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How angry would you be?

My teenager is texting me that we should look into a plant based diet because their health teacher is showing The Game Changers in class. (If that’s not the most Californian sentence ever, I don’t know what is.)

I’m actually open to moving towards a more plant-based diet, and I know that they can be healthy and tasty. When I’m on my game with planning and cooking, we already eat vegetarian about half the week.

But a Netflix documentary? Really? They’re notoriously awful and full of misinformation intended to fire people up. I’m incredibly disappointed in this teacher.

Hey, at least it’s giving me an opportunity to discuss evaluating sources and biases with my kid. Would you leave it at discussing it at home, or would you take it up with the teacher?
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Replies

  • mourvedre
    mourvedre Posts: 107 Member
    Any chance of getting a copy of the documentary and re-watching it with your teenager?
  • JBanx256 wrote: »
    I don't think I'd be angry, but more...annoyed? Like, OK, what's next, documentaries on Elvis sightings and alien abductions?

    IMO, this is a pretty amazing (and entirely fair) critique:
    https://renaissanceperiodization.com/expert-advice/game-changers-critique-by-dr-mel-davis

    FWIW, I have nothing against plant-based diets (I was vegetarian for years and my kiddo currently is, which I support wholeheartedly - both actually preparing their food and obviously paying for it). The Game Changers is just a lotta BS tho and has no place being taught as fact.

    Thanks! They texted me just before I needed to leave to pick up my younger kid, so while I was leery about it on the basis of its existence as a Netflix “health” documentary, I hadn’t looked up analyses of it yet.
  • JBanx256
    JBanx256 Posts: 1,479 Member
    JBanx256 wrote: »
    I don't think I'd be angry, but more...annoyed? Like, OK, what's next, documentaries on Elvis sightings and alien abductions?

    IMO, this is a pretty amazing (and entirely fair) critique:
    https://renaissanceperiodization.com/expert-advice/game-changers-critique-by-dr-mel-davis

    FWIW, I have nothing against plant-based diets (I was vegetarian for years and my kiddo currently is, which I support wholeheartedly - both actually preparing their food and obviously paying for it). The Game Changers is just a lotta BS tho and has no place being taught as fact.

    Thanks! They texted me just before I needed to leave to pick up my younger kid, so while I was leery about it on the basis of its existence as a Netflix “health” documentary, I hadn’t looked up analyses of it yet.

    Very welcome!

    Layne Norton also did a good piece on it:
    https://www.biolayne.com/articles/research/the-game-changers-review-a-scientific-analysis/
  • socajam
    socajam Posts: 2,530 Member
    How about getting your child to write an essay on plant based diet versus meat or vegetarian diets
    This would be a teaching moment on doing research and critical thinking skills - then both of you can sit down and discuss the findings
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    I looked at the above critiques, and they weren't the ones I had read before, so I went down a rabbit hole to find earlier threads and critiques:

    https://www.menshealth.com/nutrition/a29067926/the-game-changers-movie-fact-check/

    And here's an obviously biased source complaining about the biases in Game Changers:

    https://www.beefmagazine.com/beef/why-schwarzenegger-s-game-changers-documentary-dangerous
  • MargaretYakoda
    MargaretYakoda Posts: 2,991 Member
    nooshi713 wrote: »
    Not all Netflix documentaries are bad. There was good information in there. It is good to look at different sources of information and then use your judgement to determine what’s true or not. I would not be mad at all.

    Came here to say essentially this.
    Also?
    I pulled my kid out of public school in 4th grade because (reasons) and homeschooled after that. And one of the first, most surprising lessons he learned was that authority figures can be wrong. He learned it by checking the answers to his math in the teacher’s manual. Sometimes the answer was wrong. He could see it clearly and without any spin.

    This is an opportunity for the same lesson.

    Check multiple sources. Think criticality. Trust facts and science (mostly, quacks and charlatans still deserve derision)
    It’s a powerful lesson.

    Six disagrees here.
    Can anyone say what could possibly be the issue they’re disagreeing with?

    ‘Cause this isn’t accidental, and it isn’t anything I can understand a reasonable person would disagree with.

    Or do I have multiple disagree stalkers?

    Not upset. Just curious.
  • ythannah
    ythannah Posts: 4,371 Member
    I guess it would depend on what the teacher's motives were for showing the documentary to the students. Seeing as how it's a health class, I'm doubting it was for critique of bias in media!

    I was naively hopeful that it was some sort of lesson in how to critically evaluate popular information sources with regard to health topics. :D

    Disclaimer #2: I don't have kids and have NO idea what they do in schools these days.
  • xrj22
    xrj22 Posts: 217 Member
    I would talk to your kid first and then with the teacher. Try to get a sense of what the full cirriculum is. Did the kids have other chapters, movies, etc with good nutritional information about protein, balance diet, etc., and this was just an "add-in" to try to provide impact -- maybe OK. But if this was the bulk of the nutrition teaching, or the only thing your kid remembers about nutrition, then not OK. That movie is mostly sensationalization. Also quite skewed toward veganism, which is ONE option, and fine for you to teach your kids at home if you want, but should not be taught at the only healthy diet in schools.
  • summerviking1
    summerviking1 Posts: 91 Member
    No this would not make me angry at all. But I am not an American so I come from a different mindset. I can see how this film would upset cattle farmers and people in certain parts of the USA. You have a right to be upset and maybe mention it to the teacher.
  • Derf_Smeggle
    Derf_Smeggle Posts: 610 Member
    edited October 2021
    I think I'd discuss it with your child and expand on the topic with them. If there are specific points that you think were erroneous with the documentary that your child retained and is using as a talking point, then refute them with other factual evidence.

    I'd leave the teacher alone unless there's a very concerted and continuing effort to push the wrong info on this specific topic.
  • Tito_Tim
    Tito_Tim Posts: 72 Member
    nooshi713 wrote: »
    Not all Netflix documentaries are bad. There was good information in there. It is good to look at different sources of information and then use your judgement to determine what’s true or not. I would not be mad at all.

    But are they approved school curriculum? Teachers cannot just teach whatever they want. Nutrition should be taught at school, but in the right class, with approved curriculum. I would be concerned if this was an authorized lesson - or just the teacher preaching their own subject.
  • csplatt
    csplatt Posts: 1,205 Member
    You need more context. Did they discuss the pro/con of the credibility of the video? Was a counter argument discussed? Etc.