I think that this movie is very important. The movie teaches people what happened in Little…
With this movie it shows a lot of the good and the ugly in people. It shows that most people can change because of the…
In summation to this reflection upon this movie/ documentary and article we should all as teachers try to strive to help our students look at each other equally and treat them with the same respect, and by providing this lesson of no discrimination to our students. This will hopefully inspire a future were anyone regardless of what their skin color or their ethnicity can feel powerful and just as important as the people that surround…
This movie was a great way to wrap up the course. Much of what we learned about the older adults was reflected throughout this video.…
In this book the main character “Dominique” (Dinnie), has many opportunities. She considers them as burdens rather than possibilities. Her father had rather unsteady and unstable professions. He could not hold a permanent job for long periods. The family therefore moves to different states frequently.…
While watching the film Through Deaf Eyes I found myself generally engaged in all information that was presented to me. One piece of the film that did stick out to me was the way public schools were teaching Deaf children. I was shocked how people could have thought a person who was born Deaf could learn how to speak. The techniques of how educators would place the Deaf students hand on his or her neck to feel the vibrations that were being generated by the speaking persons’ mouth. In return, the educators thought that learning how muscles and vibrations differ within the head and neck region when sound is made can somehow teach a Deaf…
What I learned from this documentary is that we need to step it up with our education needs and provide more students with more help or possible tutors to anyone who needs help and change the negative outcome that we’ve been “labeled” by known as “Dropout Factories”. (Labeling Theory is used) I’ve learned that without education you can’t succeed much in life because you don’t have the knowledge to understand what is needed to keep moving forward. Symbolic Interactionist Perspective is used because people are being treated in certain ways that they lack in education and are fulfilling other people’s points and the expectations of those people who say that they are not going to succeed much.…
The way the writer presented the sociological issues, which includes bullying, weight obsession and peer pressure, was truly compelling. The pressure of wanting to fit in, can affect a person’s life a variety of ways. Some people are strong enough to overcome the obstacles, while others are lost upon the way; moreover, in the movie both different personalities were presented through the main character. There are lessons that are taught throughout the movie, the most crucial one of all is to not let society interfere and set a norm in which must be…
First off let me say this every time I see this movie/documentary I really inspires me to do better in my community and in my school. The movie/documentary sankofa his one very important meaning that all people of African American decent should try and incorporate in our everyday lives that is to reach back to our past and share something from our past with a young person to better their future. This is very important because how can you know where you are going if you don’t know about where your people have been. Shame on the person that does not embrace there history not only embrace it but also understand it because you must understand your past because your pas his shaped the future and if we as African American don’t start to understand and embrace our past we will allow all that our ancestor and fore fathers worked for to be taking always with the stroke of a racist senator pen. It think that it is very important that most African watch this film because somewhere along the and over the year some of the Africans I have meet are trying to be more like American if they watch this film it will empower them to embrace there every rich history and to have pride in know that our people are the true first that our people are the real salt of the earth. My favorite it part in the file was when the young lady came back from her dream and she realized that the life that she was living was not her destiny but it was an eye opener for her of how our people have allowed America to give us a false perception of our home…
Trough Deaf Eyes is a documentary outlining the history of the early deaf communities. The movie illustrates and touches the numerous achievements the deaf community has accomplished over the past years. It is startling to see and know the many obstacles that deaf citizens had to go through here in America to reach “acceptance”; this can almost be compared to years when African Americans were segregated. People these days might think that deaf citizens have it hard, but I’m pretty sure it is nothing compared to those years when it was punishable or looked down upon to use sign language to communicate with your family and friends. It is frustrating to know that deaf people were once forced to assimilate instead of just letting them sign. One of the movies speakers hints a good point when she shares that because she spent so much time learning how to assimilate words like “dog, cat, milk, and ext.” deaf people usually fell behind in their other topics. I can really relate to this and how frustrating it is because when I moved from Mexico to the U.S. I didn’t know any English at all. It was almost like being deaf because whenever I wanted to communicate to my teachers or fellow classmates most of my communication came from my hands since they all spoke mostly English and could not understand what I was saying or asking. Twice a week I was pulled out from my home classroom to go to another “special classroom” where another teacher would teach me English little by little along with another 5 other students. Thanks to that I also fell behind in my other school subjects in class; when it came down to grammar, reading, science, and cursive I sucked. Because of this small relation I found the movie to be really interesting.…
As an African American male from in an inner city neighborhood, I am familiar with discrimination, I found after viewing this film that I was naïve to the struggles of many other individuals in this country. I grew up feeling that I was proud of where I came from, not because of what I accomplished as a child from the hood making good of himself with guidance from parents who made sure of my success, but because I always felt that no one had it as tough as I had it growing up. I grew up with a chip on my shoulder. This video made me realize how selfish and inconsiderate I was, and made me realize that I didn’t have it as worse as others.…
Overall, I would recommend this movie because of its moving plot as well as showing mental disability in…
The movie is not only entertaining but also very educational on the multicultural business practices. In reality, this movie is used as an example of how to work with Americans workers and business executives by many multinational corporations such as Toyota.…
In the article Untouchable, Tom O’Neil tells us what being an untouchable is all about. By interviewing those labeled as untouchable, O’Neil finds a way to truly express to us what it’s like to be an untouchable and the true underlying complications that the seeming unbreakable caste system has projected on its cultural members.…
The director present the film in a restricted narrative manner, so we only learned information solely through The Teacher perspective. This is important as it creates curiosity and suspense.…