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Protista910
10-02-2009, 08:24 PM
I would like this documentary to be pushed constantly. I heard this was to be released in 2003 or 2004, seems a little too late if you ask me. Would it be too much to call into the Alex Jones Show or talk to John Taylor Gatto and ask them to get more publicity of this documentary?
I'm 16 and I've about had it with my government class calling our government a Republic as it should be. Technically we've been a democracy since 1913. Sadly we can't push this stuff out. We'd take a pillar down from the establishment if we'd simply get this produced.

Summary:


Education is the bedrock of any democracy. The issues of equity, justice, even homeland security, require a population that can think for itself, reason, critique, and analyze. The American school system is failing us miserably in this regard. The policy makers know this, educators know it, parents know it, and most importantly, our kids, painfully know it. The media seem to know it as well. Daily, innumerable articles, editorials, and news segments are devoted to this issue. Even as our country is on heightened threat alert, prepares for war, and struggles with a faltering economy, the national discourse continually returns to the problems of education.

Why, in the richest, most powerful nation on earth are we not able to address this issue clearly and effectively?

Perhaps it is because we analyze the problems of our school system in terms of engineering solutions—longer school days, Phonics vs. Whole Word, merit pay for teachers, metal detectors, bigger districts, smaller class size. But we must first ask the most important question: What is the purpose of education? If the first three purposes are to create good people, good citizens, and good lives, as history suggests, then why have we allowed the Managerial Fourth Purpose to dominate what is really occurring in our 100,000 school buildings?

The Fourth Purpose, a 3-part, 6-hour documentary series will be the first film to ask this fundamental question. The series will tackle the American school system: present, past, and future—its anomalies, its history, and the alternatives. The idea is to throw a bucket of ice-cold water in the faces of pundits, experts, and bureaucrats. The intention is to radically shift the context within which people view schooling by offering a ‘unified field theory’ of how and why our school system is so deeply dysfunctional. And then, once we have everyone’s attention, to show what people might do about it.

Working with author and former New York State Teacher of the Year, John Taylor Gatto, award-winning film director, Roland Legiardi-Laura has designed a 3-part structure built on solid research and a commitment to the material, which has the integrity commensurate with the epic scope of the material.

Part One: What’s Wrong? We will begin the series by looking at today’s schools. It will be a probing and precise examination of the numerous contradictions in our system. Why is it that our children’s reading and math skills regularly fall within the bottom 25 percent of developed countries? Why have these skills declined steadily since World War II? What is the purpose of standardized testing, since it has never been shown that tests have been able to predict success in later life? How come our school textbooks are so inaccurate? How is it that such a disproportionate number of minority students are relegated to special education classes? Why are there more than 6 million children taking prescribed psychoactive drugs? Why do soda machines line the halls of schools? Why are our children fed unwholesome and fattening food? Why do more than 15 percent of our children carry weapons to school each month? The many questions explored in Part One will lead the viewer to ask the all important…

How Did It Get This Way? Part Two will be an energetic tour of the history of our school system. Using animation, feature film clips, and archival footage, we will embark on a frightening and sometimes humorous adventure back in time to meet the architects of a system that had little to do with learning and much to do with effectively managing an explosively growing population while building a powerful economy.

Part Three: What Else is Possible? While the situation is grave, it is not at all hopeless. The series will build to its climax by surveying the working alternatives that have evolved here and abroad. We will look at the Amish in Pennsylvania, the Mondragon Cooperative in Basque, Spain. We will consider the different approaches to learning as presented by the Harmony School in Bloomington, Indiana, Steiner’s Waldorf Schools, the burgeoning home schooling movement, traditional private schools, the Montessori approach, viable private sector choices, and the work of brilliant lone pioneers like Escalante, Gatto, and Collins. We will summarize the work ahead, incite people to action, and conclude by asking one final question: How shall we prepare our children to live in America?

In Conclusion: The Fourth Purpose will not be another polite, talking heads, snore fest. It will be a series with powerful themes and a strong point of view. Hard questions will be asked throughout, questions that address the core of our belief system. This will be a film that engages the audience of students, parents, and teachers. As schooling is our one common experience and the mirror of our system of values, the stakes are high—the hearts and minds and future of the American people.


Distribution, Marketing, Audience & Budget

This is an ambitious project, with the scope of a Ken Burns series, and a detailed $5 million budget, designed to meet the challenge of creating a beautifully produced and compelling film. With a primary audience of 53 million school children and their parents, the film will be distributed in such a way as to generate an audience response similar to that of Harry Potter and The Blair Witch Project, the cross-over success of Eminem, and the provocative pitch of a Bowling For Columbine (the single most financially successful documentary to date).

The film will debut in theaters, then will air on prime time television broadcast. The series will be edited to air in half-, one-, or two-hour segments, depending upon the requirements of the broadcast venue.

Protista910
10-07-2009, 05:40 PM
And this receives 83 views and no comments? Would it be wise to call in alternative radio stations and other liberty oriented movement supporters to fund this project. I'd love to see this produced.

Deborah K
10-07-2009, 05:43 PM
Go for it. You don't need anybody to tell you what you already know you should do. Make this your mission.

Baptist
10-08-2009, 11:29 PM
And this receives 83 views and no comments? Would it be wise to call in alternative radio stations and other liberty oriented movement supporters to fund this project. I'd love to see this produced.

It seems weird to me that his website states that this movie is an ambitious project, yet a few weeks ago I DL'd 3 hours of Gatto on the Alex Jones show last year and he did not mention it once.

Also, it looks like his website hasn't been updated in years.
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/fourthpurpose/gatto.htm


Maybe they stopped making it? Sounds like it would be a good movie. I just ordered two of Gatto's books a few days ago. Can't wait to read them.

Protista910
10-15-2009, 04:25 AM
I have read about half of Gatto's 'Underground History of Education' book on my Iphone but then I stopped. Call Alex Jones and ask him to get attention to this. I'll try if I can today or Sunday when his show is on then.