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Rethinking Education as the Practice of Freedom: Paulo Freire and the Promise of Critical Pedagogy

by: Henry A. Giroux, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

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Paulo Freire and Henry A. Giroux, Amherst, Massachusetts, 1981. (Photo: Henry A. Giroux)

Paulo Freire is one of the most important critical educators of the 20th century.[1] Not only is he considered one of the founders of critical pedagogy, but he also played a crucial role in developing a highly successful literacy campaign in Brazil before the onslaught of the junta in 1964. Once the military took over the government, Freire was imprisoned for a short time for his efforts. He eventually was released and went into exile, primarily in Chile and later in Geneva, Switzerland, for a number of years. Once a semblance of democracy returned to Brazil, he went back to his country in 1980 and played a significant role in shaping its educational policies until his untimely death in 1997. His book, "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," is considered one of the classic texts of critical pedagogy, and has sold over a million copies, influencing generations of teachers and intellectuals both in the United States and abroad. Since the 1980s, there has been no intellectual on the North American educational scene who has matched either his theoretical rigor or his moral courage. Most schools and colleges of education are now dominated by conservative ideologies, hooked on methods, slavishly wedded to instrumentalized accountability measures and run by administrators who lack either a broader vision or critical understanding of education as a force for strengthening the imagination and expanding democratic public life.

As the market-driven logic of neoliberal capitalism continues to devalue all aspects of the public good, one consequence has been that the educational concern with excellence has been removed from matters of equity, while the notion of schooling as a public good has largely been reduced to a private good. Both public and higher education are largely defined through the corporate demand that they provide the skills, knowledge and credentials that will provide the workforce necessary for the United States to compete and maintain its role as the major global economic and military power. Consequently, there is little interest in both public and higher education, and most importantly in many schools of education, for understanding pedagogy as a deeply civic, political and moral practice - that is, pedagogy as a practice for freedom. As schooling is increasingly subordinated to a corporate order, any vestige of critical education is replaced by training and the promise of economic security. Similarly, pedagogy is now subordinated to the narrow regime of teaching to the test coupled with an often harsh system of disciplinary control, both of which mutually reinforce each other. In addition, teachers are increasingly reduced to the status of technicians and deskilled as they are removed from having any control over their classrooms or school governance structures. Teaching to the test and the corporatization of education becomes a way of "taming" students and invoking modes of corporate governance in which public school teachers become deskilled and an increasing number of higher education faculty are reduced to part-time positions, constituting the new subaltern class of academic labor.

But there is more at stake here than a crisis of authority and the repression of critical thought. Too many classrooms at all levels of schooling now resemble a "dead zone," where any vestige of critical thinking, self-reflection and imagination quickly migrate to sites outside of the school only to be mediated and corrupted by a corporate-driven media culture. The major issue now driving public schooling is how to teach for the test, while disciplining those students who because of their class and race undermine a school district's ranking in the ethically sterile and bloodless world of high stakes testing and empirical score cards.[2] Higher education mimics this logic by reducing its public vision to the interests of capital and redefining itself largely as a credentializing factory for students and a Petri dish for downsizing academic labor. Under such circumstances, rarely do educators ask questions about how schools can prepare students to be informed citizens, nurture a civic imagination or teach them to be self-reflective about public issues and the world in which they live. As Stanley Aronowitz puts it:

"Few of even the so-called educators ask the question: What matters beyond the reading, writing, and numeracy that are presumably taught in the elementary and secondary grades? The old question of what a kid needs to become an informed 'citizen' capable of participating in making the large and small public decisions that affect the larger world as well as everyday life receives honorable mention but not serious consideration. These unasked questions are symptoms of a new regime of educational expectations that privileges job readiness above any other educational values."[3]

Against this regime of "scientific" idiocy and "bare pedagogy" stripped of all critical elements of teaching and learning, Freire believed that all education in the broadest sense was part of a project of freedom, and eminently political because it offered students the conditions for self-reflection, a self-managed life and particular notions of critical agency. As Aronowitz puts it in his analysis of Freire's work on literacy and critical pedagogy:

Thus, for Freire literacy was not a means to prepare students for the world of subordinated labor or "careers," but a preparation for a self-managed life. And self-management could only occur when people have fulfilled three goals of education: self-reflection, that is, realizing the famous poetic phrase, "know thyself," which is an understanding of the world in which they live, in its economic, political and, equally important, its psychological dimensions. Specifically "critical" pedagogy helps the learner become aware of the forces that have hitherto ruled their lives and especially shaped their consciousness. The third goal is to help set the conditions for producing a new life, a new set of arrangements where power has been, at least in tendency, transferred to those who literally make the social world by transforming nature and themselves.[4]

What Paulo made clear in "Pedagogy of the Oppressed," his most influential work, is that pedagogy at its best is about neither training, teaching methods nor political indoctrination. For Freire, pedagogy is not a method or an a priori technique to be imposed on all students, but a political and moral practice that provides the knowledge, skills and social relations that enable students to expand the possibilities of what it means to be critical citizens, while expanding and deepening their participation in the promise of a substantive democracy. Critical thinking for Freire was not an object lesson in test taking, but a tool for self-determination and civic engagement. For Freire, critical thinking was not about the task of simply reproducing the past and understanding the present. On the contrary, it offered a way of thinking beyond the present, soaring beyond the immediate confines of one's experiences, entering into a critical dialogue with history and imagining a future that did not merely reproduce the present. Theodor Adorno captures the spirit of Freire's notion of critical thinking by insisting that "Thinking is not the intellectual reproduction of what already exists anyway. As long as it doesn't break off, thinking has a secure hold on possibility. Its insatiable aspect, its aversion to being quickly and easily satisfied, refuses the foolish wisdom of resignation.... Open thinking points beyond itself."[5]

Freire rejected those regimes of educational degradation organized around the demands of the market, instrumentalized knowledge and the priority of training over the pursuit of the imagination, critical thinking and the teaching of freedom and social responsibility. Rather than assume the mantle of a false impartiality, Freire believed that critical pedagogy involves both the recognition that human life is conditioned not determined, and the crucial necessity of not only reading the world critically, but also intervening in the larger social order as part of the responsibility of an informed citizenry. According to Freire, the political and moral demands of pedagogy amount to more than the school and classroom being merely the instrument of official power or assuming the role of an apologist for the existing order, as the Obama administration seems to believe - given its willingness to give Bush's reactionary educational policies a new name and a new lease on life. Freire rejected those modes of pedagogy that supported economic models and modes of agency in which freedom is reduced to consumerism and economic activity is freed from any criterion except profitability and the reproduction of a rapidly expanding mass of wasted humans. Critical pedagogy attempts to understand how power works through the production, distribution and consumption of knowledge within particular institutional contexts and seeks to constitute students as informed subjects and social agents. In this instance, the issue of how identities, values and desires are shaped in the classroom is the grounds of politics. Critical pedagogy is thus invested in both the practice of self-criticism about the values that inform teaching and a critical self-consciousness regarding what it means to equip students with analytical skills to be self-reflective about the knowledge and values they confront in classrooms. Moreover, such a pedagogy attempts not only to provide the conditions for students to understand texts and different modes of intelligibility, but also opens up new avenues for them to make better moral judgments that will enable them to assume some sense of responsibility to the other in light of those judgments.

Freire was acutely aware that what makes critical pedagogy so dangerous to ideological fundamentalists, the ruling elites, religious extremists and right-wing nationalists all over the world is that, central to its very definition, is the task of educating students to become critical agents who actively question and negotiate the relationships between theory and practice, critical analysis and common sense and learning and social change. Critical pedagogy opens up a space where students should be able to come to terms with their own power as critically engaged citizens; it provides a sphere where the unconditional freedom to question and assert is central to the purpose of public schooling and higher education, if not democracy itself. And as a political and moral practice, way of knowing and literate engagement, pedagogy attempts to "make evident the multiplicity and complexity of history."[6] History in this sense is engaged as a narrative open to critical dialogue rather than predefined text to be memorized and accepted unquestioningly. Pedagogy in this instance provides the conditions to cultivate in students a healthy skepticism about power, a "willingness to temper any reverence for authority with a sense of critical awareness."[7] As a performative practice, pedagogy takes as one of its goals the opportunity for students to be able to reflectively frame their own relationship to the ongoing project of an unfinished democracy. It is precisely this relationship between democracy and pedagogy that is so threatening to so many of our educational leaders and spokespersons today and it is also the reason why Freire's work on critical pedagogy and literacy are more relevant today than when they were first published.

According to Freire, all forms of pedagogy represent a particular way of understanding society and a specific commitment to the future. Critical pedagogy, unlike dominant modes of teaching, insists that one of the fundamental tasks of educators is to make sure that the future points the way to a more socially just world, a world in which the discourses of critique and possibility in conjunction with the values of reason, freedom and equality function to alter, as part of a broader democratic project, the grounds upon which life is lived. This is hardly a prescription for political indoctrination, but it is a project that gives critical education its most valued purpose and meaning, which, in part, is "to encourage human agency, not mold it in the manner of Pygmalion."[8] It is also a position, that threatens right-wing private advocacy groups, neoconservative politicians and conservative extremists. Such individuals and groups are keenly aware that critical pedagogy, with its emphasis on the hard work of critical analysis, moral judgments and social responsibility, goes to the very heart of what it means to address real inequalities of power at the social level and to conceive of education as a project for freedom, while at the same time foregrounding a series of important and often ignored questions such as: "What is the role of teachers and academics as public intellectuals? Whose interests does public and higher education serve? How might it be possible to understand and engage the diverse contexts in which education takes place? What is the role of education as a public good? How do we make knowledge meaningful in order to make it critical and transformative? In spite of the right-wing view that equates indoctrination with any suggestion of politics, critical pedagogy is not concerned with simply offering students new ways to think critically and act with authority as agents in the classroom; it is also concerned with providing students with the skills and knowledge necessary for them to expand their capacities both to question deep-seated assumptions and myths that legitimate the most archaic and disempowering social practices that structure every aspect of society and to then take responsibility for intervening in the world they inhabit.

Education is not neutral. It is always directive in its attempt to teach students to inhabit a particular mode of agency; enable them to understand the larger world and one's role in it in a specific way; define their relationship, if not responsibility, to diverse others and to presuppose through what is taught and experienced in the classroom some sort of understanding of a more just, imaginative, and democratic life. Pedagogy is by definition directive, but that does not mean it is merely a form of indoctrination. On the contrary, as Freire argued, education as a practice for freedom must attempt to expand the capacities necessary for human agency and, hence, the possibilities for democracy itself. Surely, this suggests that at all levels of education from the primary school to the privileged precincts of higher education, educators should nourish those pedagogical practices that promote "a concern with keeping the forever unexhausted and unfulfilled human potential open, fighting back all attempts to foreclose and pre-empt the further unraveling of human possibilities, prodding human society to go on questioning itself and preventing that questioning from ever stalling or being declared finished."[9] In other words, critical pedagogy forges both an expanded notion of literacy and agency through a language of skepticism, possibility and a culture of openness, debate and engagement - all those elements now at risk because of the current and most dangerous attacks on public and higher education. This was Paulo's legacy, one that invokes dangerous memories and, hence, is increasingly absent from any discourse about current educational problems.

I first met Paulo in the early 1980s, just after I had been denied tenure by John Silber, then the notorious right-wing president of Boston University. Paulo was giving a talk at the University of Massachusetts, and he came to my house in Boston for dinner. His humility was completely at odds with his reputation and I remember being greeted with such warmth and sincerity that I felt completely at ease with him. We talked for a long time that night about his exile, my firing, what it meant to be a working-class intellectual, the risk one had to take to make a difference, and when the night was over a friendship was forged that lasted until his death 15 years later. I was in a very bad place after being denied tenure and had no idea what my future would hold for me. I am convinced that if it had not been for Freire and Donaldo Macedo, also a friend and co-author with Paulo's,[10] I am not sure I would have stayed in the field of education. But Freire's passion for education and Macedo's friendship convinced me that education was not merely important, but a crucial site of struggle.

VIDEO: Joe Kincheloe | Interview With Henry Giroux
This video may be of interest to those interested in an introduction to critical pedagogy and a discussion of Paulo Freire's influence on Henry Giroux and his work. (Courtesy: The Paulo and Nita Freire International Project for Critical Pedagogy)

Unlike so many intellectuals I have met in academia, Paulo was always so generous, eager to publish the work of younger intellectuals, write letters of support and give as much as possible of himself in the service of others. The early eighties were exciting years in education in the US and Paulo was at the center of it. Together, we started a critical education and culture series at Bergin and Garvey and published over a hundred young authors, many of whom went on to have a significant influence in the university. Jim Bergin became Paulo's patron as his American publisher, Donaldo became his translator and a co-author and we all took our best shots in translating, publishing and distributing Paulo's work, always with the hope of inviting him back to the US so we could meet, talk, drink good wine and recharge the struggles that all marked us in different ways. Of course, it is difficult to write simply about Paulo as a person because who he was and how he entered one's space and the world could never be separated from his politics. Hence, I want to try to provide a broader context for my own understanding of him as well as those ideas that consistently shaped our relationship and his relationship with others.

Occupying the often difficult space between existing politics and the as yet possible, Paulo Freire spent most of his life working in the belief that the radical elements of democracy are worth struggling for, that critical education is a basic element of social change and that how we think about politics is inseparable from how we come to understand the world, power and the moral life we aspire to lead. In many ways, Paulo embodied the important but often problematic relationship between the personal and the political. His own life was a testimonial not only to his belief in democracy, but also to the notion that one's life had to come as close as possible to modeling the social relations and experiences that spoke to a more humane and democratic future. At the same time, Paulo never moralized about politics, never employed the discourse of shame or collapsed the political into the personal when talking about social issues. For him, private problems had to be understood in relation to larger public issues. Everything about him suggested that the first order of politics was humility, compassion and a willingness to fight against human injustices.

Freire's belief in democracy as well as his deep and abiding faith in the ability of people to resist the weight of oppressive institutions and ideologies was forged in a spirit of struggle tempered by both the grim realities of his own imprisonment and exile, mediated by both a fierce sense of outrage and the belief that education and hope are the conditions of both agency and politics. Acutely aware that many contemporary versions of hope occupied their own corner in Disneyland, Freire fought against such appropriations and was passionate about recovering and rearticulating hope through, in his words, an "understanding of history as opportunity and not determinism."[11] Hope for Freire was a practice of witnessing, an act of moral imagination that enabled progressive educators and others to think otherwise in order to act otherwise. Hope demanded an anchoring in transformative practices, and one of the tasks of the progressive educator was to "unveil opportunities for hope, no matter what the obstacles may be."[12] Underlying Freire's politics of hope was a view of radical pedagogy that located itself on the dividing lines where the relations between domination and oppression, power and powerlessness continued to be produced and reproduced. For Freire, hope as a defining element of politics and pedagogy always meant listening to and working with the poor and other subordinate groups so that they might speak and act in order to alter dominant relations of power. Whenever we talked, he never allowed himself to become cynical. He was always full of life, taking great delight in eating a good meal, listening to music, opening himself up to new experiences and engaging in dialogue with a passion that both embodied his own politics and confirmed the lived presence of others.

Committed to the specific, the play of context and the possibility inherent in what he called the unfinished nature of human beings, Freire offered no recipes for those in need of instant theoretical and political fixes. For him, pedagogy was strategic and performative: considered as part of a broader political practice for democratic change, critical pedagogy was never viewed as an a priori discourse to be reasserted or a methodology to be implemented, or for that matter a slavish attachment to knowledge that can only be quantified. On the contrary, for Freire, pedagogy was a political and performative act organized around the "instructive ambivalence of disrupted borders,"[13] a practice of bafflement, interruption, understanding and intervention that is the result of ongoing historical, social and economic struggles. I was often amazed at how patient he always was in dealing with people who wanted him to provide menu-like answers to the problems they raised about education, not realizing that they were undermining his own insistence that pedagogy could never be reduced to a method. His patience was always instructive for me and I am convinced that it was only later in my life that I was able to begin to emulate it in my own interactions with audiences.

Paulo was a cosmopolitan intellectual, who never overlooked the details in everyday life and the connections the latter had to a much broader, global world. He consistently reminded us that political struggles are won and lost in those specific yet hybridized spaces that linked narratives of everyday experience with the social gravity and material force of institutional power. Any pedagogy that called itself Freirean had to acknowledge the centrality of the particular and contingent in shaping historical contexts and political projects. Although Freire was a theoretician of radical contextualism, he also acknowledged the importance of understanding the particular and the local in relation to larger, global and cross-national forces. For Freire, literacy as a way of reading and changing the world had to be reconceived within a broader understanding of citizenship, democracy and justice that was global and transnational. Making the pedagogical more political in this case meant moving beyond the celebration of tribal mentalities and developing a praxis that foregrounded "power, history, memory, relational analysis, justice (not just representation), and ethics as the issues central to transnational democratic struggles."[14]

But Freire's insistence that education was about the making and changing of contexts did more than seize upon the political and pedagogic potentialities to be found across a spectrum of social sites and practices in society, which, of course, included but were not limited to the school. He also challenged the separation of culture from politics by calling attention to how diverse technologies of power work pedagogically within institutions to produce, regulate and legitimate particular forms of knowing, belonging, feeling and desiring. But Freire did not make the mistake of many of his contemporaries by conflating culture with the politics of recognition. Politics was more than a gesture of translation, representation and dialogue, it was also about creating the conditions for people to govern rather than be merely governed, capable of mobilizing social movements against the oppressive economic, racial and sexist practices put into place by colonization, global capitalism, and other oppressive structures of power.

Paulo Freire left behind a corpus of work that emerged out of a lifetime of struggle and commitment. Refusing the comfort of master narratives, Freire work was always unsettled and unsettling, restless yet engaging. Unlike so much of the politically arid and morally vacuous academic and public prose that characterizes contemporary intellectual discourse, Freire's work was consistently fueled by a healthy moral rage over the needless oppression and suffering he witnessed throughout his life as he traveled all over the globe. Similarly, his work exhibited a vibrant and dynamic quality that allowed it to grow, refuse easy formulas and open itself to new political realities and projects. Freire's genius was to elaborate a theory of social change and engagement that was neither vanguardist nor populist. While he had a profound faith in the ability of ordinary people to shape history and to become critical agents in shaping their own destinies, he refused to romanticize the culture and experiences that produced oppressive social conditions. Combining theoretical rigor, social relevance and moral compassion, Freire gave new meaning to the politics of daily life while affirming the importance of theory in opening up the space of critique, possibility, politics and practice. Theory and language were a site of struggle and possibility that gave experience meaning and action a political direction, and any attempt to reproduce the binarism of theory vs. politics was repeatedly condemned by Freire.[15] Freire loved theory, but he never reified it. When he talked about Freud, Marx or Erich Fromm, one could feel his intense passion for ideas. And, yet, he never treated theory as an end in itself; it was always a resource, the value of which lay in understanding, critically engaging and transforming the world as part of a larger project of freedom and justice. To say that his joy around such matters was infectious is to understate his own presence and impact on so many people that he met in his life.

I had a close personal relationship with Paulo for over 15 years, and I was always moved by the way in which his political courage and intellectual reach were matched by a love of life and generosity of spirit. The political and the personal mutually informed Freire's life and work. He was always the curious student even as he assumed the role of a critical teacher. As he moved between the private and the public, he revealed an astonishing gift for making everyone he met feel valued. His very presence embodied what it meant to combine political struggle and moral courage, to make hope meaningful and despair unpersuasive. Paulo was vigilant in bearing witness to the individual and collective suffering of others, but shunned the role of the isolated intellectual as an existential hero who struggles alone. For Freire, intellectuals must match their call for making the pedagogical more political with an ongoing effort to build those coalitions, affiliations and social movements capable of mobilizing real power and promoting substantive social change. Freire understood quite keenly that democracy was threatened by a powerful military-industrial complex and the increased power of the warfare state, but he also recognized the pedagogical force of a corporate and militarized culture that eroded the moral and civic capacities of citizens to think beyond the common sense of official power and its legitimating ideologies. Freire never lost sight of Robert Hass' claim that the job of education, its political job, "is to refresh the idea of justice going dead in us all the time."[16] At a time when education has become one of the official sites of conformity, disempowerment and uncompromising modes of punishment, the legacy of Paulo Freire's work is more important than ever before.

NOTES:

[1] One of the best sources on the life and work of Paulo Freire is Peter Mayo, "Liberating Praxis: Freire's Legacy for Radical Education and Politics" (Rotterdam: Sense Publishers, 2008). Two of the best translators of Freire's work to the American context are Donaldo Macedo, "Literacies of Power" (Boulder: Westview, 1994) and Ira Shor, "Freire for the Classroom" (Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Boynton/Cook, 1987).

[2] On the issue of containment and the pedagogy of punishment, see: Jenny Fisher, "The Walking Wounded: The Crisis of Youth, School Violence, and Precarious Pedagogy, Review of Education, Cultural Studies, and Pedagogy" (in press).

[3] Stanley Aronowitz, "Against Schooling: For an Education That Matters," (Boulder, Colorado: Paradigm Publishers, 2008), p. xii.

[4] Stanley Aronowitz, "Forward," "Critical Pedagogy in Uncertain Times: Hope and Possibilities," ed. Sheila L. Macrine, (New York, New York, Palgrave MacMillan, 2009) pp. ix.

[5] Theodor Adorno, "Education after Auschwitz," "Critical Models: Interventions and Catchwords" (New York: Columbia University Press, 1998), p. 291-292.

[6] Edward Said, "Reflections on Exile and Other Essays" (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001), p. 141.

[7] Ibid, Edward Said, Reflections on Exile and Other Essays, p. 501.

[8] Stanley Aronowitz, "Introduction," in "Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of Freedom" (Boulder: Rowman and Littlefield, 1998), pp. 10 - 11.

[9] Zygmunt Bauman and Keith Tester, "Conversations With Zygmunt Bauman" (Malden: Polity Press, 2001), p. 4.

[10] See Paulo Freire and Donaldo Macedo, "Literacy: Reading the Word and the World" (Amherst, Massachusetts: Bergin and Garvey, 1987).

[11] Paulo Freire, "Pedagogy of Hope" (New York: Continuum Press, 1994), p. 91.

[12] Ibid., p. 9.

[13] Cited in Homi Bhabha, "The Enchantment of Art," Carol Becker and Ann Wiens, eds. "The Artist in Society" (Chicago: New Art Examiner, 1994), p. 28.

[14] M. Jacqui Alexander and Chandra Talpade Mohanty, "Introduction: Genealogies, Legacies, Movements," J. Jacqui Alexander and Chandra Mohanty, eds. "Feminist Genealogies, Colonial Legacies, Democratic Futures" (New York: Routledge, 1997), p. xix.

[15] Surely, Freire would have agreed wholeheartedly with Stuart Hall's insight that: "It is only through the way in which we represent and imagine ourselves that we come to know how we are constituted and who we are. There is no escape from the politics of representation." Stuart Hall, "What is this 'Black' in Popular Culture?" in Gina Dent, ed. "Black Popular Culture" (Seattle: Bay Press, 1992), pp. 30.

[16] Robert Hass cited in Sarah Pollock, "Robert Hass," Mother Jones (March/April, 1992), p. 22.

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Henry A. Giroux currently holds the Global TV Network Chair Professorship at McMaster University in the English and Cultural Studies Department. He has taught at Boston University, Miami University of Ohio, and Penn State University. His most recent books include: Youth in a Suspect Society (Palgrave, 2009); Politics After Hope: Obama and the Crisis of Youth, Race, and Democracy (Paradigm, 2010); Hearts of Darkness: Torturing Children in the War on Terror (Paradigm, 2010); and he is working on two new books titled Zombie Politics and Culture in the Age of Casino Capitalism and Education and the Crisis of Public Values, both of which will be published in 2011 by Peter Lang Publishers. Giroux is also a member of Truthout's Board of Directors. His website is www.henryagiroux.com.

 

 

Comments

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Henry, this article is

Henry, this article is wonderful. Thank you very much for publishing it on T.O.. I will read it several times, savoring your heart-felt communications and radical insights that conflate into a masterful presentation that might facilitate the birth of the new kind of human being; one in which intellectual development remains un-separated from the cultivation of liberal grassroots movements to undermine the insane and inane assertions of Obama's and the USA's corporate-military-industrial-complex that is rapidly destroying the last vestiges of that hopeful world-view that would produce the very and new form of pedagogy you represent -- and embody in your writings and person -- so beautifully. We are all deeply indebted to your passion and intelligence and commitment to create a better world through an understanding of Freire.

why yes ! what matters

why yes ! what matters reading, math, and knowledge about the world when we can learn the politically right things !

This is a very valuable

This is a very valuable article. I hesitate to criticize it but I have to say that I think it would be more effective if it were not so painstakingly spelled out. It tends to repetition which can encourage the reader to skip lightly instead of becoming fully engaged. In that, it can defeat its own purpose. I hope it will be widely read and taken to heart.

The "why yes!' responder

The "why yes!' responder seems to have utterly missedthe point of Friere's therory re: education; a re-read of the article above might help; I suspect that this
"anoymous" soul is very young, or else very uneducated, so that the point may be not so obvious to him. Sorry. Peace/struggle/resist unreal authority!

Very fine article. Ever

Very fine article. Ever since Bush the first let everyone know we were available to be "Pinkertons to the world" as I recall him putting it, and our military became volunteer, it must have looked to young people as if being either a policeman or a soldier were their only options.

Time for a real change! Political correctness was the entrée for right wing censorship and it has harmed us all.

I want to believe in Friere

I want to believe in Friere and Giroux's thoughtful thesis, but it is hard to reconcile with the realities of life and educational attainment of our mostly poor, non-Anglo, non-English-speaking public school attendees. How shall we reach these kids in our schools? How will present schooling prevail over influences from a crushingly consumerist popular culture and the profoundly deprived and dumbed-down environments from which these kids come?
This deepening crisis will not be changed by radical thoughts from Friere/Giroux or by more of the status quo Clinton/Bush/Obama anti-union thinking, funding and testing solutions. Where is the "Change" we were promised?
Giroux aptly characterizes the continuing corporate-model neo-conservative and neo-liberal assaults on democratic government and on public education. That would include the Obama administration's extortionate "race to the top" money substituting for difficult, thoughtful, powerful and comprehensive education reform. We are in more trouble than even Giroux imagines, and his fancy philosophical rhetoric doesn't help.

There's so much to commend

There's so much to commend here. Today in America teachers are being directed by administrators to waste an unconscionable amount of time on "student learning outcomes"-- which seem to rely unduly on B.F. Skinners' very unscientific behaviorism that ambitions treating people like pigeons. These administrators as a class seem to have sold out and become uncritically devoted to "molding" students rather than educating them. If a "critical thinking" course is taught at all, it is all too likely under administrative pressure to turn into one in which each of "the Seven Steps toward Critical Thinking" will have been mastered as of a particular period of time by "73% of the students" to a "56% of operational efficiency." In other words, it too will have become one more exercise in rote memory and "informational" manipulation. None of this is entirely by accident. The long-term goal is docile workers and docile consumers.

So refreshing to hear

So refreshing to hear Freire's ideas again. His writing was so influential to my developing ideas many years ago. He is so right in directing us to never lose sight of the relationship between the detail and the larger picture, the local event and global process. Such understanding is so missing in most dialogues and issues today and so the disconnect, disempowerment, confusion and faulty decisions are made as people often work against their own better interests.

Freire has always been one

Freire has always been one of my educational heroes, in line with John Dewey, and before that folk educator Grundtvig (Danish 19th Century). They have always maintained that in order to have a working democracy, one must have an educated citizenry. How far we have strayed from that! It really began drifting that way when the bean counters took over the schools. I tried very hard to teach that way for 35 years. Principals and administrators pushed us to teach to the test, take the latest training in whatever was in vogue for decade, do it for 5 years and then move on! Thank you for this article and effort to bring Freire to the forefront again. I shall send it on to some of my former students who are now in the ranks of teachers.

One way to achieve a less

One way to achieve a less corporatist and militarist slant and emphasis on our curriculum may be to propose what Ron Paul has been proposing for some time: eliminate the Department of Education. The D of E only facilitates this damaging top-down agenda of teaching to the test, whereas local public governments may be better equipped to provide a more relevant and benevolent framework with which to educate our children.

Until you, Paolo and anyone

Until you, Paolo and anyone else interested in an enlightened society include the spiritual along with the worldly you will continue competing in the world of confused opinion. It never changes except for the individual(s) who are curious and in enough psychological pain to search the "real world" beyond the dualistic world. Your exercise is to exhaust your own adventitious aims. As sincere and genuine as I know you to be, you will only add to the empowerment of others when you yourself gain insight into mind.

I feel like I'm about to

I feel like I'm about to intrude. This article is obviously for persons far better educated than I.
But I deal with this problem on a different level.
In 19 years as a State University Community College Board member and on State policy committees, I always raised the issue that we, as colleges, had a primary responsibility to educate Citizens so that they could participate effectively in governing themselves in this "representative democracy". I received applause and, eventually, a prestigious award, but no support.
As other board members and college presidents pointed out, the money comes from the State budget which is controlled by those who believe the right reason for public education is to train a competent and docile work force.
Bluntly, policies are controlled by budget and emphasis on what we shall teach focuses on what the financial sources believe we should teach.
Working with local school boards, I found again that the school budget election and election or selection of school board members is again driven by the same philosophy.
This is a lovely article, but how do we bring it to the real world?

What seems to be missing

What seems to be missing from Freire and the system he criticizes is forgetting that for the benefits he claims possible must first exist the environment of decision making that supports it. There is a vast spectrum of learning opportunities possible within an educational environment if the decision to be there by the participants exists. To create that environment, the student must learn that the decision making process involves natural and logical consequences. This fertile environment with its structured forgiving nature teaches that life long useful skill of making good decisions based on critical thinking. Our present system by not allowing its students to choose to be there and participate within certain behavior boundaries that support a learning environment put critical thinking into the abstract world rather than the real world of every day school life. The result of not allowing natural and logical consequences for behavior that does not support the educational environment is dysfunction. That dysfunction then permeates every aspect of public education and results in the flight to the perceived next best answers which are highly structured back-to-basics or specialized alternative education environments.

Unfortunately the public school system by not being willing to allow failure actually causes failure. Some children don't belong there and never will. Some can learn to make better decisions in an environment that allows them to make mistakes, handle the consequences, and make a decision to re-enter. Some will survive in any environment and some will excel. Let's recognize that to save those who we can, we ask them to learn to make decisions that support the learning environment and if they can't they can try again and again and again until they either can not or they begin to learn how to make good life affecting decisions that will benefit them going forward.

Think of the many paths of learning that are possible in an environment where the participants actually participate at whatever level they are capable because they are making decisions to support it.

23:22 is WRONG. Ron Paul is

23:22 is WRONG. Ron Paul is essentially an anti-government, biblical-literalist opposing any form of government sponsored, educational intrusion -- in principle -- on the grounds that it contradicts private property rights and the spread of his form (i.e. the John Rushdoony brand) of right-wing Christianity through the home schooling process. He's also an ardent admirer of Milton Friedman, who I can assure you Giroux loathes. Paul knows the best way for Christians to remain cultural dullards and closeted racists is to school them at home with intellectual "inbreeding" programs designed by redneck and under-educated parents. He also defends home education because his thinking is in line with the the lunatic theologies of the Rushdoony family of Christian Crackpots, who are essentially KKK-inspired Christians. When Ron Paul ran for office, one of his first backers, who was thrilled to death at his candidacy, was the self proclaimed, neo-Nazi David Duke. So please, let's drop "Ron Paul" from this discussion entirely and leave him be where he belongs: in Texas with the Republican morons who re-elect him term after term. Besides, Giroux would probably vomit over the notion of home schooling as recommended by Ron Paul and the others. Yes, I know, Ron Paul has some great ideas, but his own stupidity rapidly cancels their benefits.

Yada yada yada How many

Yada yada yada

How many teachers with Paulo Freire background do the teachers shut out of their mystical profession of teaching?

The article is wrong. He is required reading in education programs that take students' student loan money, and then they are out of work when they graduate, and unable to pay it back.

Paulo Freire took his ideas from the Russian Revolution where they taught workers to read and write with literature from Lenin and Marx.

It was not new when Freire got a hold of it. There is nothing unusual about knowing that people are intelligent.

Very informative comment and

Very informative comment and an interesting mix of twelve-step thinking and free market philosophy. I do agree with much of what you offer.

Unfortunately your comments also seem to fall into the morass of abstraction with those you critiqued. Public schools are not the free acting entities that you depict.

For example, In Texas, our curriculum is decided through a state-wide committee system. The "findings" then go through an "Expert Committee" who vote on content and then pass their decisions on to the Texas Education Agency.

It has been very well documented that Business Roundtable and other self-interest groups were involved in the development an agenda in public education since the 1990s. High-stakes testing, elimination of alternative economic systems, veneration of free enterprise, eliminating or under emphasizing events and people in history, and asserting the projected employment needs of corporate America became the objectives of K-12 curricula through their work. For example: See the special appointments made to the State Social Studies Curriculum Committee made by Governor Rick Perry.

You say that some students must fail. Texas does a great job of that. How? All students are supposed to be college bound in the Lone Star State of confusion. All Texas public ed. students must pass algebra I & II (and geometry). Great goal - big disaster. Repeated failure in these subjects lead to high drop out rates.

Furthermore, while teaching public school in the 1990s-2005 I was told NOT to discuss involvement in apprenticeship programs in the building trades through the local AFL-CIO and area businesses. The reason: "We are all supposed to be critical thinkers and achieve higher goals by going to college." This does not represent the failure of students, but a failure of the system.

After thirty years of teaching in parochial schools, public schools, and in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice I can make the following recommendation. Get into correctional education and save those who can be saved. It is done every day and done without any public recognition or fanfare. Furthermore, the public schools and the general public will provide an endless supply of students - true job security. You can see then every day how the neo-lib. business boys truly love America.

Hey Yada, Yada! I'm not

Hey Yada, Yada!
I'm not going to go into your incorrect positioning of Paulo Freire with the Russian Revolution - it's a waste of my time.
Look at the prime state of "free enterprise" and see the joyous growth of Milton Freedman's gleeful drivel and how it's leading to something else you seem to support - fascism. In Texas, our curriculum is decided through a state-wide committee system. The "findings" then go through an "Expert Committee" who vote on content and then pass their decisions on to the Texas Education Agency.
It has been very well documented that Business Roundtable and other self-interest groups were involved in the development an agenda in public education since the 1990s. High-stakes testing, elimination of alternative economic systems, veneration of free enterprise, eliminating or under emphasizing events and people in history, and asserting the projected employment needs of corporate America became the objectives of K-12 curricula through their work. For example: See the special appointments made to the State Social Studies Curriculum Committee made by Governor Rick Perry.
All students are supposed to be college bound in the Lone Star State. All Texas public ed. students must pass algebra I & II (and geometry). Great goal - big disaster. Repeated failure in these subjects lead to high drop out rates.
Furthermore, while teaching in the Texas public schools, I was told NOT to discuss involvement in apprenticeship programs in the building trades through the local AFL-CIO and area businesses. The reason: "We are all supposed to be critical thinkers and achieve higher goals by going to college."
Well we did what our "free enterprise" advocates wanted. Now we have market driven-students with market-driven majors, graduating from-market driven universities, only to apply for jobs that have been out-sourced to third world countries. They now work in "internships" for little of no pay or face unemployment. This, of course is perhaps a better situation than those who drop out of high school.
After thirty years of teaching in parochial schools, public schools, and in the Texas justice I can make the following recommendation. Get into corrections. Public schools and the general public will provide an endless supply of students - true job security. Furthermore, our mindless propensity toward privet sector replacement of public sector services will bring in even more business..........
Your ideas are as dead as Milton Freedman or Ronald Reagan

What, TO cannot edit or

What, TO cannot edit or delete the same piece sent in over and over again?

One way to effect some

One way to effect some amount of change without waiting for the results of the, now negligible, pressure on states to make general and official changes in educational programs, is to make postings of interesting educational material, so that students or fellow teachers can reach it and benefir from it or take parts of it to send others and talk about it etc . As an example I insert here a part of a posting in which I have taken excerpts of thinkers and put them next to each other to sound as if they were talking to each other about education after hearing some stupid statement by Rumsfeld on the news:

Relevant forums/agoras or useless “debate societies”?

“…You ask what happened at the Baghdad museum, OK, the TV played many times the scene with the guy running away with a vase and some people thought thousands of vases had been stolen, but it was the same vase, how many vases can Iraq have?...You ask if I myself went to Iraq to sell weapons to Saddam. Well, I don’t remember….You ask me what I say to the people in this room who were taken out because they shouted things defaming me. I say to them that I believe in Free Speech… You ask me if what we have is victory. To answer this I’d have to first see statistics which would show if the rate we kill terrorists exceeds the rate at which they show up…” Donald Rumsfeld

“A more practical proposal is to help to change the culture of the domestic society enough so that what should be now done could at least be made a subject of discussion” Noam Chomsky

“…children do have to be prepared for the economic world--but the invasion of the public school by mercantile values has deeply demoralized teachers. I’ve been in classrooms where the teacher has to write a so-called mission statement that says, “The mission of this school is to sharpen the competitive edge of America in the global marketplace.” Jonathan Kozol amd Mathew Fishbane

“If you want to rule address yourself to the idiot, they’re the majority…I would never entrust the state with my education” Mark Twain

“Always obey your conscience, even if the state allows you not to… Dare to take your ideas seriously, because it is them that will shape you” Albert Einstein

“…(you seem to believe)…that there is a moral difference between setting out to destroy as many
civilians as possible and killing civilian unintentionally and reluctantly in pursuit of a military
objective… Evidently, a crucial case is omitted, which is far more depraved than massacring civilians intentionally. Namely, knowing that you are massacring them but not doing so intentionally because you don’t regard them as worthy of concern. That is, you don’t even care enough about them to intend to kill them. Thus when I walk down the street, if I stop to think about it I know I’ll probably kill lots of ants, but I don’t intend to kill them, because in my mind they do not even rise to the level where it matters. There are many such examples. To take one of the very minor ones, when Clinton bombed …the al-Shifa pharmaceutical facility in Sudan, he and the other perpetrators surely knew that the bombing would kill civilians (tens of thousands, apparently). But Clinton and associates did not intend to kill them… because
by the standards of Western liberal humanitarian racism, they are no more significant than ants. Same in the case of tens of millions of others” Noam Chomsky
(For another instance of the above google “Some matter more, David Edwards, July 25, Znet”)
“…This is not a prophecy: it is a factual description of what is already happening before our eyes, with murderous confrontations and infantile tantrums taking the place of rational demands and cooperative efforts. Yes: the physical structure of the power system was never more closely articulated: but its human supports were never more frail, more morally indecisive, more vulnerable to attack. How long , those who are now awake must ask themselves, how long can the physical structure of an advanced technology hold together when all its human foundations are crumbling away? All this has happened so suddenly that many people are hardly aware that it has happened at all: yet during the last generation the very bottom has dropped out of our life; the human institutions and moral convictions that have taken thousands of years to achieve even a minimal efficacy have disappeared before our eyes: so completely that the next generation will scarcely believe they ever existed” Lewis Mumford
(in Vietnam years)
........................
(google with the words in the title to see the sequel of the discussion)

Took a decisive stand on

Took a decisive stand on precisely this question, when teaching the poor and disenfranchised in Brazil how to read and write. His idea was simple: reading and writing were coupled with observing and thinking and reobserving and rethinking, in a process where the thoughts can be written down for reflection and reconsideration and reworking. This required sensitivity to the real circumstances in the real lives of real people; the illiterate adult frankly doesn't give a damn if Jane saw spot run: that adult, though illiterate, is already confronting serious issues, and this fact itself must be taken seriously in education. Of course, a project that empowers the poor and disenfranchised is by definition subversive to the privileged: it threatens the status quo that produced such powerlessness and poverty..

chai tee

3:15 It's Yada Yada Yada

3:15 It's Yada Yada Yada responding. I wonder what kind of teacher you really are since I don't recognize the person you imagine you're speaking with. Milton Friedman? Ronald Reagan? Fasicst? Wow. A from where did you garnish this information?

Yes, he did develop ideas from educational methods used with workers prior to and during the Russian Revolution. Many of workers even child laborers learning to read. I know this because I have a family member who learned to read this way. It was a very exciting time for some in those days.

Your teaching system screws a lot of people over, with teachers like yourself often the most active and ardent in doing so. And if you don't understand that,or your own role in that process, maybe you have alot more you need learn about Paulo Freire.

As for your tip on prison system, it's not my cup of tea, but I've seen plenty of you would do marvelously in such an environment. Literally living for those moments when you could put others down and in their places.

3:15 It's Yada Yada Yada

3:15 It's Yada Yada Yada responding. I wonder what kind of teacher you really are since I don't recognize the person you imagine you're speaking with. Milton Friedman? Ronald Reagan? Fasicst? Wow. From where did you garnish this information?

Yes, he did develop ideas from educational methods used with workers prior to and during the Russian Revolution. Many of workers even child laborers learning to read. I know this because I have a family member who learned to read this way. It was a very exciting time for some in those days.

As for your tip on prison system, it's not my cup of tea, but I've seen plenty of you would do marvelously in such an environment. Literally living for those moments when you could put others down and in their places. Whether you read Paulo Freire or didn't. After all, you know so much about people from one post on the internet.

I would say, rather, whatever pedagogy you use, you need a lot work on your reading comprehension.

... whatever pedagogy you

... whatever pedagogy you use, you lack reading comprehension.

Cheerio.

Hi, everyone, I've enjoyed

Hi, everyone, I've enjoyed the comments on this article, all food for thought.

Henry, I love your article on Freire's ideas and the man himself. Freire's theory underpins and informs my work as an educator and midwife. I think Freire would have loved the possibilities provided by the internet and social media.

Thanks for sharing your insights and knowledge.

Education certainly does lead to freedom. In terms of embracing spirituality in the work, the very attitude and theory of Freire embodies spiritual understanding. To make that understanding overt in the days when Freire wrote Pedagogy of the Oppressed would have been intellectual suicide. His Pedagogy of Hope may demonstrate that embodiment more for those who are interested.

Let's face an inconvenient

Let's face an inconvenient truth: no amount of internal tinkering is going to transform the fundamentals of neoliberal civilization. The project to move the planet to greater justice (through critical pedagogy, or any other conceivable means) is a puerile pipe dream. The very notion of world justice is an artifact of neoliberal ideology. Only radical, external forces (external to neoliberal civilization) can bring about its fundamental transformation/destruction.

Hi, everyone, I've

Hi, everyone, I've enjoyed
Mon, 01/04/2010 - 22:21 — Carolyn (not verified)
Hi, everyone, I've enjoyed the comments on this article, all food for thought

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Then I guess you enjoy when your fellow teachers engage in name-calling and verbal abuse.

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"Education certainly does lead to freedom."

Not reflected when people simply spout truisms and inanities.

Or blink their eyes with empty-headed smiles when teachers act like tyrants and project their worst of traits on others.

Education in America is finished as a profession.

Freire in the hands of today's teachers is useless. It is only about rationalization in service of narcissism.

to the naysayers, and

to the naysayers, and questioners "how can we do...?"-people:
You get up and do it. As you practice what you preach, you work toward trying to become more effective at it. The oppressors put their pants on the same way you do, but in addition to being committed to their ideas, they go out and make things happen. When Oliver North et al wanted to further U.S. interests in Latin America and they needed funding, they went and found financing through drug trafficing. You get out and make it happen, don't wait on someone to make it for you. Too many intellectuals and people with "good ideas" just sit on them and act pitiful, be just as ruthless in advancing your position as your opponents.

To Arius Corvinus regarding

To Arius Corvinus regarding What Seems To Be Missing. I think you may have misunderstood at least one aspect of my comment. I would never characterize public schools as being "free acting entities." In fact I would suggest just the opposite. I suggest that the expectation of public schools that is based on the need for an informed or educated electorate has been distorted to mean that every child must be educated regardless of that child's willingness to support the environment of learning. That belief or mission is in my experience strongly supported by the teachers and their unions for a variety of reasons some of which are noble and some self-preserving. The result is that the decision to be there to learn and support the environment within which others can learn is not a decision that each student and their parents are required to make. Mr. Freire teaching in South America probably encountered educational environments within which the students were more motivated and grateful. And, if not, were likely allowed to fall away or removed. I say this without knowing what those conditions were in the schools of Mr Freire. Still I think my point is relevant. The example of Texas curriculum development that you cite is common through out our country to one degree or another. I suggest that those efforts are the result of a reaction to the perception of school systems having lost their core mission by trying to be all to every student regardless of their willingness to participate. Certainly there are behaviors that are not tolerated and those children removed. However, the median point for acceptable decision making behavior is allowed to be too far into that which renders the education environment dysfunctional for all but those who would survive regardless. Survival though is not the goal. And, the resulting environment causes flight out of the public school system and the federal, state, and local meddling that you describe. The irony of that is that the schools could be nearly all to every student if those students (and their parents) supported a learning experience. So if we want our public schools to function and do so under the guidance of those who really understand how people learn and what developing minds for the future is really all about, then we have got to create an environment that is supported by those who benefit from it and their parents. I can give you more ideas on how to accomplish that and take this further out of the abstract towards where the rubber hits the road, but that would require a lot more time and space.