Can we trust learners to learn on their own?
Critical pedagogy is a teaching approach
inspired by Marxist critical theory and other radical philosophies, which
attempts to help students question and challenge posited "domination,"
and to undermine the beliefs and practices that are alleged to dominate. In
other words, it is a theory and practice of helping students achieve "critical
consciousness."
The goal of critical pedagogy is
to challenge conservative, right-wing and traditionalist philosophies and
politics. Critical pedagogy developed in the 1960s and '70s as a reaction
amongst academics of an activist, radical left-wing inclination to the repeated
failure of socialist governments around the world to deliver on their promises
of economic equality. Critical pedagogic educator Ira Shor defines
critical pedagogy as:
“Habits of thought, reading,
writing, and speaking which go beneath surface meaning, first impressions,
dominant myths, official pronouncements, traditional cliches, received wisdom,
and mere opinions, to understand the deep meaning, root causes, social context,
ideology, and personal consequences of any action, event, object, process,
organization, experience, text, subject matter, policy, mass media, or
discourse. (Empowering Education, 129)”
In this tradition the teacher
works to lead students to question ideologies and practices considered
oppressive (including those at school), and encourage "liberatory"
collective and individual responses to the actual conditions of their own
lives.
In his article titled; The Standards of Critical
Digital Pedagogy, Sam Hamilton makes a statement that “Educational
standards limit the consciousness towards which critical pedagogy aims.” He
continues to say that critical digital pedagogues at all levels of education
must familiarize themselves with standards regarding Information and
Communications Technology (ICT) literacy. Standards for ICT literacy represent
a key component of cultural and political oppression with which all of our
students must become critically conscious. I share the view of Paulo Freire
which he published in his article Pedagogy of the Oppressed, where he says that
“Education must begin with the solution of the teacher-student
contradiction.” This is amazing because it forces both teachers and students to
redefine their roles so that they are not limited to be either bankers making
knowledge deposits or empty bank vaults passively receiving those deposits.
This is clearly seen in The Independent Project,
where eight students started a school-within-a-school that they ran themselves.
This proved to their teachers and the whole world that kids can be trusted to
learn on their own. The learners who started this project mention that the main
reason they started this project was because school was simply not a happy
place for them. Teachers were not inspiring them and were not pushing them to
take initiative of their own education. They were tired of being boxed and categorised.
The learners realised that if learning was to take place, they needed to make
decisions about how they wanted to learn. Ted Sizer says that “Inspiration,
hunger: these are the forces that drive good schools. The best we educational
planners can do is create the most likely conditions for them to flourish and
get them out of their way.” This is exactly what the teachers did when they
allowed these learners to start this project. Educators need to make kids feel
incharge of their education. Children want to learn, they have that desire and
hunger to acquire information and our job as educators is to facilitate the process
of learning. Hence, Technology-mediated self- directed distance learning should be implemented more. \instead of fearing the unknown, why not try something new seeing that the current system is failing us.
"...Why not try something new seeing that the current system is failing us.." yes totally agree. If we allow a platform in which learners are allowed to take charge, choose how they want to learn and learn best, the learning experience will improve so much, especially right here on home soil, South Africa needs to start over on a clean slate when it comes basic education. The introduction of tech-based self-study will be a great start.
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