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After School Massacre; After.Life; Akeelah and the Bee; The Alien (unproduced film) All I Wanna Do (1998 film) All Things Fair; Alone (1931 Soviet film) Always Trouble with the Teachers; American Dreamer (2022 film) American Fiction (film) The Amityville Playhouse; Amy (1981 film) Another Round; Arlington Road; Assassination Classroom (film)
Waiting for "Superman" is a 2010 American documentary film written and directed by Davis Guggenheim and produced by Lesley Chilcott. [2] The film criticizes the American public education system by following several students as they strive to be accepted into competitive charter schools such as KIPP LA Schools, Harlem Success Academy and Summit Preparatory Charter High School.
School for Scoundrels (2006 film) School Life (2019 film) School of Death; School of Rock; School-Live! (film) A Separate Peace (film) Seven Days Grace; Sex Ed (film) Shadow Zone: My Teacher Ate My Homework; Shazam! (film) She's Dating the Gangster; Silenced (film) The Silent Revolution (2018 film) Sir (2024 film) Sister Death; Ski School (film ...
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The novel is a semi-autobiographical account of Bégaudeau's experiences as a French language and literature teacher in a middle school in the 20th arrondissement of Paris, particularly illuminating his struggles with "problem children": Esmerelda (Esmeralda Ouertani), Khoumba (Rachel Regulier), and Souleymane (Franck Keïta). The film stars ...
Ken Carter, education activist and former high school basketball coach portrayed by Samuel L. Jackson, in the 2005 film Coach Carter [10] Noel Chestnut, track team coach and prison guard portrayed in the 2008 film Racing for Time [11] Joe Louis Clark, high school principal credited with the turnaround of a troubled and dangerous New Jersey high ...
Pitch Perfect is one of those movies that is brilliant on all fronts: Acting, writing, directing, and obviously, music. It's so good, it inspired two sequels and hit songs like Anna Kendrick's "Cups."
By 1950, prominent educational film institutions like New York University's Educational Film Library, Columbia Teachers College, and the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) believed that documentaries intended for children, such as A Better Tomorrow (1945), Tomorrow's a Wonderful Day (1948), and The Children's Republic (1947), were suitable for adult ...