ABSTRACT

Films about education provide many of the most popular interpretations of what teaching and learning mean in schools. An analysis of this medium reveals much about the historical, cultural, political, and philosophical dimensions of education. Timely and engaging, this book fills a gap for scholarly and informed public commentary on the portrayal of education in film, offering a wide range of conceptual and interpretive perspectives.

Teaching, Learning, and Schooling in Film explores several key questions, including: What does it mean to be a good teacher? How do these good teachers instruct? When is and what makes teaching complex? What constitutes learning? Do educational reforms work? The book’s interdisciplinary group of contributors answers these important questions in essays highlighting Hollywood, independent, and documentary films. Prospective and practicing teachers will engage with the thought-provoking educational issues raised in this book and gain insight into the complexities of teaching and learning portrayed in film.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

An Invitation to Read and View

section |81 pages

Teaching

chapter |16 pages

From Blackboard to Smartboard

Hollywood's Perennially Misleading Teacher Heroes

chapter |14 pages

Monsieur Lazhar

The Subversive Dance of Relationship and the “Fierce Urgency of Now”

section |69 pages

Learning

chapter |14 pages

Pastry, Practice, and the Pursuit of Excellence

A Commentary on Kings of Pastry

chapter |12 pages

Whale Rider

Culture, Cosmopolitanism, and Unofficial Schooling

chapter |13 pages

A Poetics of Moral Education

Insights from Lee Chang-Dong's Poetry

section |87 pages

Schooling