The Address, however, features none of the oft-parodied 
Burns storytelling techniques. It's really a documentary about the 
Greenwood School in Putney, Vermont, which houses 50 boys ages 11 to 17 
who have various learning disabilities, including 
dyslexia, dysgraphia, executive function,
 and ADHD. With help from teachers, administrators, and advisors, the 
boys try to overcome their problems in order to memorize the Gettysburg 
Address. This is apparently a tradition at the school. The documentary 
genuflects in the direction of the "ticking clock" genre by telling us 
how many weeks are left until all the boys have to recite the Address, 
but its tone is unhurried to the point of being relaxed. Even though the
 story of the kids and the school is sometimes interrupted by factoids 
about President Lincoln's most famous bit of writing and the historical 
circumstances that birthed it — backed with music and voice-over 
narration performed by the students — the titular paragraph is just an 
excuse to tell us about the students' learning disabilities, what they 
mean in everyday terms, and what can be done to manage them. 
 
Along the way we also get lots of fly-on-the-wall scenes of the 
teachers working with the kids and zeroing in on their own distinct 
difficulties. One boy has trouble keeping focused. Another stumbles over
 particular words or phrases. Another seems fixated on his version of 
order, is annoyed that the Gettysburg Address doesn't fit it, points to a
 particularly irksome phrase, and asks the teacher, "Why can't you just 
switch it around?" If you have a friend or family member with a 
disability, you already know a lot of what The Address has to 
say, but if you've been untouched by this particular set of challenges, 
this might be an eye-opening primer. A school therapist tells us that 
for many of these kids, memorizing and accurately reciting 272 words is 
"the ultimate, difficult thing."