd. Walk in and I still want every kid to win. Because I know he's easily influenced to do things he shouldn't do. You said OK we're not going to penalize bad teachers. NAKIA: The public schools in my neighborhood don't add up to what I want from her. WEINGARTEN: Im just -- that's why there was a cap from the early -- SCARBOROUGH: We have a lot of people that want get involved here. HdT]H|G?GdW{MND)>qOX3cL>NHjr5i:bSqu /Type /Page WEINGARTEN: Theres nothing wrong with what Geoffrey just said. SCARBOROUGH: Why is it -- [ applause ] why is it that you have an area like Washington, D.C. that is 12 percent proficient in math? UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: The space with the Xs is for all of the fifth grade students moving into the sixth grade for next year. RHEE: We wanted to give the teachers the tools. You have to live in the district. Why were you frightened to send her to school. /GS0 18 0 R GUGGENHEIM: Weve won the lottery. What's amazing about these tears, I knew about the film for months and just knowing the system, I knew how it was going to end. /T1_1 20 0 R They want to know what good teaching looks like and they want to emulate it. I have a good feeling about this. >> No one wants lousy teachers. You said, you still cry every time you see it. An examination of the current state of education in America today. I think we all need to take more responsibility. During its opening weekend in New York City and Los Angeles, the film grossed $141,000 in four theaters, averaging $35,250 per theater. SCARBOROUGH: All right. Because what's happened in so many instances, is that the evaluation system is what's broken. /Resources << But Id like -- I think there is a disconnect here that John Legend talks about. One of these amazing children is a boy named Anthony. "[14] Geraldo Rivera praised the film for promoting discussion of educational issues. Take a look. NAKIA: Shes 7 now. GUGGENHEIM: Those parents don't care. We could say to everyone in education we have to give a couple of more hours. endobj SCARBOROUGH: Right. Cross your fingers. She was a teacher in Indianapolis. Teaching standards are called into question as there is often conflicting bureaucracy between teaching expectations at the school, state, or federal level. UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Lets get started. /ProcSet [ /PDF /Text /ImageC ] /T1_0 52 0 R "[18] Kyle Smith, for the New York Post, gave the film 4.5 stars, calling it an "invaluable learning experience. /ProcSet [ /PDF /Text ] SCARBOROUGH: What have you learned since getting involved? My kids have won the lottery. A good education, therefore, is not ruled out by poverty, uneducated parents or crime and drug-infested neighborhoods. The second thing is, I think the frustrating thing to me about panels like this, when we get going we have to stop. One of them is Nakia. /T1_1 20 0 R I mean, from my perspective, it really seemed like what was scary to people was this idea of beginning to differentiate folks. WEINGARTEN: John. JOE SCARBOROUGH: Good evening. Yet instead of examining this critical issue objectively, the movie Waiting for "Superman" cites false statistics in their effort to scapegoat teachers, unfairly blaming them for all the failures of our urban schools. Filmmaker Davis Guggenheim reminds us that education "statistics" have names: The union leaderships could take this on as a platform and say this is something we're going to commit to and give our membership behind this so we can show progress in taking on these issues. [17] The Wall Street Journal's William McGurn praised the film in an op-ed piece, calling it a "stunning liberal expos of a system that consigns American children who most need a decent education to our most destructive public schools. When you have kids from Harlem going there with first grade reading proficiency and science proficiency and they leave three years later with 100 percent proficiency, it just -- at some point it becomes a moral issue. But I think that's false. You try to make reforms and it causes a problem. Waiting for Superman exposes an array of complex, complicated, persistent, and multi-layered historical and societal problems. We need to do a lot more of what Debbie Kenny is doing in that school but we need to do whats going on in lots and lots and lots of public schools because at the end of the day, every single teacher I know wants to make a difference in the lives of kids. NAKIA: Yes. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Because there is no downside to failure. I don't care what I have to do, I don't care how many jobs I have to obtain but she will go to college. But we need to have real evaluation systems, which is what the union has been focused on, so that teachers are really judged fairly. WEINGARTEN: A collaboration issue was where we disagreed at times. But when I saw you after the film, and I would -- being macho, hey, Davis, how you doing, man? /MediaBox [ 0 0 595.27600 841.89000 ] ?zBzD%YC1_PVu,fkGsM'2Hnm^]6_1W|qpff&,+y cWoM~UNxa*_EE}=}z/P__~:Y)z `'4Q!-ccE"?6HD6JW (b]Jl BP> /Font << SCARBOROUGH: Okay, Michelle -- WEINGARTEN: We agreed at times. This isn't some Hollywood drama or a romance flick. There are two Americas right now when it comes to education. More importantly than our union, the new mayor is committed to it. The answer is no. Do you think it has characterized you fairly? This is a documentary about our failing education system and the tears we saw in this room are about our children and how our schools are leaving them behind. Were here to talk about the movie, to talk about education. I was really tired. /Type /Page SCARBOROUGH: Fantastic. SCARBOROUGH: Randi said the teachers wanted the tools to get the job done. Let's give five extra hours for all the teachers in America to help kids right now and have the unions lead this charge of saying this is an emergency, we need to help these kids. /Resources << WebFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. WEINGARTEN: This is not about the adults. WebView and compare WAITING,FOR,SUPERMAN,DOCUMENTARY,TRANSCRIPT on Yahoo Finance. Waiting For Superman was more widely released than any other documentary, and among the highest-grossing documentaries of 2010. But can we really get Geoffrey Canadas in every public high school across America? There's a complete and utter lack of accountability for the job that we're supposed to be doing, which is producing results for kids. I'd like to follow up by asking you, that on "MEET THE PRESS" this morning, you said the union has taken steps to make teachers better, taken concrete steps. If you look at what the Kipp schools have done or the uncommon schools, they've been able to replicate this model over and over. We're seeing all this great success in Harlem, there were forces that were trying to make sure that that couldn't be replicated on a larger scale. We're here at the site of our education nation summit launching today at NBC News and MSNBC. ANTHONY: I stayed back one grade. GUGGENHEIM: And the stakes for them. SCARBOROUGH: Davis? LEGEND: My last thing I would say, we have to realize that these kids are our kids. /Parent 1 0 R /GS1 17 0 R We just don't want lousy teachers to be able to keep their jobs and kids not get an education. CANADA: There are two things. The issue is, and we saw it and heard it in the town hall today a lot, we need to have instruments like they do in every other business to effectively judge and assess teachers. DAISY: Isnt that when people play and they win money. Joe and I saw the movie a few days ago and we literally walked up Broadway, I think it was, in complete silence, both feeling very twisted and angry about what we had seen. >> It reveals that the two major problems So the question is, what's New York City doing right? GUGGENHEIM: Those kids can't learn. /T1_0 24 0 R You went into the lottery system for your daughter. WebThe documentary Waiting for Superman, directed by Davis Guggenheim, is a film that shows how school systems are today. Coming up next, MSNBC's going to re-air the teacher town hall hosted by Brian Williams. You could fail those kids for another 20 years, everybody keeps their job, nobody gets the go. /BleedBox [ 0 0 595.27600 841.89000 ] Let's go there and talk to the president of the American federation of teachers, Randi Weingarten. We can run the school the way we want, which is to give our teachers the power to teach. /Parent 1 0 R SCARBOROUGH: You also told me that there was a split in the civil rights community, that older members of the civil rights community sometimes fought younger members of the civil rights community who were reformers. /Contents [ 9 0 R 10 0 R 11 0 R 12 0 R 13 0 R 14 0 R 15 0 R 16 0 R ] Because what is wrong with what he's saying? I went up and I saw a revolution, a revolution that you helped start. There's a cap in New York State because ultimately when George Pataki and I and others started to work on having charter schools in this state, there was an issue in terms of the economics and what would happen with moneys in terms of other districts. /Properties << We increased student achievement levels. Let me answer your question first. This is why. /Resources << Are you feeling agreement? The film is extremely eye-opening, showing just how bad a state most of our education systems are in. Where does the union take some responsibility in this? /GS1 17 0 R SCARBOROUGH: Because we've been up to Harlem, we've seen what's happening up there. Be the first to contribute. What happened there? So even though we may disagree about that, what this film does, it creates a moment in time. BRZEZINSKI: Okay. "Geraldo at Large." /Count 5 There's a problem with our system and who know that there are children in this country who are falling behind. ", "Film's anguished lesson on why schools are failing", "Protesting teachers give 'Waiting for Superman' an 'F', "Catching up with WAITING FOR SUPERMAN's Davis Guggenheim", "At the Critics' Choice Awards: Winners Are Social Network, Inception, Firth, Portman, Leo, Bale | Thompson on Hollywood", An Inconvenient Superman: Davis Guggenheim's New Film Hijacks School Reform, "Michelle Rhee's Cheating Scandal: Diane Ravitch Blasts Education Reform Star", "Waiting for Superman" star on cheating scandals, Eager for Spotlight, but Not if It Is on a Testing Scandal, FRONTLINE: The Education of Michelle Rhee, "NYC teachers counter 'Waiting for Superman' with film of their own", "Waiting For "Superman": How We Can Save America's Failing Public Schools", Critics Say Documentary Unfairly Targets Teachers Unions and Promotes Charter Schools, Black Reel Award for Outstanding Documentary, Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest, Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Documentary Feature, George Harrison: Living in the Material World, DallasFort Worth Film Critics Association Award for Best Documentary Film, Summer of Soul (Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised), National Board of Review Award for Best Documentary Feature, Hearts of Darkness: A Filmmaker's Apocalypse, Paradise Lost: The Child Murders at Robin Hood Hills, Producers Guild of America Award for Best Documentary Motion Picture, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Waiting_for_%22Superman%22&oldid=1118430069, Documentary films about American politics, Documentary films about education in the United States, Short description is different from Wikidata, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 3.0, This page was last edited on 27 October 2022, at 00:08. RHEE: Yes, that's right. The video explores several of the problems within the system, and tells the personal stories of several families and communities who have been impacted and disadvantaged by the broken education system. Filmmaker Davis Guggenheim reminds us that education "statistics" have names: Anthony, Francisco, Bianca, Daisy, and Emily, whose stories make up the engrossing foundation of WAITING FOR SUPERMAN. It took a little while to get the money straightened for this green light and 80 percent of the teachers voted for that agreement. Take a look. /Resources << What were your thoughts when the number did not come up? /Font << 1 0 obj Michelle and I love great teachers. And the audience in this room just finished watching an extraordinary powerful film called "Waiting For Superman" which opened just a few days ago. Even during the MSNBC town hall today, there were teachers who say I don't care about tenure. And Im not going to pretend that you can just come in and snap your fingers and things are going to get better overnight. There are really, really bad charter schools across America. Didn't get an answer on that. We actually have to change the political environment. And this is not America, the idea that one kid could have a great education and one kid can't. I think he actually wants to do the right thing. endobj They couldn't add basic first grade skills, they couldn't have it. That's what our union has been trying to do for the last two years. It is about working together to create problem solving contracts and ultimately, Michelle, it's not about you or I. [31] (The film says, however, that it is focusing on the one in five superior charter schools, or close to 17%, that do outperform public schools.) WebShop for waiting for superman documentary transcript filetype:lua at Best Buy. BRZEZINSKI: Please help us welcome founder and CEO of the Harlem Children's Zone, Geoffrey Canada, Washington D.C.'s school's chancellor, Michelle Rhee, American Federation of Teacher's president Randi Weingarten and filmmaker Davis Guggenheim.
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