Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One boy is wealthy and the other is poor
The "poor" kid lives in a 2+ mil brownstone and his mom is a nurse.
Anonymous wrote:One boy is wealthy and the other is poor
Anonymous wrote:In the beginning of the documentary, it showed where they lived. Not exactly in richy rich Manhattan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I started watching it online last night. I only got 15 minutes into it and then I went to bed. I'll watch the rest tonight. I wish they explained a few things that a PP explained. It makes sense that their parents are well educated. I thought it would be about 2 black boys from the poorer section of NYC get into a top school. They didn't really explain about the admissions process and what other schools they looked at, etc. I guess some of my questions might be answered but I already had tons of questions after they got into the film.
Why did you assume they would be poor?
Anonymous wrote:I started watching it online last night. I only got 15 minutes into it and then I went to bed. I'll watch the rest tonight. I wish they explained a few things that a PP explained. It makes sense that their parents are well educated. I thought it would be about 2 black boys from the poorer section of NYC get into a top school. They didn't really explain about the admissions process and what other schools they looked at, etc. I guess some of my questions might be answered but I already had tons of questions after they got into the film.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I watched it. Interesting how parenting has changed since we were kids: Neither of our parents were so interested and helpful with schoolwork. They mostly nagged us about getting good grades. But it seems the parenting represented in the film is what is the norm now. DH and I both went to Ivies and elite private schools for grade school - hs although we are not AA. I am Asian and DH is white.
I agree with Idris's mom's lament that her son does not have the same drive that she had. Told my DH that I don't want to redo elementary, middle and high school with our son, doing homework, keeping track of his work and projects. If the kid cannot manage those things himself, what's going to happen when the kid goes off to college?
Interesting film. Very much worth watching.
I agree with you. Parenting is soooo different now. My parents weren't terribly interested in my schoolwork either. They simply wanted to see the report cards.
But several things have changed. 1) Schoolwork has become so much more challenging. I could finish my homework for all 7 of my classes in 1 hour or less. Today kids are doing homework for 4-5 hours per night! 2) We've just become so much more competitive. Today our children are just another example/extension of our success. We must have the biggest house, fanciest car, best figure and most attractive spouse in the subdivision. And our children then must be more successful than yours. They must go to the best school (Dalton) and get into the best colleges (Stanford) or we (the parents) look like failures.
Anonymous wrote:DH and I watched it. Interesting how parenting has changed since we were kids: Neither of our parents were so interested and helpful with schoolwork. They mostly nagged us about getting good grades. But it seems the parenting represented in the film is what is the norm now. DH and I both went to Ivies and elite private schools for grade school - hs although we are not AA. I am Asian and DH is white.
I agree with Idris's mom's lament that her son does not have the same drive that she had. Told my DH that I don't want to redo elementary, middle and high school with our son, doing homework, keeping track of his work and projects. If the kid cannot manage those things himself, what's going to happen when the kid goes off to college?
Interesting film. Very much worth watching.