Originally posted by BackFire
In my highschool we watched Mel Brooks History of the Word😛art one in my history class. It was awesome
at least mel brooks never tried to pass it off as historically accurate.
nothing wrong with fun in the classroom, so long as the work is covered.
but when someone makes a movie, claims it to be historically accurate,
and it's a blatent lie, thats just wrong....yeah....mel gibson needs to die
Yea after AP testing all we really do In AP classes is watch movies and such.
This year,
English I've seen
"The Crucible"
And
"Of Mice and Men"
And In history
"Dr. Strangelove"
"All The Presidents Men"
"American Graffiti"
"A Rosa Parks Story"
"13 Days"
And I'm taking film Analysis, we see all sorts of cool movies in that class
Last year we watched loads of movies in my math class during the last three weks of school, it was after the AP exam and we had nothing else to do, so we watched Shrek, Ferris Bueller, and a few other movies...we also watched Spaceballs in AP Biology on Halloween, but that was the first day since school started that we actually took a break from classwork.
Most of the movies I've watched in school were actually relevant to something we were learning, though. I still wish we could have talked our philosophy teacher into letting us watch Matrix....
Best thing ever though, was my friend Meg and I talking our teacher into letting us watch Dr. Strangelove in physics class junior year. Hehehe. Well, we WERE learning about nuclear technology at the time and it was the last week of school....
Oh, and we watched Monty Python during German class once. Believe it or not, it actually WAS relevant.
Re: Now playing at your local school.....
Originally posted by KharmaDog
I was in the movie forum and looked at a thread that was talking about movies that kids had watched while in class. Here are some of the movies and the classes in which they were shown:The Patriot in history, which although was supposed to occur during the american revolution is so historically innacurate that it should never have been shown anywhere near a history class.
Taxi Driver & Man on Fire in computer class. Neither of these have anything to do computers and just show that the teachers were incredibly lazy or incredibly unqualified for the position.
Kill Bill Vol.1 and Ferris Bueler's Day Off in English , what the hell do these have to do with english class?
What the hell?! Personally if I was a parent I'd be a little pissed. I don't know whether this shows apathy or total unprofessionalism from the teachers or schools, but it definitley would explain why kids seem to know less and less and that the education seems to be not near as effective as it used to be.
Any thoughts?
My thoughts are, it's just a god damn movie. Every kid i knew in school diddnt watch class movies with an educational perspective. Movies were always looked at as slack off time. there is no need for movies anyway. You are a teacher, you are paid to create vivid painting in the mind. The only movies that i remember that any one took somthing away from, was the WWII footage of nazi's piling jews on conveyor belts that moved the bodies into a boiler. Showing how the americans fought, and seeing actual facial expressions, of the americans when they came across the concentration camps are images that will stay with me forever.
Belive it or not in my Jr. High School final year our history teacher gave us a lecture on slavery. Then he played the entire first season of Roots during the last week and the day before summer break we had to watch Shaka Zulu. Even worse we had to take a quiz on what we saw. It was hell alright...but I did like the movies.
Originally posted by Fire
But who shows The Patriot or Gladiator in History????
My history teacher, he also showed American History X and Southpark...
In the last four classes after all our work was done and we had nothing more to do... He just asked people to bring movies with any historical context they could think of. I brought Southpark and Gladiator, I know both have nothing to do with history, but both are damn good movies
We watch a great deal of movies.
In history class we watched The Clan of the Cave Bear, Alexander, Spartacus, in religion we watch things such as Joseph and the Technicolour Dreamcoat, Jesus Christ: Superstar, the Passion, in English class we watched Macbeth, the new Romeo and Juliet, etc etc.
I think movies are a great idea to teach something. If they are accurate they're wonderful. Because some people are visual learners and it helps them.
And I honestly don't think watching movies is dumbing down the generation. If aything the movies we watch in health and bio are much more informative and generally better than the same about 15 years ago.