By Michael Ormsby
Director Lee Daniels’ film Precious, Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire, stars Gabourney “Gabbie” Sidibe as Claireece “Precious” Jones, a sixteen-year-old girl who cannot read or write, but has reached 9th grade with good grades. When Precious is threatened with being expelled after being impregnated for the second time by her father, she is forced into an alternative GED program. The film has been praised for its excellent acting by Gabbie Sidibe and Mo’Nique, who plays the main character’s abusive mother, but more than that, it has opened up dialogue about GED programs and adult education programs, and it provides a compelling portrait of an adult learner that many GED® students can identify with.
The alternative GED program that Precious enters gives her something that has been lacking in her school, personalized attention and a route to self-determination. Although many students pursuing a GED diploma are older than Precious, adult learners will find many points of empathy with Precious. Her difficulties at home and at school speak to both educators and learners in adult basic education programs, and this has opened a dialogue among film viewers in GED programs and other adult literacy programs.
Ben Merrion writes about viewing the film with adult basic education students and staff. Precious’s achievement in the film is raising her literacy from a second grade level to a seventh grade level, and adult learners realize the significance of this huge achievement. The film is laudable for recognizing how great an advance this is. Read Ben Merrion’s article.
Newsweek criticized the film for focusing on teaching Precious to write, instead of encouraging her natural talents for math, and a response appeared in the blog qualities-communities-literacies supporting promoting adult literacy in all learners. Read the response.
The film Precious is a good one to view for any adult in an adult learning center, literacy program, or GED adult secondary education program, or for any adults who need to get a GED diploma. Precious struggles with many of the problems adult secondary education learners face every day: an abusive home life, embarrassment, and criticisms from those around her. Though the film is fiction, it inspires discussion of these important issues.
Michael Ormsby is the president of The GED Academy and oversees software and curriculum for adult learners and people with educational challenges. For more information, visit passGED.com. Michael can be contacted by telephone at 800-460-8150.
