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The Eastern Echo

News and nonsense spiced with nerve

Film tackles education problems

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“Race to Nowhere,” an 85-minute personal documentary that delves into the negatives of the American education system was shown at Eastern Michigan University’s Porter Hall on Saturday.

Director Vicki Abeles an Oakland, Calif., mother of three schoolchildren, said, “The main purpose of the film is to give students and educators a voice in the conversation on education.”

Abeles got the idea for her film when she noticed her children were struggling from the burden of excessive homework, which was taking a toll on their health.

“Homework has become more about quantity rather than quality,” Abeles said. “What’s more, parents expect their kids to come back from school with homework. But, the question is: ‘Are they really learning anything or just becoming these machines that memorize and throw back what’s required on tests?’ I think it’s more important that homework be developmentally appropriate.”

The film questions issues regarding homework and workload and the consequences these issues are having on children in grades K-12. It highlights the seriousness of the effects to the health of these children and how most of their problems today are stress-induced disorders.

“It’s scary that 95 percent of the girls in school experience gastrointestinal issues because they internalize school stress, where as boys act out,”Abeles said. “I was worried about my daughter. Looking at her I noticed that she’d lost the love to learn.”

Abeles draws out experiences and viewpoints from professionals, parents and children about the American education system. She also shared the story of her family.

“When I decided to make a movie for this cause, the first 15 minutes of production did not feature my family, as we’re just private people,” she said. “After speaking with a couple of people in the film industry, I was told that if I didn’t show my family in the documentary it wouldn’t make as strong of an impact as I wanted it to have.”

A parent in the audience said, “It’s amazing how young children are being prepped for college. They go to school, take classes in music, play sports and then come home and do hours of homework and then wake up the next morning to do the same thing all over again.”

Another parent said, “It’s not enough to be good at just one thing like just sports or just academics or just art. Today for a kid to get into college, they need to be good at everything. And yet what they learn at high school doesn’t equip them to deal with college.”

Abeles said educators even face pressure from various school policies and state education departments to teach a certain way.

“The focus has become doing great on tests, not on what the students have learned,” she said. “If it was some sort of pesticide that was harming our children’s health we’d put a stop to it right away. Then why aren’t we doing something about stress induced by school?”

The film, which was shot over three years, is being prescreened in schools and communities all over the country and has managed to get Oprah Winfrey’s attention. The movie is featured on Winfrey’s Web site and will be going out nationwide showcasing these issues. It also has been screened at film festivals.

Abeles’ priority is to get the word out.

“This film is a call to action,” she said. “I don’t want it to be a film that people watch and think about just for a moment and then forget. We are looking to get people involvedin this movement. We want the state to sit up and take notice.”

Carla Palffy, student counselor at a local school, said: “Race to Nowhere has been shot well. It tackles the, ‘If I don’t do it all, then I’m going to miss the boat’ idea that most students tend to share. Students need to know that they don’t have to open all doors but rather find the right door for them.”

More information on the film is at: www.racetonowhere.com.


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Section: Life, Top Stories
3 Comments
June 15 at 1:16 PM
by Gary Burnaska

When yo expect a child to be good at everything, you will get a jack of all trades but a master of none.

All the people you became super successful got that way by MASTERING a craft, computers, science sports or whatever.

School System is BROKEN, what is is really doing is just burning kids out.

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June 15 at 2:42 PM
by Kenneth Barna

Dear Friends of Education,
I was a high school teacher for thirty years, right here in Michigan. I felt that Eastern did prepare me for my vocation, especially in the pre-student teaching areas, and student teaching as well.
I was excited to go to my school and open inquisitive minds to learning about things. That went on for the first twenty years.
Then changes began to happen, administrators began to worry that maybe you were failing too many students, maybe you expected too much out of them, you were too tough. Parents began to complain that Johnny was really an “A” student. How can it be that he is receiving a “D” in your class? Or Mr. Barna haven’t you heard of grade inflation? Or Sally just can’t do well on essay exams, let alone testing of any kind.
Of course students backed by administrators, or their own parents, also complained that discussions in class were boring, Mr. Barna tries to trick us with the questions he asks on exams, or he expects us to be exact in locating places on a map. Everyone wanted every thing watered down. Expectations are too high, remember inflation.
Yes, many schools are not achieving as they should, but I believe it has alot to do with what I have said above. Students and their parents are not held accountable for achieving, it’s everyone else’s fault, especially the teachers.
I could go on for another half hour, but I’ll give someone else a chance to reply.

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June 15 at 5:30 PM
by Gary Burnaska

I also think it is an embarrassment when we are graduating students who CANNOT READ. Learning to Read should be an important aspect of education as with basic math. Sure not every student will graduate knowing Calculus but they should have enough basic math background to balance their finances.

Social Promotion and this self-esteem crap needs to stop it belongs in education as much as creationism. That is a load of garbage

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