Class of Her Own

Class of Her Own, formerly known as "Discovering Gloria," is a documentary film by Boaz Dvir set to release in 2024. The documentary captures Gloria Merriex’s transformation into an educational innovator and shows her engaging her math, reading, and science students at the most effective levels through unconventional teaching practices, which included hip-hop and dance routines.

Background
Gloria Jean Merriex grew up on the east side of Gainesville, Fla.. She earned an education degree from the University of Florida, and would spend her entire career at Duval Elementary School. In 2008, Merriex died of a diabetic stroke, an illness that long ailed her, but had never let affect her work. She died one day after receiving a W.K. Kellogg Foundation grant to share her teaching breakthroughs on a national level.

Dvir found inspiration for the film after talking with Don Pemberton, director of UF’s Lastinger Center for Learning, who had previously sent professors and doctoral students to watch Merriex's teaching methods. While Dvir never personally met Merriex, he had over 150 hours of footage to use for his project.

While Steve Whitney contributed as well as a co-producer, most of the funding for the film came from the Kellogg Foundation itself, with Dvir being permitted final cut on the project. "I never had even one conversation with Kellogg about the making of the film," Dvir said. "I interviewed a Kellogg rep as part of the filming process, but he never asked me about what I was doing. He simply answered my questions. I’ve never even screened the rough cut for Kellogg!"

Dvir admitted that after working on the film, his own thinking had shifted: "[Class of Her Own] made me feel quite differently about standardized testing."

Synopsis
The film focuses on Merriex’s transformation by way of archival footage and interviews with her students, family, and colleagues.

Class of Her Own shows how Merriex helped Duval Elementary leap from an F on the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test in 2002 to an A the following year.

In one of the interviews, Prof. Elizabeth Bondy – director of the University of Florida College of Education’s School of Teaching and Learning, who studied Merriex's methods – described how and why Merriex broke vital new ground in the primary education field.

"She didn't move to using music because she studied Howard Gardner's work about multiple intelligences," Bondy says in the documentary. "She moved to using music and movement and the other strategies that she used because she studied her students."

Reception
Nearly 500 people – including many of Merriex's former students – attended a rough-cut screening for Class of Her Own in East Gainesville. The post-screening panel discussion featured Bondy along with University of Texas Assistant Prof. Emily Bonner, Alachua County School Board Member Leanetta McNealy, and UF College of Education Associate Dean for Research Thomasenia Adams.

In her book Unearthing Culturally Responsive Mathematics Teaching, Emily Bonner described the documentary as "compelling".

In her op-ed in the St. Augustine Record, Pam Thor called Class of Her Own a "fabulous documentary" and urged all teachers and policymakers to watch it.

In her article in The Gainesville Sun about the documentary’s first screening, Aida Mallard wrote that Discovering Gloria brings Gloria Jean Merriex "to life".