A few weeks ago, Houston's Channel 8 and the Houston A+ Challenge presented the first Houston screening of the documentary 2 Million Minutes. If you are unfamiliar with this documentary, click here (or look after the jump) for a short synopsis (more information is available on the 2 Million Minutes website).
Channel 8 is broadcasting 2 Million Minutes on three different days:
Sunday, October 5, 2008, 6-7 pm
Friday, October 10, 2008, 1-2 pm
I strongly urge you to spend an hour watching this compelling documentary.
I received an email from Channel 8 that suggests the following post-viewing discussion suggestions for classroom or dinner table conversation:
- What motivates each student in the film?
- How did the teaching and learning that you saw in the film look different in each country? How did it look the same?
- What did parental/family involvement look like in each of these students’ lives?
- From your unique vantage point, what does this film say about education and global competition in the 21st century economy?
- What could we apply from this film to make students in the Houston area more competitive in a global economy?
- Teachers: As you look at your own scope and sequence, which components are helping your students gain a competitive edge in the global economy? What could be improved?
- Principals: Does your school encourage students and teachers to apply a global perspective to learning? What could improve?
…Two Million Minutes until high school graduation…Two Million Minutes to build their intellectual foundation…Two Million Minutes to prepare for college and ultimately career…Two Million Minutes to go from a teenager to an adult
How a student spends their Two Million Minutes - in class, at home studying, playing sports, working, sleeping, socializing or just goofing off -- will affect their economic prospects for the rest of their lives.
How do most American high school students spend this time? What about students in the rest of the world? How do family, friends and society influence a student's choices for time allocation? What implications do their choices have on their future and on a country's economic future?
This film takes a deeper look at how the three superpowers of the 21st Century - China, India and the United States - are preparing their students for the future. As we follow two students - a boy and a girl - from each of these countries, we compose a global snapshot of education, from the viewpoint of kids preparing for their future.
Our goal is to tell the broader story of the universal importance of education today, and address what many are calling a crisis for U.S. schools regarding chronically low scores in math and science indicators.
In many ways the six kids simultaneously fit and break national stereotypes.
Take Rohit in Bangalore. He is under intense pressure from his folks to get into a top engineering university but blows off steam singing with his "boy band" and dreams of sending demos out to record companies. In Shanghai we meet math whiz Xiaoyuan, who, while awaiting word from Yale to see if she gained early acceptance, tries out as a violinist for the top music conservatory in Shanghai.
In Indianapolis we go to school with Neil. The senior class president and former star quarterback who gave up football to focus more on his studies. He has cruised through school, but now, with a full academic scholarship to Purdue University, wonders if he is up to the college challenge. The other students profiled in the documentary -Ruizhang, Brittany and Apoorva - face many of these universal adolescent pressures as well.
To put these narratives in context we have assembled an array of interviews with specialists like former U.S. Secretary of Labor, Robert Reich, Congressman Bart Gordon, chair of the House Committee on Science, Harvard economist Richard Freeman as well as top Indian CEOs, and leading scientists in America.
Statistics for American high school students give rise to concern for our student's education in math and science. Less than 40 percent of U.S. students take a science course more rigorous than general biology, and a mere 18 percent take advanced classes in physics, chemistry or biology. Only 45 percent of U.S. students take math coursework beyond two years of algebra and one year of geometry. And 50 percent of all college freshmen require remedial coursework.
Meanwhile, both India and China have made dramatic leaps in educating their middle classes - each comparable in size to the entire U.S. population. Compared to the U.S., China now produces eight times more scientists and engineers, while India puts out up to three times as many as the U.S. Additionally, given the affordability of their wages, China and India are now preferred destinations for increasing numbers of multinational high-tech corporations.
Just as the Soviets' launch of a tiny satellite ignited a space race and impelled America to improve its science education, many experts feel the United States has reached its next "Sputnik moment." The goal of this film is to help answer the question: Are we doing enough with the time we have to ensure the best future for all?
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