Good "teacher movies" draw
future teachers into the profession and reinvigorate seasoned veterans.
Often based on real-life events, the films show teachers reaching deep
inside themselves in order to touch the lives and hearts of their students.
This week, Education World reports on an e-survey of teachers around the
country to find the ten teacher movies that resonate most strongly with
today's educators. Included: A message board link
so you can weigh in with your favorite teacher movie!
"True 'teacher movies' show the nobility of the teaching profession
and honor educators," Philip Bigler, 1998 Teacher of the Year, told Education World. "They show how important teachers really are to
society."
Three potent messages from good teacher movies speak directly to the
heart of teaching:
Teachers have tremendous positive impact on students.
Everyone can learn.
If the system doesn't work for students, change it.
TEACHERS MAKE A DIFFERENCE
Bigler's favorite movie, Mr. Holland's Opus
(1995), celebrates the vital and often unseen impact teachers have on
the lives of their students. Bigler's own recent experience affirms this
validating message to teachers. "I just ran into a student of mine from
21 years ago," Bigler told Education World. "She told me how important
I was to her life -- and I never knew!"
TEACHERS
PICK TEN FAVORITE TEACHER PIX!
Mr. Holland's Opus
(1995)
Goodbye Mr. Chips
(1939, 1969)
October Sky
(1999)
Stand and Deliver
(1987)
Dangerous Minds
(1995)
To Sir With Love
(1967)
The Blackboard Jungle
(1955)
Up the Down Staircase
(1967)
Teachers
(1984)
Dead Poets Society
(1989)
Corinne Milmoe from Wading River (New York) Elementary School agrees:
"Mr. Holland's Opus shows what we are really here for -- to make
a difference in kids' lives."
Making a difference, as all teachers learn, is as basic as making a
real connection with the students they teach. Oldie but goodie Goodbye,
Mr. Chips (1939, 1969) has inspired teachers for decades with Mr.
Chipping's transformation from a detached, ineffective prep school teacher
into a hero who touches the lives of his large family of students. "I've
had thousands of children, all boys," the elderly Chips says as he is
dying.
"I frequently quote that to my students when they ask if I have
children," Virgil Middle School (Los Angeles) ESL teacher Caitlin Casement
told Education World.
The Talmud teaches that "one who saves a single life has saved the entire
world." The film October Sky (1999) spotlights the tremendous impact
a teacher can have on the life of an individual student. Without the support
of his teacher, Miss Riley, Homer Hickam would not have continued his
literal and figurative reach for the sky. "October Sky shows that
the power of teaching can do amazing things," says third-grade teacher
Pam Van Zuilen, from Lakeland Elementary School in Coldwater, Michigan.
After hearing the film's real-life NASA scientist speak, "his admiration
for his teacher is still very strong and moving," fourth-grade teacher
Wendy Goldfein -- from Newington Forest Elementary School in Springfield,
Virginia -- told Education World.
LEARNING KNOWS NO BARRIERS
In Stand and Deliver (1987), Jaime Escalante teaches calculus
to urban remedial math students. "The message I like from this movie is
that all children can learn," Philip Bigler told Education World. "The
film also showcases good leadership," Bigler commented in the November
19 Bulletin of the Association
for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
In another teacher favorite, Dangerous Minds, (1995) English
teacher LouAnne Johnson hooks challenging students into learning but has
to manage without the benefit of supportive leadership. "Her perseverance
is something we should always strive for," elementary teacher trainee
K Santhi Saravanan from the National Institute of Education, Singapore,
told Education World.
Many teachers, both newbies and vets, credit the films To Sir With
Love (1967), The Blackboard Jungle (1955), and Up The Down
Staircase (1967) with inspiring their career choices. In each film,
teachers innovate ways to reach students who have significant personal
and educational obstacles. "Students in The Blackboard Jungle challenged
their teacher to find a way to get through to them," says Middletown (Connecticut)
High School cinema studies teacher Chris Warren. "They really needed him.
The film gave me insight into what I wanted to do with my life."
"The Blackboard Jungle helped me decide to become a teacher,"
concurred Fran Borden, who teaches eighth grade at Unadilla Valley Middle
School in South New Berlin, New York.
"Up the Down Staircase and To Sir With Love were two of
the earliest teacher movies that I can remember," Barbara Ross, a teacher
at Irving Park Middle School in Chicago, told Education World. "Both of
them were kind of corny, but I think that, in some way, they may have
been responsible for my having chosen the teaching profession."
YOU HAVE TO BE A LITTLE CRAZY
Two of the most popular teacher films depict good teachers as mavericks
challenging an unresponsive system. "The movie Teachers [1984]
shows that teachers are human," said teacher-in-training Lindsay Harmon
from Central Missouri State University. "It has made an impact on how
I will view teaching when I graduate." The students in Teachers,
which is less idealistic than some teacher movies, remind their teacher
to stand up for what he thinks is right -- something they learned in his
classroom and by his example.
In Dead Poets Society (1989), Mr. Keating's unconventional teaching
methods get him fired, but "you witness students falling in love with
learning, and that encourages them to live life with their hearts," teacher
Jennifer Holden from Westridge Middle School in Orlando told Education
World.
As in Teachers, where one of the most creative teachers wandered
into the school straight out of the local psychiatric hospital, "the message
is that you have to be a little crazy to teach kids," said Matt Price,
a doctoral candidate in education at the University of Kansas. And according
to our survey responses, that teacher movie take-home message is one of
the most appreciated and validating of all!
ADDITIONAL ONLINE RESOURCES
For educators interested in films, the Internet offers a wide variety of
movie resources.
Teach With Movies
This site provides learning guides to each recommended film,
describing the benefits of the movie, possible problems, and helpful
background. It includes discussion questions, bridges to reading, projects,
and links to the Internet.
Media and the Family
This site uses a green light, a yellow caution sign,
and a red stop sign to rate the content of media products in terms of
violence, harmful or illegal behaviors, sex, age appropriateness, fear,
nudity, and language.
Movie Review Query Engine
Search this extensive database for print and Internet film reviews from
a myriad of sources.
Kids-in-Mind Movie Ratings
Thumbnail movie descriptions are followed ratings
for sex, violence, and profanity. Click through to a detailed listing
of scored items.