Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Limitations and Learning

I recently watched a movie on Lifetime (I don’t remember the name of it…it was on March 27 at 1pm). It was about the principal of the school running for the state-wide superintendent. She was very strict on what the teachers and students could and could not do. For example, one teacher taught a class on making documentaries with video tech. When he tried to let them go out of the box a bit with their idea, he was suspended. I remember the quote he said “I’d rather be fired from this school, than change the ways I teach.” Her strict ways ended up causing the students to rebel even more, so far that they called everyone in their phonebook to tell them not to vote for her when the time came around. I feel that Dewey would be opposed to her sort of methods because she took away the teachers’ and students’ freedom in thought and imagination through assignments. On page 61, Dewey comments about the traditional schooling with rows of desks and the “military regimen.” Her type of commandment over the school reminded me of this type of enforcement (not quite to that extreme though). On page 62, Dewey states “Enforced quiet and acquiescence prevent pupils from disclosing their real natures. They enforce artificial uniformity.” The principal wanted to have the ideal school with ideal students and teachers that would be an example to the rest of the state. However, this way of running the school created chaos because of the lack of freedom for the school. The video tech teacher that allowed them to think outside the box represented the greatest amount of individual growth that the students were allowed to have, and she eventually took this away from them as well. As teachers, we could learn from this in our individual classrooms. If we model our classrooms as the principal did, we don’t learn about the individual needs and backgrounds of our students. However, if we let our students use their imagination as the video tech teacher did, we would help them to grow as students, as well as individuals into adults.