"that movie is complete and utter bullshit" my mother, teacher of 33 years, when I asked if she had seen it.
as nice as it was showing the parents that do care there are even more that don't and they don't show how much of basic education can be tackled at home, like knowing numbers, sight words, and the alphabet before they even get to school. yet with our economy (and this is going back to the 70's and 80's when our problems started) you no longer had the traditional 1 job household. instead you have family start seeing both parents out working and kids becoming latch key kids. and when parents get home they are to exhausted to make sure little johnny or sue are keeping up with their homework.
add into that no longer are teacher expected to teach the 3 r's but manners, sex ed, and a whole host of things that should and used to be taught by parents and you end having kids slip through the cracks, due to teachers just not having enough time to cover all the itinerary for that school year, and making sure they tier their lessons for different learning abilities, making sure multicultural diversities are covered. also it doesn't help when like jeremy said parents refuse to believe their child could have failed/lied/cheated/bullied etc etc so instead of holding them back they just let them move on to the next grade without them being proficient compared to their peers.
the biggest problem comes from a childs reading ability, if they aren't sound in their reading ability (which I feel falls on the shoulders of the parents far more than teachers) by the time they get to 4th-5th grade they won't be able to make sense of the math and science requirements. some kids enter into school without ever having picked up a boo, much less seen one.
as bad as the public school system may be compared to other nations, like jeremy said "you got a better idea, spit it out" so much of the problems lie with the hundreds of parents that use the school systems as glorified daycare centers. for every 1 household like the ones shown in the movie, there are hundreds of others not taking an active part of their childs lives. plus honestly the movie did nothing in the way of offering a solution outside of "charter schools are good" but then that comes back to the economic structure of things. remember that graph of the "drop-out factory" schools they put up, where were most of them again? oh that's right historically poor regions of our country. how are they supposed to get into those charter schools? its an endless cycle of ignorance, apathy, and unaccountability in those areas.
also that 100% math comment that goblin laughed at, laugh all you want, but every kid has to be at 100% testing in algebra. that doesn't matter if the kid is illiterate, dyslexic, or has any other learning disabilities. that kid better test at 100% in proficiency or that school gets its funding cut. and it goes beyond that as well, its every single subject that school teaches, and once again it doesn't matter if that kid is the next einstein or is severely mentally handicapped, 100% is needed by all. which then basically makes that school slowly die or become like the movie said a "drop-out factory"
getting out of this mess and restoring our education system won't happen overnight, nor with dumping millions of dollars into the system or removing unions, board members. it'll start at home with caring parents who take a vested interest in their child's development. what a surprise, a parent who cares about their kids lives and school, checking their homework, shutting off the tv and making sure it gets done, talking to teachers, pushing them to study, actually have kids that do well in school.