Why Do These Kids Love School?

Why Do These Kids Love School? is a documentary film directed by filmmaker, Dorothy Fadiman, which examines an independent school, Peninsula School, followed by visits to eight public schools around the country (pre-school through high school) all of which have innovative programs. What emerges is the value of implementing humane values and programs that value creative thinking, self-directed learning, and first-hand experience more than memorization of facts. The schools in the film are Peninsula School, Graham and Parks School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Central Park East Secondary School in New York City (now a high school since 2005), Clara Barton Open School in Minneapolis, Clement Gregory McDonough City Magnet School in Lowell, Massachusetts, Jefferson County Open School in Lakewood, Colorado, New Orleans Free School (closed after Hurricane Katrina), Central Park East II in New York City, and Davis Alternative Magnet School in Jackson, Mississippi.

Why Do These Kids Love School?
Directed byDorothy Fadiman
Narrated byDorothy Fadiman
Music byAlex De Grassi and Ric Louchard
Release date
  • 1999 (1999)
Running time
57 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Mary Anne Raywid wrote that the film "manages not only to produce a strong emotional impact but also to provide a remarkably intimate look at life inside nine different schools. It successfully conveys a sense of the spirit and personality of the schools portrayed, and it even manages to suggest something of what makes them tick."[1] Alternative Education Resource Organization used the film to explain the term, "Open School" in a glossary about education.[2]

Awards

Blue Ribbon American Film and Video Festival

Best Documentary The "Joeys" San Jose Film Festival

Silver Plaque Chicago Film Festival

Silver Apple National Educational Film and Video Festival 1991 Bronze Star at the WorldFest-Houston International Film Festival[3]

Screenings

References

  1. Why Do These Kids Love School?, Phi Delta Kappa International, April 1992, JSTOR 20404720
  2. glossary, educationfinder.net, retrieved April 4, 2012
  3. 1991 Worldfest-Houston International Film Festival Winners (xls), Worldfest-Houston International Film Festival, p. 14, retrieved April 2, 2012
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