I am teaching this documentary and doing an accompanying project with my
students based on Vik Muniz's powerful social art project on garbage in
Brasil. I truly was different after watching this film. Its called "The
Waste Land" directed by Lucy Walker. I need to do things like this. It
is in my heart to do them and while I know that my path with always come
back to teaching in more formal classrooms, my life will not reach its
full purpose until I spend time finding and learning from and
documenting the stories of the people of this Earth. I have to meet them
and love them and know their lives. Teaching is nothing without these
stories. We spend so much time teaching about things that narrow our
view to a single test or way of thinking. we start believing at our root
that a letter grade is the most important thing in our lives. we begin
to value ourselves and others based on performance at a desk and we
become a patch of 2'x2'x6' nothingness. Strong words, I know, but
education is not that. education is not copying worksheets and filling
in small bubbles with a #2 lead pencil. It is spending time in a trash
heap learning to love people who have become the fringe of society. it
is involving them in something greater than themselves so they can step
back and see how narrow they once saw their own lives. This CAN happen
in our classrooms. we CAN teach our students who they are. we CAN show
them how to step back from cares that mean nothing to the depths of what
life has to offer. this is not idealism, this is truth. and so few of
us are brave enough to teach it. we are scared of what it might do to
us. and to them.
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