I am so proud of our newest film for 180 Studio.
At its most literal, A Little Piece of Something is a story about a public Montessori school in Memphis that is changing the way people think — about their community, about public education, and about the best way(s) to foster a healthy identity in young children.
At its core, however, it’s a story of how we come to understand who we are and why we matter. It interweaves three different narrative threads: the inextricable relationship between the health of a community and the health of its schools; the impact of structural racism on our individual and collective sense of identity; and the mission of public Montessori programs, which offer a radically different model of healthy child development than the conventional “reform” approach (i.e., KIPP, Success Academy, etc.) to educating low-income children of color.
I hope you’ll watch and share — and if you do, we hope you’ll join me in considering some larger questions worth wrestling with:
What assumptions have we made in America about children living in poverty that this school is directly challenging?
In what ways has structural racism impacted the ways we see public education, child development, and one another?
And finally, what have we become as a country, and what do we wish to become?
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