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Against Common Sense: Teaching & Learning Toward Social Justice

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1 Against Common Sense: Teaching & Learning Toward Social Justice
ECS210 January 30th, 2015

2 Kevin Kumashiro Director, Centre for Anti-Oppressive Education
Professor, University of Illinois at Chicago President, National Association for Multicultural Education Teacher, various grade levels in a wide variety of settings Ph.D. In Educational Policy Studies, School of Education Challenges educators to challenge ‘common sense’

3 Story of Nepal How was Kumashiro challenged in his experience in Nepal? Why did he share this story with us?

4 What makes something common sense?
What IS common sense? What makes something common sense? Is common sense comfortable? How can common sense be problematic? How can we begin to challenge, disrupt our own common sense? Rip Van Winkle story Rip Van Winkle Story

5 Kevin Kumashiro "Common sense often makes it easy to continue teaching and learning in ways that allow the oppressions already in play to continue to play out unchallenged in our schools and society.” Kumashiro, K. Against Common Sense, 2004, p. XXIV

6 What is good teaching? Commonsensical definition of ‘good teaching’… “Good teaching was not something we needed to learn; rather, it was something we had already learned.” “…embedded in any way of thinking about teaching & learning are values & perspectives, including values & perspectives that can be quite oppressive (i.e. that privilege or favour certain was of being in this world and marginalize or disadvantage others.” What does our teaching make possible? What does our teaching make impossible?

7 What is Oppression? “Oppression refers to a social dynamic in which certain ways of being in this world are normalized or privileged while others are disadvantaged or marginalized” Who does our current education system privilege? Marginalize?

8 Center for Anti-Oppressive Education
DEFINITION OF "ANTI-OPPRESSIVE EDUCATION" Teaching involves both intended and unintended lessons, and it is often in the unintended, hidden lessons that racism, sexism, and other "isms" find life. Learning involves both a desire for and a resistance to knowledge, and it is often our resistance to uncomfortable ideas that keeps our eyes closed to the "isms." Common sense does not often tell us that oppression plays out in our schools. But the contradictions in education make it impossible to say that oppression is not in some way affecting what and how we teach, despite our best of intentions. What might it mean, then, to teach in ways that challenge oppression?

9 Messages from Kumashiro
Teaching towards social justice does not mean teaching the “better” curriculum or the better story; rather, it means teaching students to think independently, critically, and creatively about whatever story is being taught, whether that is the dominant narrative or any number of alternative perspectives from the margins.” p. xxv

10 Kumashiro Challenges Educators to:
Understand that oppressive education can go on in unnoticed ways Question those things that we take for granted, because maybe they are part of the problem Understand that anti-oppressive education may be uncomfortable and controversial Challenge all forms of oppression in classrooms, both intentional and unintentional Empower minority groups to have an equal opportunity to become well educated citizens See that many of the problems arise from racial unawareness on the part of the educators. Ask, “How do our practices contribute to oppression?”

11 Images of Teacher Teacher as Learned Practitioner
Teacher as Researcher Teacher as Professional Against Common Sense Against Common Sense (Kumashiro) Chapter One: Three Teacher Images in U.S. Teacher Education Programs

12 Teachers as Learned Practitioner
Learn about students, the what and how to teach Blend theory & practice Problematic: little focus on differences, equity, power and oppression. only certain ways of knowing students privileged Need to: Trouble & disrupt knowledge See different insights, identities, practices & changes it makes possible while critically examining to see what it closes off To teach the contradictions, the gaps

13 Huebner’s Messages: We must surpass technical foundations of education
We require historical awareness of: where we once were sensitivity to present problems, resistances and binds and openness to future possibilities Dwayne E. Huebner’s ( ) Philosopher of education and curriculum theorist

14 Teacher as Researcher To be lifelong learners
To reflect on own teaching practices, readings, discussions To do research projects, working to bridge theory to practice Learning to teach involves reflecting on, raising own questions and doing research. Problematic: Doing research does not in itself promise anti-oppressive change. Need to: Look at what we have already learned and want to continue to learn (comfort zone) Look at what we resist learning (where we feel discomfort). Ask: what do our students desire learning, how do we desire teaching, and how do these desires make anti-oppressive changes difficult?

15 Move beyond the ‘banking’ system of education
Freire’s pedagogy starts from a deep love, and humility before, poor and oppressed people and a respect for their "common sense" Students need to learn to think critically to overcome social constructs that are paralyzing Urges both students and teachers to unlearn their race, class, and gender privileges and to engage in dialogue with those whose experiences are very different from their own Move beyond the ‘banking’ system of education Banking education to problem-posing education Critical pedagogy Freire's revolutionary pedagogy starts from a deep love for, and humility before, poor and oppressed people and a respect for their "common sense," which constitutes a knowledge no less important than the scientific knowledge of the professional. This humility makes possible a condition of reciprocal trust and communication between the educator, who also learns, and the student, who also teaches. Thus, education becomes a "communion" between participants in a dialogue characterized by a reflexive, reciprocal, and socially relevant exchange, rather than the unilateral action of one individual agent for the benefit of the other. Nevertheless, this does not amount to a celebration of the untrammeled core of consciousness of the oppressed, in which the educator recedes into the background as a mere facilitator. Freire conceived of authentic teaching as enacting a clear authority, rather than being authoritarian. The teacher, in his conception, is not neutral, but intervenes in the educational situation in order to help the student to overcome those aspects of his or her social constructs that are paralyzing, and to learn to think critically. In a similar fashion, Freire validated and affirmed the experiences of the oppressed without automatically legitimizing or validating their content. All experiences–including those of the teacher–had to be interrogated in order to lay bare their ideological assumptions and presuppositions. The benchmark that Freire used for evaluating experiences grew out of a Christianized Marxist humanism. From this position, Freire urged both students and teachers to unlearn their race, class, and gender privileges and to engage in a dialogue with those whose experiences are very different from their own. Thus, he did not uncritically affirm student or teacher experiences but provided the conceptual tools with which to critically interrogate them so as to minimize their politically domesticating influences. Conceptual Tools Banking education. Freire criticized prevailing forms of education as reducing students to the status of passive objects to be acted upon by the teacher. In this traditional form of education it is the job of the teacher to deposit in the minds of the students, considered to be empty in an absolute ignorance, the bits of information that constitute knowledge. Freire called this banking education. The goal of banking education is to immobilize the people within existing frameworks of power by conditioning them to accept that meaning and historical agency are the sole property of the oppressor. Educators within the dominant culture and class fractions often characterize the oppressed as marginal, pathological, and helpless. In the banking model, knowledge is taken to be a gift that is bestowed upon the student by the teacher. Freire viewed this false generosity on the part of the oppressor–which ostensibly aims to incorporate and improve the oppressed–as a crucial means of domination by the capitalist class. The indispensable soil of good teaching consists of creating the pedagogical conditions for genuine dialogue, which maintains that teachers should not impose their views on students, but neither should they camouflage them nor drain them of political and ethical import. Problem-posing method. Against the banking model, Freire proposed a dialogical problem-posing method of education. In this model, the teacher and student become co-investigators of knowledge and of the world. Instead of suggesting to students that their situation in society has been transcendentally fixed by nature or reason, as the banking model does, Freire's problem-posing education invites the oppressed to explore their reality as a "problem" to be transformed. The content of this education cannot be determined necessarily in advance, through the expertise of the educator, but must instead arise from the lived experiences or reality of the students. It is not the task of the educator to provide the answer to the problems that these situations present, but to help students to achieve a form of critical thinking (or conscientization) that will make possible an awareness of society as mutable and potentially open to transformation. Once they are able to see the world as a transformable situation, rather than an unthinkable and inescapable stasis, it becomes possible for students to imagine a new and different reality. In order, however, to undertake this process, the oppressed must challenge their own internalization of the oppressor. The oppressed are accustomed to thinking of themselves as "less than." They have been conditioned to view as complete and human only the dominating practices of the oppressor, so that to fully become human means to simulate these practices. Against a "fear of freedom" that protects them from a cataclysmic reorganization of their being, the oppressed in dialogue engage in an existential process of dis-identifying with "the oppressor housed within." This dis-identification allows them to begin the process of imagining a new being and a new life as subjects of their own history. Culture circle. The concrete basis for Freire's dialogical system of education is the culture circle, in which students and coordinator together discuss generative themes that have significance within the context of students' lives. These themes, which are related to nature, culture, work, and relationships, are discovered through the cooperative research of educators and students. They express, in an open rather than propagandistic fashion, the principle contradictions that confront the students in their world. These themes are then represented in the form of codifications (usually visual representations) that are taken as the basis for dialogue within the circle. As students decode these representations, they recognize them as situations in which they themselves are involved as subjects. The process of critical consciousness formation is initiated when students learn to read the codifications in their situationality, rather than simply experiencing them, and this makes possible the intervention by students in society. As the culture circle comes to recognize the need for print literacy, the visual codifications are accompanied by words to which they correspond. Students learn to read these words in the process of reading the aspects of the world with which they are linked. Although this system of codifications has been very successful in promoting print literacy among adult students, Freire always emphasized that it should not be approached mechanically, but rather as a process of creation and awakening of consciousness. For Freire, it is a mistake to speak of reading as solely the decoding of text. Rather, reading is a process of apprehending power and causality in society and one's location in it. Awareness of the historicity of social life makes it possible for students to imagine its re-creation. Literacy is thus a "self-transformation producing a stance of intervention" (Freire 1988, p. 404). Literacy programs that appropriate parts of Freire's method while ignoring the essential politicization of the process of reading the world as a limit situation to be overcome distort and subvert the process of literacy education. For Freire, authentic education is always a "practice of freedom" rather than an alienating inculcation of skills. Read more: Paulo Freire (1921–1997) - Conceptual Tools, Philosophy of Education, Criticism - Students, Social, World, and Process - StateUniversity.com Paulo Freire ( ) Critical Pedagogy

16 Teacher as Professional
Learning to teach characterized as an entry into a profession Clear certification expectations with relevant components of program, knowledge, skills, and perspectives valued in society Problematic: Some in society prescribe ahead of time what all teachers need to know and do and be in order to be “good” teachers May insist on only certain knowledge and may not encourage troubling knowledge and looking beyond. Need to: Problematize any effort that claims what it means to be a “good” teacher Remember commonsensical definitions of good teaching are often complicit with different forms of oppression Examine “progressive” definitions of good teaching as being partial and contradictory and are always in need of rethought

17 What are the messages to our learners?
It’s not only what we teach but what we don’t teach... It’s not only what we do but what we don’t do... It’s not only what we say but what we don’t say... It’s not only what we include but what we leave out...

18 Expanding Teacher Self-Knowledge
Since bias is often unconscious, one of the first things we need to do is to be aware of assumptions about our students. Challenge the ‘common sensical’ notions of schooling.

19 Know own strengths, gifts and weaknesses
Examine own beliefs, values, assumptions Know own knowledge & limitations of being an anti-oppressive education Be willing to feel ‘discomfort’ in learning Ask what I want to learn/teach & what I resist Challenge ourselves to learn, unlearn, relearn Continue to ask: What do I see? Not see? What do I do? Not do? What do I teach? What do I leave out? Why? What kind of learner is privileged in my classroom? Who is marginalized? AND if you think you have all the right answers, then start asking different questions!

20 Kumashiro urges us to… Transform schools into spaces where all students will be safe, addressed, and affirmed Create spaces within schools where students can go for help, support, advocacy, and resources Change the knowledge that all students have about people who are labeled ‘different’ Broaden students’ understanding of differences and different groups of people by integrating into the curriculum a richer diversity of experiences, perspectives & materials. Kumashiro, K. (2009). Against Common Sense, p. xxxvii AND remember…“An anti-oppressive teacher is not something that someone is. Rather, it is something that someone is always becoming.” Kumashiro, K. (2009). Against Common Sense, p. 15


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