The very first documentary about Jane Elliott's educational experiment about discrimination, which was originally produced for ABC News, in which she conducts an unforgettable lesson with her third-grade class in Riceville, Iowa.

In 2018 the 1st & 2nd EPA.L. Agia Paraskevi relocates to a new state of the art building after 20+ y...

Devoted teacher Anne Sullivan leads deaf, blind and mute Helen Keller out of solitude and helps inte...

In the early 19th century, Dr. Frankenstein discovers the secret of life – how to create a perfect m...

The documentary's title translates as "to be and to have", the two auxiliary verbs in the French lan...

J and Jacky are good friends who attend the same school. J is from a single-parent family, and will ...

Every year, around 3000 Indigenous students receive scholarships to attend some of Australia’s most ...

Morgan Spurlock subjects himself to a diet based only on McDonald's fast food three times a day for ...
People are interviewed in Dresden, Ontario, to sample local attitudes towards racial discrimination ...

The challenges of the present, expectations for the future, and the dreams of those who experience t...

In the fifties, when the future Democratic Republic of Congo was still a Belgian colony, an entire g...

This film made by a Palestinian-Israeli collective shows the destruction of the occupied West Bank's...

After the Battle of Algiers, France and its army exported, as true experts, anti-subversive methods ...
This intimate portrait of an American domestic terrorist contemplating mayhem is a close-up and unfl...

An analysis of the impact on the United States Latino community of immigration policies promoted by ...

Stephen Lawrence was a black London teenager murdered by white racists in 1993. His parents fought t...

New school headmaster and single mother Kathy discovers her vacation fling with charming 18-year-old...

Inner city kids are given new direction when they are convinced to join the school chess team.
The 15- to 16-year-old women from the ISC Alhilal agree: they have made football games more confiden...