zaterdag 26 april 2008

Recess: School's Out

Recess: School's Out (2001): Andy Lawrence, Ashley Johnson, Pam Segall, Rickey D'Shon Collins
PopMatters Film Review


Enter Recess: School's Out, the new Disney animated film based on the popular Saturday morning cartoon. Like the show, the movie follows the exploits of a group of elementary schoolers as they torment their overbearing teachers, such as the shrewish Miss Finster (April Winchell) and the well-meaning but clueless Principal Prickly (Dabney Coleman). As the film opens, the kids are celebrating the upcoming summer break by pulling one more school prank, namely, the theft of ice cream bars that are being kept from the kids by Miss Finster.

Wired: School's Out

School's Out

The hyperlearning revolution will replace public education

Wired 1.01: School's Out

The conventional "technology" of the classroom is a thousand-year-old invention initially adopted to discipline an esoteric cadre of acetic monks. The institution of contemporary, "public" education is a 19th- century innovation designed as a worker-factory for an industrial economy. Both have as much utility in today's modern economy of advanced information technology as the Conestoga wagon or the blacksmith shop.

Papert: School's Out

SCHOOL'S OUT?
A CONVERSATION WITH SEYMOUR PAPERT.
in Meme

Seymour Papert: The big shift is social rather than technological. In 1980 kids used computers in schools, and if you wanted to talk about changing education, school was the place to do it. Now there are many more computers in homes than schools, and there is more interesting innovation and alternative learning taking place in homes than in schools. The transformation is in the kids. They are the power that will change schools. They know a lot more than many teachers do -- certainly collectively they do. Computers in the home is the biggest source of change in education.
DB: Why is it an improvement that education might be happening in the home rather than in the schools? Why is that a cause for optimism?

Cooper: School's Out

Alice Cooper- school's out
Watch You Tube

Alice Cooper | School's Out lyrics

Lyricsfreak


Well we got no choice all the girls and boys
Makin' all that noise 'cause they found new toys
Well we can't salute ya can't find a flag if that don't suit ya that's a drag
School's out for summer school's out forever school's been blown to pieces
No more pencils no more books no more teacher's dirty looks yeah
Well we got no class and we got no principals and we got no innocence
We can't even think of a word that rhymes
School's out for summer school's out forever my school's been blown to pieces
No more pencils no more books no more teacher's dirty looks
Out for summer out till fall we might not come back at all
School's out forever school's out for summer
School's out with fever school's out completely


Alice Cooper lyrics

School's Out

School's Out (song) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


"School's Out" is a 1972 title track single released on Alice Cooper's fifth album. It is arguably Alice Cooper's most well-known song.

Cooper has said he was inspired to write the song when answering the question, "What's the greatest three minutes of your life?". Says Cooper: "There's two times during the year. One is Christmas morning, when you're just getting ready to open the presents. The greed factor is right there. The next one is the last three minutes of the last day of school when you're sitting there and it's like a slow fuse burning. I said, 'If we can catch that three minutes in a song, it's going to be so big.'"

Cooper has also said it was inspired by a line from a Bowery Boys movie.

"School's Out" became Alice Cooper's first big song, reaching #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 pop singles chart and propelling the album to #2 on the Billboard 200 pop albums chart. The song reached #1 on the UK singles chart for three weeks in August 1972. It also marked the first time that Alice Cooper became regarded as more than just a theatrical novelty act. In 2004, the song was ranked #319 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

The lyrics of "School's Out" indicate that not only is the school year ended for summer vacation, but ended forever, and that the school itself has been blown up. It incorporates the childhood rhyme, "No more pencils, no more books, no more teachers' dirty looks" into its lyrics. It also featured children contributing some of the vocals, just as in Pink Floyd's 1979 hit "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)".

There is one difference between the LP and single versions. The "turn-off" effect used at the end of the album track (which is also the common radio airplay version) is not used for the 45, which simply fades out.


Song in popular media

The song has been used in the movies Scream, Dazed and Confused, and Rock 'n' Roll High School.

In 2004, the song was also used in a Staples television commercial in which Alice appeared as himself. A young girl with black hair, obviously disappointed that school is starting soon, says, "I thought you said 'School's out forever.'" Alice (who's pushing a shopping cart full of her school supplies) replies, "No, no, no ... the song goes, 'School's out for summer.' Nice try though." (However, the lyrics to the song do include the phrase "School's out forever.")

The title of the first Degrassi movie comes from this song

The song is also referenced in Martin Scorsese's The Departed ; After the police academy graduation, Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson) says to Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon) "School's out... No more pencils, no more books."

The Simpsons episode Kamp Krusty had an excerpt of the song's refrain used during Bart's dream sequence with the destruction of Springfield Elementary on its last day of school before summer vacation.

A cover is playable in the video game Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock. In addition, the message "School's out forever!!", extracted from the song, can be seen on LED scrolling panels on the "Battle of the Bands" stage in the game's precursor, Guitar Hero II.

In the Series "Everybody Hates Chris" in an episode when Chris gets revenge from the School Bully and the police are outside the school they play the song.

donderdag 24 april 2008

Schoolfilms

Nova


Net voor de grote vakantie verwent Cinema Nova het publiek zes weken lang op films én debatten over het meeste bezochte instituut ter wereld: de school. "School's Out" is een filmprogramma met een kritische blik op het schoolsysteem en op de pedagogische methoden - traditioneel of alternatief - die er gehanteerd worden.


zie ook OFFoff

maandag 14 april 2008

Film & Education

Film & History
Een interessante site waarin representaties binnen films aan bod komen.

zondag 13 april 2008

Research, Ideology, and the Brown Decision: Counter-narratives to the Historical and Contemporary Representation of Black Schooling


by Jerome Morris — 2008

TCRecord: Article



Background/Context: Most narratives of Brown v. Board of Education primarily focus on integrated schooling as the ultimate objective in Black people’s quest for quality schooling. Rather than uniformly assuming integration as Black people’s ideological model, the push by Black people for quality schooling instead should be viewed within the contours of Black political thought, which encompasses multiple ideologies (of which integration represents only one).