|
|
![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Best Blu-ray Movie Deals
|
Best Blu-ray Movie Deals, See All the Deals » |
Top deals |
New deals
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() $86.13 3 hrs ago
| ![]() $49.99 18 hrs ago
| ![]() $29.96 3 hrs ago
| ![]() $34.96 20 hrs ago
| ![]() $14.44 5 hrs ago
| ![]() $31.99 | ![]() $80.68 | ![]() $36.69 1 day ago
| ![]() $20.97 4 hrs ago
| ![]() $19.99 10 hrs ago
| ![]() $72.99 | ![]() $37.99 1 day ago
|
![]() |
#11 |
Blu-ray Guru
|
![]()
I know in high school Spanish we saw several animated movies with Spanish audio and English subtitles (like Finding Nemo, Toy Story, etc.).
I saw some interesting ones in college. The one that sticks out most is Being John Malkovich. We also got to see snippets of R-rated movies as early as middle school, like Amistad and My Cousin Vinny (they were clean parts though). I believe I saw Glory in middle school in full, but can't remember if it was then or high school. Now, as a math teacher myself, every year I show my students Memento (with consent) and they have to write a 2000-word paper connecting math and memory. They are provided a lot more than that to go off of (probably the biggest prompt/rubric they've ever been given, in fact). And on a block day if we're way ahead in the schedule, I give them a "mystery screening" of the movie Searching (no assignment or connection associated). |
![]() |
Thanks given by: | D00mM4r1n3 (07-03-2025), DR Herbert West (07-02-2025) |
|
|
![]() |
Tags |
aids, movies, school, teaching, tools |
|
|