The Graduates Film Analysis

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The Graduates provides a compelling glimpse into the specific struggles and strengths of Latino youth in America’s present education system. Specifically, this film utilizes the stories of six Latino youth across America to tell a larger narrative of inequity and injustice. This film is distinct in its specific focus on the plight of Latino youth, and ultimately the problem that is revealed is that racially fueled segregation keeps all-Latino schools stagnant. In addition to this, political barriers for undocumented immigrants hinder individuals from accessing certain educational opportunities, no matter their potential or ability. The Graduates presents grassroots-level solutions such as peer juries in high schools, as well as national-level solutions that would provide clearer avenues for undocumented students to access a college education. Writings by Hooks, Stroub, Santa Ana, Hornberger, and Anyon will all be used to frame the underlying issues …show more content…

It would have been helpful if more information was provided, other than the repeated theme of there being lack of support offered to youth by counselors and teachers. This documentary could have been boosted through quantitative research showing that Latino schools (and those who resource them) are inherently at fault for Latino youth being failed by the education system. Research like the kind done by Anyon would be perfect to pair with the anecdotal evidence provided in The Graduates. Anyon’s study shows that low-class students are taught in a completely different way than working and upper-class students, and a memorization-focused, innovation-lacking curriculum works to reinforce existing power structures (Anyon, p. 90). Infusing this type of research into the film would have provided supplementary evidence for the actual difference that exists in minority

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