April 26, 2024

From Critical Thought to Change: Freire in the Classroom

      In Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Palo Freire defines the idea of the Banking Model of education as a divide between a teacher who is the subject of the classroom and the students who are objects in the same room. The students are empty vessels that are filled by the contents of what the teacher / subject knows though narrations that impart static facts to the learner (71). For me, this description of the banking model is the center of the book, as it is the counterpoint which all the suggestions for improvement are posed against, and it is remarkably similar to the status quo as described by Postman & Weingartner. The students are passive receivers, where “[t]he more meekly the receptacles permit themselves to be filled, the better students they are” (72). Education, in the Banking Model, is an endpoint where those who have been educated in the method are automatons made to integrate into the status quo (74).

The environment that Freire was theorizing in was different than those Postman & Weingartner were looking at. Freire was teaching the titular oppressed illiterate poor of Brazil while the other authors were addressing the American school system of the same time. What they had in common though, was a concern with turning educational objects into subjects. What this entails for both texts is having the oppressors become their own liberators, and not purely following some teacher. Both sets of authors focus on the process-orientated aspect of education and larger reality (Freire 75, 83; Postman & Weingartner 205).

Freire’s counterpoint to the dominant Banking Model of Education is a “problem-posing” model of education. In this model, we have a dialogical, two-way, rejection of the narrative education that epitomizes the Banking Model and instead relies on conversation and “cognition, not transferals of education” (79). In this model, the teacher loses subjectivity, and the students lose their objectivity, and all parties grow together. Everyone becomes both student and teacher (80). The problem posing model is more liberatory in that it frees everyone of the constraints of the Banking Model, both the initial students and the teachers. This new method is full of revolutionary potential as the problem-posing model is a mode of praxis. It is a state of constantly becoming and not a filled bucket (84). If I were to try to parse the difference between the problem posing education posited by Freire to the inquiry method of Postman & Weingartner it would be that the inquiry method feels more isolated to the confines of the school and the immediate community. The problem posing model is one that in theory is about the larger political process. Freire means it to be liberatory not just into a coming to knowledge about the self and the world, and through that changing the world - praxis.

To implement the problem posing model of education, we can use the Freirean Culture Circles, grounded in the idea of conscientização, a Portuguese term meaning critical awareness, critical consciousness, or consciousness-raising (104). In culture circles. Freire emphasized that the prior life of students is the starting point in teaching reading and writing. Schooling was necessary not only to learn the letters of the alphabet, but also to know each person, and who they are (Souto-Manning 17). We can implement these in the classroom as individual study circles as we teach our pupils with the problem posing model of education as we move from there to dialogue to action.

Implementing these study circles in a classroom would look something like this. First you have to explain the model. You are moving away from the current dynamic of the Banking Model and instead moving towards a more student-centered process where you students have the ownership over their education an everyone is both a teacher and a learner. You would need to make sure that there is buy-in and understating at this point. It is a new process and not what your co-learners are used to. Everyone needs to be on the same page, knowing that the classroom is a safe space and to be respectful, and my role would be to be impartial facilitator, keeping discussions focused, being open to different viewpoints, and asking tough questions (Organizing).

Once the stage was set, we would then venture forth to trying to figure out what it was that we wanted to explore. We would take what the students knew and were interested in as the basis for further exploration. We could take broad themes and start to focus on something specific. We would then move from the specific to a dialogue with me as the facilitator asking questions and making sure that everyone was part of the process. The end goal of these circles is praxis.

This is the model that I see in this class. We were presented with the syllabi, and there is the reading that we have to do, but through the presentations and the discussions in class, the goal is the coming to consciousness of  “conscientização” as we all learn from each other. The presentation assignments force us to do that, by taking the students out of our comfort zone and making us present, we do have ownership over our education in this course in a way that I have not had before even in seminar classes. I can also see Freire’s influence in the final paper. It is designed so that we can look at a problem at an organization close to us and think about why it is happening and how we can make changes to it. If we do it right, it becomes a change that we can actually make and improve the world around us from where we were at the start of the class to a slightly better world that we make through our praxis.

Finally, I still have a couple of concerns about the implementation process. By removing the authority from yourself as a teacher, you do become a partner. However, you do have the fact that no matter how you present it, there is the chance you will have students who are resistant to the process. The Banking Model hierarchy is so enculturated to people that to move away from the existing paradigm creates resistance. You might not find that all your students are as willing and flexible to move towards praxis in their self-education and they could disrupt the process for the rest of students if you do not have full buy in. The other concern is that in my implementation plan I was talking about is in generalities since I can see how Freire was successful in teaching literacy and how my approaches to writing inspired by his methods worked where a subject less grounded in skills and more focused in facts might not work as well. I struggle to think about how we teach chemistry with the problem-posing model. 

Works Cited

 

Altman, David G. Public Health Advocacy: Creating Community Change to Improve Health. Stanford Center for Research in Disease Prevention, 1994.

Freire, Paulo. Pedagogy of the Oppressed: 30th Anniversary Edition. Bloomsbury Academic, 2014.

Henke, Cole. “State to Make Cuts to Care for Developmentally Disabled in Illinois.” WCIA.Com, WCIA.com, 21 Jan. 2024, www.wcia.com/news/state-to-make-cuts-to-care-for-developmentally-disabled/.

Postman, Neil, and Charles Weingartner. Teaching as a Subversive Activity. Penguin Books, 1972.

“Section 11. Organizing Study Circles.” Chapter 31. Conducting Advocacy Research | Section 11. Organizing Study Circles | Main Section | Community Tool Box, ctb.ku.edu/en/table-of-contents/advocacy/advocacy-research/study-circles/main. Accessed 10 Mar. 2024.

Souto-Manning, Mariana. Freire, Teaching, and Learning: Culture Circles across Contexts. Peter Lang, 2010.

Wehmeyer, Michael L. “Self-Determination and the Empowerment of People with Disabilities.” KU ScholarWorks, Council for Exceptional Children, Jan. 2004, kuscholarworks.ku.edu/handle/1808/10942. 


Teaching as Listening: Strategies from Postman & Weingartner

     As I read Postman & Weingartner’s Teaching as a Subversive Activity, I was not reading as a believer. I kept arguing with the book as I read, and I really could not explain just why it was. As we had the lecture in the class from my peers, I did gain a better appreciation of the text as I saw it through the eyes of practitioners in the field. Chloe called the text complicated, outdated, but interesting. I had to set back and really think about the larger cultural context this book was written in. The expansion of public education at the tertiary level from the GI bill was petering out, it had been a decade since the Sputnik moment so that there was more investment in what we would call STEM classes now. It was also the late sixties and a visible part the boomer generation was questioning everything about the order of the system, Concurrently, we were seeing the rise of postmodernism and post-structuralism where the idea of any sole source of capital T “Truth” was in question.

That is the environment that was birthing the critical educational theorists with Freire and Postman & Weingartner that we have read for this course and I’m sure there are more whom I have not engaged with as I have not taken any pedagogy courses. Understanding the context better does not necessarily mean that I am in full support of the program.I still have several key critiques of the question-posing methodology. My main issue is that it torpedoes any sense of expertise. You as a professor have studied a topic and thought about it deeply and engaged with texts and the other experts in the field and have a baseline of knowledge in whatever subject it is that you are teaching. You might not know everything, in fact you know that you do not know everything and are aware of your limitations, but you know the process of coming to knowledge about the things that you do not know. I kept thinking about Socrates as a progenitor of this process as exemplified in the Platonic dialogs, in which we see the students in the agora coming to knowledge through an early version of the question posing form of teaching. In this, I am firmly in the camp with Aristotle in that we need some sort of empiricism as that baseline – what is it that we know and what is knowable, though that second part of epistemology does lend itself to the strategic process.

The other part that kept rubbing me the wrong way is that even though the goal of Postman & Weingartner is to allow student to become peers with their teachers in terms of taking ownership of their own education, the student is not centered in the text. We mostly see the authors focusing on the teachers and their role, but in a process like they are speaking about, it would seem to me that the students are the more important part. All the talk of teaching as a subversive activity should be overshadowed by the fact that learning is a subversive activity.

So how does one help make teaching a subversive activity? The authors share a list of eighteen suggestions in chapter eight, “New Teachers” that they state will seem “thoroughly impractical” (137). And this is where I think my frustration with the text came to a head. They start with a suggestion that we stop using textbooks for five years, then go on to having teachers teach outside of their areas of expertise, to dissolving all thoughts of a subject at all. They even have what feels like a Maoist suggestion to have teachers take a leave of absence every fourth year to do something else (139). Their list got increasingly absurd, and I did agree that it seemed impractical. I have to admit to being a bit conservative in making radical changes of this sort. Taking great risks can have great positive consequences, but I would rather make small incremental improvements than risk the huge downside risks that could come from failure.

However, the authors have a point in noting that change is needed (141), and that change is a key component of the world, but it does not feel as if it was fully embraced by educators (xiii). I think my own conservative nature regarding education is in part from the fact that the education process worked well for me. So, what I do is reflect on the classes I had and when I step into a classroom, I try to recreate the best of what I saw as a student but flip that to doing the same thing as a teacher. We see though, through years of evidence, that this does not work for all students. There are many who are disengaged for whatever reason, who resist the current paradigm, and thus “fail” in terms of how success in the system is measured.

To make this change from the lessons of Postman & Weingartner, I need a reframing of the process from how I was initially reading it. On my first reading of the text, I really read what they were doing as a denigration of all forms of expertise. As someone who has spent a lot of time in school, I value the level of expertise I have. I know things and that is important to my conception of self. What we need to do is not see the call for student-centered teaching as a denigration of expertise, but what it is a call for humility. This humility is important because to break down the hierarchy inherent in the current paradigm, it takes a mental shift from the professor. You are no longer the expert in the room, the sage on the stage, but you are a facilitator or coach as the other people in the room come to knowledge. You may be a bit further on the path of formal learning than your new peers, but they are acknowledged experts in their own lives and experiences.

Thinking through this reframing and humility allows you to work through the process with your students. You can meld the process of learning with the thing that you are learning. You cannot be learning any particular “subject,” but instead be focusing on one small node in the larger web of everything that is possible to be learned and to be creating new threads in that web. We can talk about what it is that we know and how we know it and how it has effects on our life outside of the classroom. We can learn not just things but the questions that we ask to learn those things (23). You as a teacher can use this question posing, open-ended process in a generative way, and that is reflected toward the end of the book in Chapter 12 as the authors are looking at applications of the process. It is here they are humbler themselves than what we saw in the earlier chapter, knowing that there are larger structural limitations in place. One suggestion is to “Listen to your students” (194). Here is a radical idea, emphasizing that you need to be really listening as a psychologist and not just being reactive. This humanizes your students and helps level the playing field, ensuring that you can see your students as humans with their own agency. It is in this chapter that we see the cumulation of the critiques and suggestions in the book and allows everyone to see education as an ongoing process and not some predetermined endpoint (205).

To make it more concrete, I will try to outline the process of  identifying strategies from Postman & Weingartner’s book would I use to implement changes from my experience as a writing instructor. We did not have control over the larger curriculum. The students were supposed to write and revise five papers, three of which were selected to be reviewed by my peers and professors to make sure we all were grading to similar standards. However, we were given a lot of leeway. In this new context, I would work through the process with my students. I would come on the day the unit started, and I would introduce the constraints within which we were working. We would talk about how we would want to respond. One of the interesting things is that it was a writing class so we had to write about something, so we would talk about what it was that was interesting to us at that point. We would then start asking what we think we know about the subject. We would examine why it is that we think we know it. We would ask what it is that we do not yet know, and we would come back and talk about what we learned as we tried to learn more about the topic. From here, we would start shaping our writing, and putting the paper we were assigned to write together. We would shape the arguments and make our claims and respond to objections – objections from our peers and anticipated ones from our assumed audience. By doing this process, we would all end up with a document that met the constraints imposed by the department on me as a teacher and the students in their institutional role. All of us would start out from a place of less knowledge and experience and grow to a place where we had more knowledge and experience. We would learn research without ever having a specific lesson on research and we would learn the rhetorical triangle without ever reading the Poetics. It would not be truly subversive, but taking as much ownership of our collective education is as subversive as possible within existing constraints. 

December 17, 2023

Mostly Fiction: Reading 12.17.2023

 

The Invisibles Omnibus – Grant Morrison

The first thing I have to mention is the sheer physical heft of the book. It’s hard to read in a normal way. It makes it hard to find the time to sit down and read it because the only way I was able to read it with some momentum and not want to put it down every few minutes was propped up on a desk that I cleared of other stuff.

 

Content-wise, it was interesting. Morrison is a good writer, and the individual stories are connected to some larger arcs and there is payoff at the end, but it does feel like it takes a while for it to get there. He weaves in stuff from the situationists and mentioned memes way earlier than I had heard of them. Also, huge props to the series for including a trans character in the nineties.

 

The other thing that was weird reading the story now is that the Myan great cycle that hit the news at the end of 2012 is a plot point that is important but for a reader now it was just a quaint thing in the past (or did everything actually reset?).

 

Worth reading but I would recommend finding smaller versions because of the dang size of the omnibus book.

 

The Portable Door – Holt

 

At this point I have read a dozen books by Tom Holt. And I like Tom Holt but I’m not an evangelist for him. I heard of him at some point where I was asking for writers like Pratchett and his name came up and it was good that he’d been fairly prolific so there are a number of books one can read by him. But there’s something missing. Like all the ingredients are there but like maybe it’s too British or something. I like it for the absurdist comic fantasy that it is, and I will read more of the books, but maybe it was a detriment that his work was compared to Pratchett because it is hard to stand in that comparison. I’m still going to read the next one in this series, and well keep going from there.

 

The Red and the Black – Stendhal

If there’s one thing that I learned from this book, is that if you have women in your house, don’t invite Julien Sorel in. I had a challenging time getting into this book, as the first parts where Julian is in the provinces and then in seminary go a bit slow, but then once he’s in Paris, it picks up.

 

I didn’t see his crime coming, but it does seem to be in character because Stendhal makes this guy pretty loathsome to me. I don’t know why it’s not obvious to the other characters in the book. I think it may be a dramatic irony built in, but I am far enough removed from living in the context of the book to not really know if I should be rooting for Sorel or not, or if Stendhal likes his creation or not (or if that even matters).

 

I’m glad I read it because it is an important part of the canon but also enjoyable on its own, no matter what you make of the central character.

 

Nights at the Circus – Angela Carter

Carter here creates a meditation on truth and storytelling, as she tells the story of Sophie Fevvers and the journalist who is telling her story, Jack Walser.

We meet the characters in London and follow them across Europe to Petersburg and then to Siberia. Sophie is part human and part swan, or is she? Jack follows and falls in love with her, and they end up in a train accident in Siberia and meeting an exiled piano teacher. It’s weird and really peaks after the first third of the book where the characters have met in London and Sophie is telling her back story. But it is also beautifully written so even though it felt like it was spinning out and I was waiting for some resolution it was worth reading.

 

Think Python – Downey

 

I used this book as a supplement to a class I was taking in Python. It was good as a supplement, but I do worry that it would not be sufficient for someone who was only using this book or someone who had not had a bit of a background in doing some programming stuff. The exercises are also made for someone who has a decent understanding of math and personally I stopped trying the exercises after the first few chapters because of that, as well as having other problems that had been assigned to me for the course I was taking.

 

Camp Damascus – Chuck Tingle

 

I had only known Tingle as the author of the seemingly silly titled erotica but having followed him on social media for a while, I know the person behind the façade is an interesting and thoughtful writer. So, I was interested to see that he was making a more mainstream book.

 

Camp Damascus is a horror novel with a queer female teen protagonist who seems to have some sort of autism spectrum disorder. She is in a family in a town that is strongly centered on the titular camp that is run as a conversion camp. It is not giving too much away to say that hijinks ensue. The characters, especially the main one, are beautifully written and developed and the action flows really well. If you were raised around or within the evangelical movement, you might find that Tingle hits some notes perfectly. It feels almost like a backhanded compliment to say that the book is really professionally written and to note that I have already pre-ordered the next “serious” title, but you really should read this book if you like religious themed teen horror. It’s really well done and not even something that is in my normal wheelhouse.

 

Giants in the Earth – Rolvaag

 

My wife’s family is from the northern plains – Scandinavian immigrants to the Dakotas and Nebraska territories, and the story of their ancestor’s descendants is broadly the story told here. Rolvaag tells the story of a group of settlers and the dangers and trials they face trying to tame the empty wilderness and make it their own. If you have ever driven through the plains, you know the barrenness and emptiness of the landscape, but also, its wide-open beauty as the land is just an open ocean all around you.

 

Our heroes face locusts and snowstorms and wandering cows, as well as the natives (though I was surprised how little the people that the settlers were displacing on the land came into the narrative) to make the land their own.

 

The book made me think of how important the relationships you build were in the settlement process. You only had your family and your immediate community, and often you were on your own. The book it reminded me of most was Steinbeck’s East of Eden, not just because of the settlement aspect of it, but also there is the same sort of edge of misogyny in the female characters. The main character’s is Per Hansa and his wife is drawn almost as if she has clinical depression from the move to the prairie and Per Hansa doesn’t address her needs – ignoring them to his detriment.

 

There’s also what felt like a weird lack of tragedy in the book for a set of characters who are facing hardship – right up until the last chapter (spoiler alert). It’s well-written and made me feel like I was part of the settlers. I would call it an engrossing read.