Commentaries can be a wonderful addition to almost any format. They can enlighten, inspire, teach, celebrate, and illuminate. However, if not done well, they can be a painful reminder to listeners that they are missing something better.
Sylvia Maria Gross’s reflection on summer school is well-written and paced. On many levels, it is a fine commentary. However, it has one debilitating flaw: you can see the ending/resolution coming almost as soon as the character is introduced.
The commentary follows Gross through teaching math to 7th grade summer school students. As the piece unfolds, it is obvious once the young girl Jackie is introduced, that the piece will focus on her experience. Further, when Jackie has trouble with math, the commentaries resolution is, again, fairly obvious: that Jackie will overcome her adversities and master long division, achieving some quiet life goal along the way.
With commentaries, as with all good storytelling, you can't lead readers/listeners through the obvious parts of a story. Readers/listeners remember the unexpected moments, the thrill. I kept waiting for this piece to take me somewhere I wasn't anticipating. It never did.
Very engaging.
Even the teacher had a bad attitude going in, but discovered that a focus on the basics leads to success.
The plight of teachers is a universal touchstone and this piece further humanizes the cliches. The piece is earnest, slightly sweet and is sure to induce a bit of grade-school nostalgia for the listeners.
This piece could work as a commentary during summer. An earnest young woman teaches summer school for the extra money and faced with a classroom of sweaty, sullen teenagers, somehow manages some long division breakthroughs. This isn't a piece that packs a big suprise or delivers a message; it's just real life for a whole lot of kids in school and thankfully for a some teachers too.
Comments for Summer School
Produced by Sylvia Maria Gross
Other pieces by Sylvia Maria Gross
Rating Summary
3 comments
Eric Nuzum
Posted on July 22, 2004 at 04:40 AM | Permalink
Review of Summer School
Sylvia Maria Gross’s reflection on summer school is well-written and paced. On many levels, it is a fine commentary. However, it has one debilitating flaw: you can see the ending/resolution coming almost as soon as the character is introduced.
The commentary follows Gross through teaching math to 7th grade summer school students. As the piece unfolds, it is obvious once the young girl Jackie is introduced, that the piece will focus on her experience. Further, when Jackie has trouble with math, the commentaries resolution is, again, fairly obvious: that Jackie will overcome her adversities and master long division, achieving some quiet life goal along the way.
With commentaries, as with all good storytelling, you can't lead readers/listeners through the obvious parts of a story. Readers/listeners remember the unexpected moments, the thrill. I kept waiting for this piece to take me somewhere I wasn't anticipating. It never did.
Sean O'Connor
Posted on July 12, 2004 at 10:01 PM | Permalink
Review of Summer School
Very engaging.
Even the teacher had a bad attitude going in, but discovered that a focus on the basics leads to success.
The plight of teachers is a universal touchstone and this piece further humanizes the cliches. The piece is earnest, slightly sweet and is sure to induce a bit of grade-school nostalgia for the listeners.
Mary McGrath
Posted on June 29, 2004 at 05:31 PM | Permalink
Review of Summer School
This piece could work as a commentary during summer. An earnest young woman teaches summer school for the extra money and faced with a classroom of sweaty, sullen teenagers, somehow manages some long division breakthroughs. This isn't a piece that packs a big suprise or delivers a message; it's just real life for a whole lot of kids in school and thankfully for a some teachers too.