Schooled in Schooling
After living in New Orleans for two years, I thought I knew a lot about the city. Obviously not everything, but the important stuff: the difference between Cajun and Creole, the meaning of Fais Do-Do, how to sort of dance Zydeco and which neighborhoods you should never be stuck in after dark. Working with the ReThinkers, I realized that there was a big chunk of this city I was missing out on: the school system. As a student of Tulane University, it strikes me as really odd now to think that I knew nothing about the learning institutions of the city I was attending college in. It surprised me that so many schools were failing their students and adding to the “school to prison pipeline” system that just churned out future inmates. I was even more surprised when we got into the specifics of charter and KIPP schools that were controlled by CEOs and corporations instead of personal hands-on staff with no agenda. When the students talked about how all of their old teachers were fired and replaced with fresh out of college government selected teachers, I was appalled. I heard more than one account of the new teachers saying out right that they were only there for the paycheck and benefits the job gave them. How can you ever hope for a better future when the foundations are crumbling like this? New Orleans especially is a city in turmoil and for there to be so much money spent on tourism and advertising while kids are being failed by the school system is plain wrong. There are no words for it, no way to make sense of it. If all they do is keep locking up teenagers who never got a good education then pretty soon it’s going to make more sense to stop building school and just build a jail house in its place.
By Teresa Russo
You can’t get to the bottom of New Orleans. The more I find out about this
city, the more I realize how little I know. From student life at Tulane to working
at a local bakery to engaging with local high school students, each facet…
When I signed up for place-based storytelling, I thought I was signing up for some
regular class where we would learn how to tell stories about New Orleans. I assumed
we would write some stories and film them and that would be it. What I…
It is truly bizarre how much your view of a place can change over time. I have only
lived in New Orleans for a little over a year now, and it is unbelievable how this
place is the same one I daydreamed about in high…
If you put a camera in someone’s face, you can learn a lot. I’m not
referring to the story that person tells, though their narrative is important. I am
referring to the reaction someone has to the very camera. While filming for our
class project…
I am the only one in the class who is a native of New Orleans, which puts me in an
interesting
position to reflect on what this video project has taught me about the city. How can
I be taught
something new about my city…
I’m so sorry.
It seems strange to begin this journal entry that way, but it was the first thing
that came to mind. I’m so sorry, New Orleans. I have lived here for almost
four years; I have claimed to love you. But I didn’t…
Place-based Story Telling was a rewarding experience because it gave me the
chance to connect to classmates in a way I hadn’t before. I transferred to
Tulane
during my Sophomore year of college because I was determined to move to New
Orleans. Tulane was the…
I had an idea of what this class was going to be about when I registered, but I
didn’t realize how much of an impact it would have on me in the course of the
semester.
The only time I’ve really worked with kids in…
New Orleans has much more of a filmic quality and community than I originally
realized. Yes, the culturally literate (culturally pretentious ?) dub New Orleans
the “new Hollywood,” but there are so many people involved in film and
media that actually live and work here…