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Reviewing the documentary for BBC Radio 4's In Touch, the opera singer Denise Leigh, who is herself visually impaired was generally positive about it. "I think it broke down barriers, I don't think it was ground breaking in any sense at all, but I think it showed that there are less divisions between the blind teenage community adolescents ...
Pages in category "Documentary films about high school" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Pages in category "Documentary films about high school in the United States" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The opening film of the 2024 Freep Film Festival is "Rouge," a 90-minute documentary about the River Rouge boys basketball program and 2020 season. 'Rouge' documentary on historic high school ...
Ira Glass, host of This American Life, said it was "the most amazing reporting on a high school that I had ever seen. It's called 'Seventeen' and it was directed by a couple, a woman named Joel DeMott and a man named Jeff Kreines. It was made in 1983, filmed at Southside High School in Muncie, Indiana. It's just this incredible document.
The documentary is about the senior prom in Charleston, Mississippi. The high school in Charleston (a community of 2,100 residents) has an average of 80 graduates per year, and up until 2008 had separate, segregated proms for Black students and White students, [3] despite Mississippi fully integrating their schools in 1970. [5]
Graduating Peter is a 2001 American documentary film directed by Gerardine Wurzburg.This is a sequel to the 1992 Academy Award-winning short documentary film Educating Peter; where it follows the continuing adventures of Peter Gwazdauskas, a special needs student with Down syndrome, in his middle school and high school life as well as his high school graduation.
The documentary follows one of the classes attending JFK High School in Newark, New Jersey, as they prepare for graduation. In a year and a half, they will graduate from the public school system and go on to their next stage of life. What makes Janet Mino's class different from some others is that she teaches special needs students.