Skip to content
J Student Reporters

J Student Reporters

featured by The Korea Daily

Menu
  • Home
  • About Us
  • How To Join JSR
  • In Print
  • JSR FAQ
  • Contact Us
Menu

Stand and Deliver is Motivational

Posted on May 2, 2013May 2, 2013 by Daniel Seung-Hyun Chung
Caption: Jamie Escalante (right) and Edward James Olmos (left) stand next to each other on the film set. (Image Credit: Warner Bros/AP)

Ramon Menendez’s Stand and Deliver presents a bold statement for the plight of minorities and their search for quality education in an urban environment. Based on a true story, Stand and Deliver motivates others to build a future better than the present and to win over obstacles that hold them back.

Sure — it’s an old movie. But it’s a good one to watch for inspiration before AP testing.

Stand and Deliver tells the story of a real-life calculus teacher at Garfield High, Jaime Escalante (played by Edward James Olmos). He takes a class of only troublemakers and potential dropouts with absolutely no motivation for studying. Yet, the unrelenting teacher inspires the class to fight against society’s discrimination and troubles, and soon, they bond and progress intellectually and morally. He ultimately leads all eighteen students of the class to pass the AP Calculus exam with high scores.

Escalante has stated that the movie is “90% truth and 10% drama.” There are moments that are overly dramatic and artificial, but those scenes do not hinder the overall message in the film. Fictional elements include the typical high school romance among students and their conflicts with parents and authorities. The movie, though, captures the gist: Escalante’s wise sight of seeing the potential in troublemakers who may have never achieved anything large without the help of this active educator.

The film realistically depicts the students’ conflicts outside of school and how Escalante’s devotion aids the students in overcoming the poverty, racial discrimination and other plights that characterize their lives. Olmos expresses Escalante’s passionate character finely, without fluffs and exaggerated tones. He was even nominated for an Academy Award for his performance.

The film ends with surprising statistics of Escalante’s continued success at Garfield High School, with more students passing the AP test after the 18 students of 1982. This true life-changing story is definitely well-fit to be a film, giving a portrait of Escalante’s legacy to other students dealing with hardships.

Daniel Seung-Hyun Chung

Daniel Seung-Hyun Chung

Daniel is currently a junior at Cypress High who enjoys creative writing and English. He utterly despises math and says that he is "paler than a vampire."

More Posts

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

search articles

About JSR

Visit the J Student Board Instruction Manual website to access your Editorial Group pages, sign up for office hours, or brush up on JSR style.

www.EduBridgePlus.com JSR 기사 보기

search articles

Categories

About JSR

Visit the J Student Board Instruction Manual website to access your Editorial Group pages, sign up for office hours, or brush up on JSR style.

Apply 22nd JSR

©2025 J Student Reporters | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb