Will "Waiting for Superman" Save the Schools?
Wednesday, October 6, 2010 at 12:40AM
Becks Davis in Becks Davis, Detroit, Detroit, Detroit Moxie, charter schools, davis guggenheim, detroit public schools, dps, public school system, united way, united way for southeastern michigan, waiting for superman

Gov. Granholm sitting just down the row from me at "Waiting for Superman."I was invited by the United Way for Southeastern Michigan to attend the movie “Waiting for Superman” on Monday night in Royal Oak. The movie, directed by Davis Guggenheim, is about “the current state of public education in the U.S. and how it is affecting our children.”

Yes, I put that last sentence in quotes because it comes directly from their website, it’s how they are marketing the movie, it’s their wording.

“Waiting for Superman” portends that a superhero is not going to swoop down and save our children and our educational system. The movie champions charter schools and the great thinkers of educational reform that run them.

I am not a parent. I am not an educator. And, I’m not a big thinker. I’m just one person who loves Detroit. It doesn’t take a big thinker to know that the Detroit Public School system is failing the community.

However, proclaiming charter schools as the answer is like putting a band-aid on a gushing wound. It’ll stop a few trickles of blood but it’s not going to stop the bleed. I have nothing against charter schools and the ones shown in the movie are amazing but we can’t turn our back on our public schools.

The movie is very well done; it’ll move you to tears and make you angry. You feel for the parents who just want a better life for their children. The children, Daisy, Francisco, Bianca, Emily, and Anthony will make your heart melt and your fists pump. The last chance for these children is a lottery, a one in a million shot, for a better education.

I took my cousin, a first grade teacher in a suburban school district, to see the movie with me to get a teachers perspective. One of the first things she said was, “the kids in the movie, they’re the lucky ones.” And she’s right, the children in the movie have a support system at home; their family wants better for them, so many kids don’t have that.

My cousin is a good teacher, I know this, but as the movie states not all teachers are good. She tells me that at the end of each school year her students are six months to a year ahead of their reading levels. The sad part is that at the end of the following year they remain at those same levels, no improvement, nothing gained.

So, it’s not just the DPS or inner city schools, public school systems everywhere have problems.

The band-aid will help a few students who are lucky enough to win the lottery but it won’t help the community as a whole. Matt Eder from michigandads.com, says in his post about driving through Detroit, “I could not relocate to current-day Detroit for two main reasons, safety and schools.” People won’t move into a city, any city, with failing public schools.

The gushing wound that is our public school system needs to be addressed and fixed.

What do we do? What are the answers? How do we stop the bleed?

I don’t know.

The United Way for Southeastern Michigan got involved because they want to jump-start the conversation. Teachers fighting against administrators fighting against unions fighting against politics is getting us nowhere. 

Get involved in the conversation. Or, do your own thing to make a difference. Just do something!

"Waiting for Superman" opens at the Main Art Theatre in Royal Oak on Friday.

Have you seen "Waiting for Superman"? What did you think? Do you know how we can improve our public school system? Share it with us!

Article originally appeared on (http://www.detroitmoxie.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.