Subtitles section Play video
-
I'm Julia, and I'm 17.
-
My parents are from Argentina,
-
and I've grown up in Manhattan my whole life
-
and go to school in the Bronx.
-
I think a lot of high schools
-
are trying to get their students
-
into the best colleges.
-
And because the way students are being measured
-
is through numbers that are so harsh,
-
I think public schools are killing creativity.
-
They're quantifying students.
-
Students are only given an incentive
-
to learn for a good grade,
-
but nothing more.
-
I probably just skim the surface
-
just to pass exams a lot of the time.
-
'Cause what you hear mostly in the hallways
-
are what projects are due,
-
what grades you got,
-
how you're going to fit it all in your day.
-
And, in class, half the students have their head down sleeping
-
because they've been up all night
-
trying to study for their exams.
-
The only support we really get
-
is from our guidance counselors
-
about which college to apply to,
-
what classes to take.
-
"You need an AP science if you want to go to nahdahdah."
-
But that's not me.
-
I'm very, very much engaged in art history
-
and 'mic/mac', which is micro/macroeconomics.
-
Both the teachers are extremely intelligent,
-
and they like to talk about what they know about the subject.
-
My 'mic/mac' teacher, he sits at his desk,
-
and he gives not only all his opinions,
-
but all the videos he's watched,
-
all the articles he's read,
-
everything that's going on right now
-
that's somehow related,
-
and pulls everything out of the air
-
and brings it all in to the topic that we're talking about,
-
which will not be tested on
-
but makes the topic something real.
-
I never imagined myself to enjoy economics.
-
The best way I learn is in an actual, hands-on experience,
-
something that can bring me out of the classroom.
-
I think the best kind of education
-
is one that teaches you how to speak
-
and think for yourself.
-
That's much more valuable
-
than just passing your exams.