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Up the Down Staircase 1967

Runtime

124 mins

Language

English

English

Sylvia Barrett, a new English teacher, enters a high‑school with a weary faculty, unruly students and an administration buried in endless paperwork. Her upbeat greeting—“Good morning, I’m Miss Barrett, your homeroom teacher”—sparks a battle of wills as she struggles to reach the most troubled pupils, while school indifference deepens each day.

Sylvia Barrett, a new English teacher, enters a high‑school with a weary faculty, unruly students and an administration buried in endless paperwork. Her upbeat greeting—“Good morning, I’m Miss Barrett, your homeroom teacher”—sparks a battle of wills as she struggles to reach the most troubled pupils, while school indifference deepens each day.

Does Up the Down Staircase have end credit scenes?

No!

Up the Down Staircase does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Take the Ultimate Up the Down Staircase Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of Up the Down Staircase with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


Up the Down Staircase Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 1967 film *Up the Down Staircase* with these ten questions ranging from easy to challenging.

What is the name of the new English teacher who arrives at Calvin Coolidge High School?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Up the Down Staircase

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Read the complete plot summary of Up the Down Staircase, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


Sylvia Barrett, fresh out of graduate school, arrives at Calvin Coolidge High School, having just been hired to teach English. On her first day, she discovers a broken glass window and two broken chairs in her classroom, and the room quickly fills with students who are loud, unruly, and hard to discipline. One student, Alice Blake, has a crush on the English teacher, Paul Barringer, who happens to be Sylvia’s colleague. Another student, Joe Farone, is bright but troubled, currently on court-mandated probation.

As the weeks pass, Sylvia’s classroom remains a battle zone of inattentive pupils. After class, she talks with Barringer about their different teaching styles. Mr. McHabe, the vice-principal, calls her in to address Joe’s habitual absence and the mountain of attendance records she hasn’t filed. A girl named Linda arrives late one day, revealing she has suffered abuse at home. Concerned for her, Sylvia seeks guidance from Ellen Friedenberg, the school’s guidance figure, and learns about the students’ PRCs (permanent records). Sylvia decides to keep Joe after class to discuss his history, but he slips away, leaving her with more questions than answers. On the stairs later, their paths cross again, and she ends up reporting him for carrying a knife.

Barringer, who resents Sylvia’s calm, student-centered approach, clashes with her, while Beatrice Schacter, an older teacher, takes Sylvia under her wing and offers practical support. At the school dance, Barringer asks Sylvia to dance, but she declines. Instead, he chooses to dance with Alice, who has begun to trust Sylvia. Later, Alice hands Barringer a love letter she has written for him, only for Barringer to ruthlessly correct its grammar and spelling, which deeply wounds her. As Sylvia teaches Dickens’s A Tale of Two Cities in a lively discussion, Alice, who has skipped class, unexpectedly breaks through a school window—though a ledge stops her from a fatal fall.

The weight of the incident hits Sylvia when she learns of Alice’s suicide attempt after class, and she blames herself. In the meantime, Principal Bester—Dr. Bester—reinstates Joe back into Sylvia’s class, adding to her mounting responsibilities. Eddie Williams, a Black student in Sylvia’s class, decides to drop out, convinced that school won’t lead to a job. The next day, Barringer storms into Sylvia’s lesson and rants at the students, further widening the rift between them.

Midterms bring a spark of hope when Joe earns a surprisingly high grade on his paper, reinforcing Sylvia’s belief in the value of her approach. One evening, a parent-teacher conference unfolds where Sylvia meets several parents of underperforming students. Joe arrives unexpectedly and makes a pass at her, which she rebuffs firmly. The following day, Sylvia tells the principal that she intends to resign. Dr. Bester accepts her decision and asks her to fill out the proper paperwork.

Winter arrives, and Sylvia stages a mock trial with her students. Jose Rodriguez, a shy and reserved pupil, rises to the occasion and acts as a confident judge, handling himself with new poise. When the class is dismissed, Jose tells Sylvia that her English class is the best he has ever attended. This acknowledgment convinces her that her efforts have paid off, and she chooses to remain at Calvin Coolidge High, ready to continue guiding her students toward brighter futures.

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Up the Down Staircase Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


reference to calvin coolidgereference to george eliotreference to silas marnerreference to a tale of two citiesreference to charles dickensreference to emily dickinsonreference to edna st. vincent millayreference to geoffrey chaucerf ratedwhite saviorstrong female characterstudent teacher relationshipfirst day of schoolnew teacherguidance counselorclassroomstudent fancies teacherpandemoniumswimming upstreaminner city neighborhoodenglish teacherteacher as protagonistbroken windowschool assemblyprincipalpaperworkfaculty meetingtruancyswitch bladehigh school danceboogaloo danceracial discriminationexaminationparent teacher meetingreference to a prostitutemaking a passend credits roll callacademia dramainner cityyoungmentormenteeschoolgirl crushamerican scholastic educationincompetent principalstairwaystairwellheadmasterhot for teacherregulation

Up the Down Staircase Other Names and Titles

Explore the various alternative titles, translations, and other names used for Up the Down Staircase across different regions and languages. Understand how the film is marketed and recognized worldwide.


Escalier interdit Contra corriente Subindo Por Onde Se Desce Вверх по лестнице ведущей вниз Su per la discesa 桃李满门

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