But I Digress - A Film And Lit Podcast
S01E60: Stand and Deliver
Listen to my 5 min review of this film. It's a true story of a teacher and his class that truly "Stood and Delivered" passing the AP calculus exam from a school that was one of the lowest in the state at the time.
Stand and Deliver (1988)
Cast
Edward James Olmos, Estelle Harris, Mark Phelan
Directed by
Ramón Menéndez
Written by
Ramón Menéndez, Tom Musca
Other Info
Drama
PG
1h 43min
This film means a lot to me as someone who values education. I can only think of one other film that competes for the position of my all time favorite and that is 'Lean on Me' with Morgan Freeman. They both demonstrate the concept of raising your expectations high for students, trusting they want to achieve.
This film, as far as I am concerned, should be required viewing for anyone who wants to be a teacher. I'm not saying it will discourage that career path but I think it accurately shows what you have to aspire to be if you want to reach your students. The larger than life teacher, Jaime Escalante, is played by Edward James Olmos in an eerie sort of doppelgänger way. It's as if he was born to play this part.
The story goes that Escalante starts his first day teaching in an inner city Los Angeles school. The school is overwrought with gang members and students who seem to not care about school or their new teacher. I can tell you I have seen this played out in high school when I was a substitute teacher there in my twenties. At the same time, I've seen it in the lower grades, though a little more innocently, in my 17 years of teaching elementary public school. How do you tame this teeming horde? That's the method you must develop as a teacher and it doesn't come easy. Sending kids to the Principal becomes a last resort and you have to deal with unruly and disrespectful kids on your own.
Because the situation is so bad in some schools, teachers should see this movie. You can pick up some tips and you can be encouraged to go toward what you think is best. That's called developing a teaching style. It's also really easy to get into because it's an 80's movie with a great soundtrack. Credits to credits, you feel immersed in the miracle that truly took place in an inner city L.A. school. It is a powerful film for anyone to appreciate and enjoy, especially teachers.
Escalante gets a group of hispanic kids all fired up to take the AP calculus test. This surprises everyone in the film because up to now, the school has been one of the most underperforming in the country. Escalante petitions to the school board to get his students to take it and in spite of some people disagreeing, he gets permission. The kids do finally take the test and at that point, the worst of all worst things happens: the state comes out to investigate possible cheating. As if it wasn't enough for these kids to work so hard, now they get accused of doing an immoral thing. They have to take the test again to exonerate themselves.
All along the way, Escalante is reaching out to his students: showing them a finder trick to learn their 9's in multiplication, dining at their parents' restaurants trying to get buy-in on them going to college, and things like that. He is not a normal educator but rather a "super" one. I think it would be foolish for me to try and be like him, he's an individual with a specific skill set of gifts. I on the other hand, have my own bag of tricks when it comes to classroom management and student achievement. Even those who are not teachers will find this film entertaining. Everyone has been in that student chair right? It is relatable from both sides and it clearly shows the benefits of having a common goal and never backing down.
Lou Diamond Phillips plays on of the hoodlum gang types that gets drawn in by Escalante's teaching style. There is a great scene where Phillips' charact...