The miss-representation the first meeting between the Richmond basketball team, and their new coach. One of the students shows attitude to the coach and treats him like a man of his own age as he talks disrespectfully, eventually the student attempts to punch the coach, and the coach blocks the punch and pushes the student into the wall. This scene clearly outlines the manners which the students in Richmond have been brought up with and follows the representations and stereotypes which have been attached to them. After embarking on this module I really found the film Coach carter a powerful black film and in many way the film is. Through analystical review I found the film to withhold a plethora of black steorypes and …show more content…
Fish believed that the role of teacher is to inflict discipline and nothing else. He also claimed that Higher educational institution should not suggested that (HEI,s) can make you good people. Fish mistake was that Higher education is based on values of truth, trustworthiness, honesty, proper-pride, humility, courage all qualtites that affect your moral character and in turn altered the student character for the better . In coach carter I feel like coach carter achieved this he altered the morals of his basketball team. In the film coach carter when he locks the team out the gym until their grade improve. Coach Carter demands excellence of these student players, on and off the court. Though his ways might strike one as punishing, he wants more for these kids than to be burned out high school players. He believes in them and teaches them to believe in themselves. There have been other movies with a similar theme, yet this story reverberates after it is over; there is much talk of the achievement gap between students of different races and different socioeconomic classes. Ultimately, what this movie shows is an inherent truth: all students can achieve, if teachers go beyond what is asked of them and put themselves on the