Re:thinking / PhotoSynthesis Productions presents ; a film by Deborah C. Hoard & Rachel Ferro ; produced by Deborah C. Hoard ; directed by Deborah C. Hoard & Rachel Ferro.

Other author Ferro, Rachel, director.
Other author Hoard, Deborah C., director, producer.
Other author PhotoSynthesis Productions, production company.
Format Video (Streaming)
PublicationIthaca, NY : PhotoSynthesis Productions, 2017.
Description1 online resource (61 minutes)
Supplemental Contenthttps://go.openathens.net/redirector/ecu.edu?url=http://www.aspresolver.com/aspresolver.asp?MARC;3864139
Subjects

Other title Re thinking
Other title Rethinking
Abstract What if as well as teaching students what to think, we also taught them how to think? This simple but profound idea is the foundation for RE:THINKING, the new educational documentary that inspires us to rethink schools. It gives insight to policy makers, school administrators, parents, and the public. It offers hope to those seeking more from the current educational system. RE:THINKING is a film that shows rather than tells. It captures the voices of students, teachers, administrators, and researchers and shows what can happen when they are all on the same page. This is not a film that rests on educational platitudes, either. RE:THINKING dives deeply into the research and practice of what it looks like when students are asked to think and what it means to teach thinking skills in the classroom. Following the work of Drs. Derek and Laura Cabrera of Cornell University, RE:THINKING follows four school districts over the course of three years as they successfully meet public education requirements, while embracing a culture that emphasized thinking over memorization and valued the individual child not as an empty vessel to be filled but as an adult-in-training. Dr. Laura Cabrera explains, "When children understand how they think, any idea is possible and any goal achievable." RE:THINKING shows us that the key to learning - as well as a just democracy - isn't for students to be docile consumers of information but active builders of knowledge. Better thinkers in turn are more creative, more competent, and eager to solve problems and contribute to democratic society. Producer and Director, Deborah C. Hoard, explains, "There is no better place than education, to use the power of film to bring about social change."
General noteTitle from resource description page (viewed February 14, 2018).
LanguageIn English.
Genre/formDocumentary films.
Genre/formFeature films.

Availability

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Electronic Resources Access Content Online ✔ Available