(NAME-MCE) The Principal Story - videos worth watching...

Anselmo Villanueva anselmo.villanueva at gmail.com
Sun Sep 20 10:29:22 CDT 2009


This is a great film.  It was shown on PBS the other night.  It is available
to watch online.  It takes just over 50 mintues.

Anselmo
-------------

Watch the complete film online at:

http://video.pbs.org/video/1248700916/program/1154485580

*The Principal Story* captures a year in the life of two dynamic public
school principals in Illinois. Veteran principal Kerry Purcell has led
Harvard Park Elementary in the state capital of Springfield for six years;
Tresa D. Dunbar, Ph.D., is in her second year as principal at Chicago's
Henry H. Nash Elementary on the city's tough west side. They differ in
temperament, age, race and experience. Yet they share a striking demographic
challenge: Their students are overwhelmingly from low-income families. At
Harvard Park, the number is 87%. At Nash, virtually every student — a
shocking 98% of the student body — comes from a low-income family. With this
fact come a host of familiar problems — lack of funding, teacher turnover,
low attendance rates, low test scores and the corresponding lures of drugs,
gangs and violence.

Fortunately, as *The Principal Story* makes clear, Purcell and Dunbar share
a couple of other things, too. One is an irrepressible determination to see
that poverty doesn't prevent their students from getting a good education.
The other is an uncanny knack for delivering on that determination.

*The Principal Story*, by award-winning filmmakers Tod Lending (*Omar & Pete
*, POV 2005) and David Mrazek, has its national broadcast premiere Tuesday,
Sept. 15, 2009, at 10:30 p.m. on PBS as part of the 22nd season of POV.
(Check local listings.) American television's longest-running independent
documentary series, POV is the winner of a Special Emmy for Excellence in
Television Documentary Filmmaking. The series continues through Tuesday,
Sept. 22 at 10 p.m. and returns with specials on Wednesday, Nov. 11 and
Wednesday, Dec. 30.

*The Principal Story* offers two real-life suspense stories in one. In six
years at Harvard Park (pre-K through fifth grade), Purcell has taken a
school where student behavior was out of hand, test scores were "in the
gutter" and staff morale was low, and dramatically increased attendance,
test scores and order in the classrooms. The numbers alone show her success.
Yet the numbers can be treacherous under policies that emphasize uniform
test results, such as the No Child Left Behind Act. With success, "the
standards keep going up," as Purcell ruefully notes. In her sixth year at
Harvard Park, rather than resting on her laurels, she faces the daunting
task of raising the students' proficiency rates in reading and math from 65%
to 95%.
[image: Principal Tresa Dunbar sits in Ms. Dubin's first grade class, in a
scene from The Principal Story]

Principal Tresa Dunbar sits in Ms. Dubin's first grade class.

At Nash Elementary (pre-K through eighth grade), second-year principal
Dunbar faces a particularly dire situation. The school has been on probation
for 12 years and on the academic watch list for eight, and it had gone
through six principals in five years before appointing the former assistant
principal (who returned to the school after multi-year principal training)
as principal. In her first year, Dunbar barely began rallying the teaching
staff and reaching out to her students and their families. Now the challenge
is stark — if she and her staff cannot significantly raise test scores this
year, Nash Elementary will be closed.

Against this background, Lending and Mrazek have crafted an intimate,
vérité-style account of each principal's year as she deals with a dizzying
array of students, teachers, parents, school staff and school district
officials. All the deeper qualities these two women share become apparent —
buoyant dedication, rapport with the students and a sympathetic focus on
teacher development and support. "The teacher is the single most important
factor in a student's success," says Purcell without hesitation. Dunbar
understands this as well as anyone. Having inherited a teaching staff she
figures is no more than 35% effective — and with 12 new teachers on the
rolls — she knows that the key to saving Nash is teacher development.

Many principals are perceived as remote figures, but *The Principal
Story*reveals Purcell and Dunbar to be in constant contact with both
students and
teachers — and in constant motion. They are literally hands-on leaders,
working punishing hours, including participation in extra-curricular support
programs for teachers and students. They also keep their staffs engaged in
ongoing self-examination, as both women are determined to use data on
student performance to improve classroom and administrative effectiveness.
Perhaps the most remarkable feature shared by Purcell and Dunbar is their
striking ability to show sympathy, understanding and affection without
compromising their authority with teachers or students.

In *The Principal Story*, the futures of two schools and their hundreds of
students hang in the balance. Yet the struggles at Harvard Park and Nash —
and the successes forged by Purcell and Dunbar — lay bare the crises
afflicting much of American public education. In those crises, the futures
of millions of public school students — of public education itself — and of
the nation certainly hang in the balance.

"David Mrazek and I learned many things about the job of being a principal
and the challenges of turning around a low-performing school," says
co-producer/co-director Lending. "We were surprised by how dramatic a
principal's days are. We were struck by the plethora of problems that kids
would bring to school. Even though I've spent years filming in low-income
communities where violence and social dysfunction are rampant, I was never
so aware, until this project, of the devastating impact these circumstances
have on a child's ability to learn.

"Something that cannot be taught is essential to the principal's job,"
Lending adds. "Principals call it 'heart-work.' In making this film, I
learned that it takes a tremendous amount of passion, love and 'heart-work'
to be a good principal."

"For better or worse, a school is the sum of its many complicated but
essential parts," adds Mrazek, Lending's producing and directing partner.
"It is our hope that the film and related outreach video and print materials
can be utilized by public television stations, national partners and other
outreach participants to generate dialogue and build awareness about the
importance of education leadership and the role of principals as
instructional leaders. It is not just a case of needing more resources, but
for people to 'think differently,' to paraphrase the old Apple ad. Our
featured principals say it a lot, but it bears saying again: Those working
in education have to make decisions based on putting children first. With
that mantra in mind, you can't go wrong."

*The Principal Story* is a production of Nomadic Pictures with Funding from
The Wallace Foundation.


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