Schooling the World: The White Man's Last Burden
Schooling the World: The White Man's Last Burden
| 01 June 2010 (USA)
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If you wanted to change an ancient culture in a generation, how would you do it? You would change the way it educates its children. The U.S. Government knew this in the 19th century when it forced Native American children into government boarding schools. Today, volunteers build schools in traditional societies around the world, convinced that school is the only way to a 'better' life for indigenous children. But is this true? What really happens when we replace a traditional culture's way of learning and understanding the world with our own? SCHOOLING THE WORLD takes a challenging, sometimes funny, ultimately deeply disturbing look at the effects of modern education on the world's last sustainable indigenous cultures.

Reviews
VeteranLight

I don't have all the words right now but this film is a work of art.

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Pluskylang

Great Film overall

BelSports

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

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Nayan Gough

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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riannabrooks_1

Instead of focusing education around the world on Western values, such as the pursuit of money and climbing the corporate ladder, it should be focused on the local beliefs, culture, and economic background. Global education should not be the beliefs of one dominant country, as that limits our ways of thinking and solving problems. It is important for anyone who is going into education understands the issues brought up in this documentary. It was executed in an impressively artistic way. My views on education in developing countries completely twisted and expanded. This documentary provided insights on many Western educational flaws. "Those who are branded as failures have a wide variety of capacity to think in different ways, that's being suppressed and lost. While those who think in one-dimensional ways are being supported." This quote from the documentary says a lot about the flaws in our education system. If we educate the world with one single pedagogy, then how are we going to get anything done? How are we going to find new and innovative solutions?

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satanenterprises

There's something to be said for the point being made, that people should be more involved in what their charitable donations support. Of course education programs should be sensitive to the cultures of the countries that they are in.However, this ridiculous hour long argument with a straw man from the white guilt overcompensation crew is just a straight up disservice to that cause. It almost totally ignores everything good about the myriad of achievements of western society. Just constant shots of L'Oreal billboards interspersed with poor kids that treats western culture like it's the great Satan. It's not the only way to do things, but to say that there is little merit in the education system that (for example) put people on the moon is just bad documentary making.The reality, if you've ever traveled and taught in developing countries around the world, is that there is demand for a modern education. In fact, the mass rote learning that they display so much is something that you rarely see anymore in modern schooling systems in the developed world. It's ironically the foreigners overseas who are the most put off by the Orwellian rote learned techniques applied in those schools The problems are probably more of a product of poverty. A teacher to student ratio of 1:60 really limits the style of teaching you can employ. That (for example) would of been a really great angle to explore, or just the question "Hey, why do you send your kid there?" or "What would you change about the school that these foreigners made?" but they just had absolutely 0 interest in making this informative.This documentary ironically taught it's viewers exactly the same way as the education system it sought to disparage. "This is how it is. This is the right way to think. That's it."

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