An American TV show called Abbott Elementary is a comedy about teachers in a Philadelphia elementary school.
The show has been praised for being funny, smart and heartwarming and for dealing with important education issues. Over two seasons of 35 episodes, the show has explored education issues like school budgets, charter schools and teacher mental health.
The show is on ABC, one of the biggest American television networks. The show is being aired at a time of teacher shortages and debates about how race issues and history should be taught.
The creator and star of the show is Quinta Brunson. Brunson’s mother was a public school teacher in Philadelphia. Brunson plays a young, second-grade teacher named Janine at Abbott Elementary. The show follows several other teachers at Abbott, which is a badly supervised and majority-Black school that does not have enough money. Although the teachers often run into trouble with students and the administration, they care about their jobs and try to help their students.
Brunson said in an interview with Education Week that two writers on the show are former teachers. She said she wanted all the writers to have “a healthy relationship to education.”
She added that since the COVID-19 pandemic, education has been a subject on the minds of everyone.
“Three years ago, no one was talking about teachers as much as they are now,” Brunson said. “And now, everywhere we look, we’re talking about education…I hope that it leads us into a better place in this country with our treatment of education, specifically public education.”
Sara Jones is a professor of elementary education at Illinois State University. Next spring, she will be teaching a class on Abbott Elementary. At each class, students will watch an episode of the show then discuss an issue related to urban education that appeared in that episode. The class will also read related research papers from education experts.
Jones is a former elementary school teacher and has researched urban education. She said the show covers many issues that come up in her research like teacher shortages, teacher training and unfair use of public money.
“I immediately fell in love with the characters and the storytelling and that connection to my own teaching experience,” Jones told VOA.
The class is part of the university’s honors program instead of the education school, so it will have students from different areas of study. Jones added that the show is funny and interesting but deals with issues in a simple way that people who are not involved in education can understand.
A repeated issue in the show’s second season is the charter school movement. Charter schools receive public money but operate outside the public school system. Charter schools also receive private money. Businessmen like Facebook co-founder Mark Zuckerberg and former Microsoft chief Bill Gates have invested money in some charter schools. In Abbott, a group called Legendary Charter schools threatens to turn every public school in Philadelphia into a charter school.
Charter schools do not have the same operating requirements as local government-operated public schools. Critics argue that charter schools receive local tax money that could go to traditional public schools.
In one episode, the teachers discuss the threat of Legendary charter schools. One of the older teachers, Barbara, says, charters “take our funding. Not to mention the private money from wealthy donors with ulterior motives.”
But the principal, Ava, who is often portrayed as foolish says, “Weird cash swirling around? Don’t threaten me with a good time.”
Jones said the story explores urban school issues better than most shows on television, including the news media.
“I hope students will get from (this class) a deeper understanding of those issues and perhaps a shift in perspective about particularly urban schools.”
Brunson said she hopes people who watch the show will be more likely to support schools and teachers.
“It’s a public service,” Brunson said of teaching. “Who are we without teachers? Who are we without the people who teach us how to read?”
I’m Dan Novak.